Bill Claff does. He just makes you search for it, because he's so fond of his, in my opinion, useless PDR metric. If you go to his site and choose the 'input referred read noise' chart.
Then select the camera(s) you're interested in, and you get the read noise chart.
Click on the name of a camera (red arrow) and you get the DR (as Bill insists, the 'EDR') data.
For comparison, here's the Mk III
There's about half a stop DR difference - probably the result of faster ADC converters (which are usually noisier).
Alternatively there is still DxOMark.
As to how to interpret the data, first, this is un-normalised - it is at the native resolution. To normalise it to some required standard resolution you need to add half of the log-2 pixel ratio. So, for instance if you want to normalise at 8MP (A3 at 300ppi) then you need to add log2(24/8)/2 = 0.8. My preferred normalisation value is 24MP (A3 at 360 ppi) - since this I think reflects the needs of high-end photographers. Then you need to decide what is the acceptable low end, remembering that this will always be the deepest shadows in your final image (since you'll never be pushing shadows to light grey). I've done some experiments and I think an SNR of 2:1 is fine in the deepest shadows (remember they're Zone I, defined as 'near black with slight tonality but no texture'). That would subtract a stop from the raw DR. So that would give you 11.7 stops at 24MP for the Z6 III 100 ISO and 12.2 stops for the Z6 II. If you chose figures for 8MP (A3 print) it would go to 12.5 and 13 stops.
8MP also corresponds pretty much to 4k video. If you wanted display on an HD screen, about 2k then you can add another stop.
It's also worth remembering that you'll only get that DR if you expose right up to the highlights in raw, which will usually mean an exposure somewhat above the nominal ISO exposure indicated by the meter. If you just expose according to the meter, and want to know how much you can push the shadows, then you also need to know how much raw headroom there is, which only so far comes from DxOmark.
Just another pet peeve here I'm reminded of doing these screen shots - the way Bill advertises it as 'your trusted source' - it's not up to him to decide whether it's 'trusted' or not - that's up to users.