Dear MARMAM community,

On behalf of my co-authors, I am pleased to share a new (open access) paper on 
dolphin motor synchrony:

Allied male dolphins use synchronous displays to strengthen social bonds in a 
cooperative context (https://doi.org/10.1186/s40462-025-00603-z)

Abstract
From fireflies to fiddler crabs and anurans to apes, males from across the 
animal kingdom perform synchronous displays in the mating context. Most do so 
in competition for mates, but few species synchronise signal production 
cooperatively. For example, synchrony in humans is cooperative; where 
interpersonal synchrony increases affiliation, cooperative ability, and group 
cohesion. Interestingly, multi-level alliances of male Indo-Pacific bottlenose 
dolphins in Shark Bay, Western Australia, also engage in cooperative synchrony. 
Adult males form pairs or trios to cooperatively herd single oestrus females, 
during which males perform elaborate synchronous displays. These displays 
comprise synchronous turns, leaps, and surfacing bouts around the female, but 
the function remains equivocal. Here, we used drone mounted video coupled with 
40 years of behavioural data to investigate what social factors influence the 
performance of these synchronous displays by male dolphins. We found that males 
perform synchronous displays for longer after engaging in affiliative contact 
behaviour, and that those with weaker social bonds engaged in more precise 
synchrony with each other. Aligning with recent research on vocal synchrony in 
this population, we provide evidence that male dolphins use synchrony to both 
maintain and strengthen their social bonds. These findings suggest that 
dolphins have converged with humans on the use of synchronous displays to 
sustain multiple social bonds in nested, complex social systems.

Citation:
Hill-Cousins, S., Chereskin, E., Allen, S.J., Connor, R.C., Krützen, M., 
Papageorgiou, D., King, S.L. Allied male dolphins use synchronous displays to 
strengthen social bonds in a cooperative context. Mov Ecol 13, 84 (2025). 
https://doi.org/10.1186/s40462-025-00603-z

All the best,

Sam Hill-Cousins M.Sc.
Email: [email protected]

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