Researchers study same-sex dolphin love.
Homosexuality in the wild is much more common than you might think. Bottlenose dolphins, for example, are one of the most intelligent creatures known to have same-sex relationships. Scientists believe this behavior has something to do with social bonding, but there is obviously a lot more below the surface.
Male dolphins in Shark Bay, Australia, synchronize their movements perfectly.
Nicholson stated, “Apart from homosexual behavior, males, unlike females, in Shark Bay have also been recorded to perform synchronous displays.”
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According to the Dolphin Communication Project, synchronous displays, or mirroring the behavior of your dolphin friend, signal to other dolphins that you are in a close relationship with your partner. Synchronous swimming creates a strong visual for anyone watching and is a powerful display of solidarity.
Dolphins have a gang culture around finding and protecting sexual partners.
Dolphins have been found to spend 80 percent of their lives in sexual play.
David Linden, a professor of neuroscience at Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore, discovered that the male bottlenose dolphin had found “perhaps the most creative form of animal masturbation” – by wrapping a live, squirming eel around its penis.

It’s still a scientific mystery.
Janet Mann, who has studied dolphins at Shark Bay for decades, concluded that another possible reason for this homosexual behavior is for males to practice mating. In her book Homosexual Behavior Animals: An Evolutionary Perspective, Mann wrote: “Homosexual interactions in bottlenose dolphins … seem to serve multiple functions, although the exact fitness consequences, if any, are unknown.”