Page:BirdWatchingSelous.djvu/95

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CHAPTER IV Watching Wheateafs, Dabchicks, Oystercatchers, etc.

The wheatear is common over the warren-lands, and as I have been so fortunate as to witness for a whole afternoon, and very closely, a series of combined displays and combats on the part of two rival males, which struck me as very interesting, and as bearing on the question of sexual selection, I will give the account in extenso, as I noted it down from point to point between the intervals of following the birds about on my hands and knees. Should the narrative be tedious — and it is, I confess, somewhat minute — I need not ask my readers to absolve nature and give me the blame of it, for I am assured that anyone in