Down. | Bromley. | Kent S.E.
Mar 4—
My dear Sir
Very many thanks about the Dotterel, & I am pleased to hear of this additional evidence.1 I have looked to Swinhoe’s papers, but the case does not seem very conclusive.2 After writing to you I remembered that the female of the carrion-hawk of the Falkland I’s (formerly called Polyborus N. Zealandii) is very much brighter coloured than the male, as I ascertained (Zoolg. Voyage of Beagle: Birds) by dissection; I have written to the Missionaries there about its nidification & if I receive any answer, will inform you.3 The other day I thought I had got a case at the Zoolog Gardens in the Casuarinus Galeatus, in which the female has the finest & brightest caruncles &c; but Sclater tells me it wd be rash to trust to the comparison of a single pair, & he tells me that the male ostrich has the finest plumes.4
With my best thanks | I remain my dear Sir | yours very sincerely | Charles Darwin
P.S. Mr Blyth tells me that according to Jerdon, the natives say the male Turnix alone incubates & attends to young—5
There is another consideration which might lead to the females being the most beautiful, viz if they were the more numerous than the males & the species were not polygamous, for in this case the more beautiful females wd. be selected.—6
Please cite as “DCP-LETT-5430,” in Ɛpsilon: The Charles Darwin Collection accessed on