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Bernard Fort would moreover give the title ‘Exaltation’ to one of his electroacoustic compositions based on the songs of skylarks: Le Miroir des oiseaux (Groupe de Musiques vivantes de Lyon, produced by Chiff-Chaff records).

      4 4. D. Haraway, The Companion Species Manifesto: Dogs, People and Significant Otherness. Chicago: Prickly Paradigm Press, 2003.

      5 5. Baptiste Morizot invites us to take a similar direction with his conception of tracking as an art and a culture of attentiveness which encourages us to re-examine the ways in which we cohabit with other species as well as with humans.

      6 6. E. Viveiros de Castro, Cannibal Metaphysics. Minneapolis: Univocal, 2014, p. 196.

      7 7. D. Debaise, Nature as Event: The Lure of the Possible. Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 2017, p. 2. The speculative question which runs through his work, ‘how to grant due importance to the multiplicity of ways of being within nature’, is based on the acknowledgement of the ever-present influence of what Whitehead called the ‘bifurcation of nature’, the effects of which are still being felt, notably in the denial of plural forms of existence within nature. The ‘bifurcation of nature’, which determines our modern experience of the world, refers to a way of understanding for which our experience reveals only what is apparent, whereas the elements necessary for the process of discovery and understanding are always hidden and must be found elsewhere. As a result, nature ends up divided into two distinct systems.

      8 8. In the work of Louis Bounoure the expression ‘cosmic factors’ recurs repeatedly to indicate, in particular, the lengthening of daylight and the modification in temperatures. L. Bounoure, L’Instinct sexuel: étude de psychologie animale. Paris: PUF, 1956.

       Unicum arbustum haud alit

       Duos erithacos

      (A single tree cannot shelter two robins)

      Proverb by Zenodotus of Ephesus

      (Greek philosopher, third century BC)

      Other descriptions are possible. These would quickly follow, since Howard had clearly opened the floodgates to a whole stream of research in this area and was widely acknowledged by all the scientists working in this field as its genuine founder. His book Territory in Bird Life, published in 1920, not only provides meticulously detailed descriptions but also sets out a coherent theory which provides the explanation for these observations. According to Howard, the birds are engaged in securing a territory which will enable them to mate, build a nest, protect their young and find enough food to provide for their brood.

      For others, territory would first of all be associated with rivalry between males over females. The defended area would either enable the male to ensure exclusive access to any female who settled there, and would therefore amount to a problem of jealousy, or it would provide him with a ‘stage’ on which to sing and perform displays in order to attract a potential partner. This would be one of Moffat’s theories. In such a case, territory counts not as a space but as a behavioural whole.

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