Nature Recycles - How About You?
By: Michelle Lord
Illustrated by: Cathy Morrison
Publisher: Sylvan Dell
Publication Date: March 2013
ISBN: 978-1607186151
Reviewed by: Deb Fowler
Review Date: March 2013
Illustrated by: Cathy Morrison
Publisher: Sylvan Dell
Publication Date: March 2013
ISBN: 978-1607186151
Reviewed by: Deb Fowler
Review Date: March 2013
A Carolina wren sings out as she lines her nest, a nest she made in an old boot. “Tea-kettle. Tea-kettle.” She has found all kinds of things no one wants any more, including “used feathers and dog hair too.” Yes, she is another creature who recycles. An elf owl peeks out from “an old woodpecker hole in the hundred-year-old saguaro cactus,” a hole that she has recycled. “Yip. Yip. Yip.” Yep, recycling is important. You’ll also learn about several other animals in nature who do just that, including the veined octopus, a Galapagos Island woodpecker finch, a dung beetle, mound-building termites, a caddisly larva, a poison dart frog, and an Asian elephant. What do you recycle?
This is a fun and fascinating look at many creatures in the wild who recycle. Full-page, full-color artwork swirls though this book as it illustrates many unusual ways that nature’s creatures ingeniously reuse and recycle as they help themselves. One of the more interesting ones is when we are able to watch the Galapagos Island woodpecker finch use a cactus spine to spear a grub for dinner. Newly independent readers can tackle this beginning nonfiction book with a bit of assistance with more difficult words such as “precipitation.” In the back of the book are several activities that can be downloaded and printed from the publisher’s website. This would be an excellent book to read and discuss in the homeschool or classroom setting.
Quill says: This is the perfect book to introduce young students to recycling and creatures of the wild who do just that!
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