Animal Groups: How Animals Live Together

Description

40 pages
Contains Index
$6.95
ISBN 1-55337-338-3
DDC j591.56

Author

Publisher

Year

2004

Contributor

Illustrations by Pat Stephens
Reviewed by Martha Lamon

Martha Lamon is a freelance writer and researcher based in Huntsville,
Ontario.

Review

Animal Defenses, Animal Senses, Animals at Work, Animals Hibernating,
Animal Talk, Animals Eating, Animals and Their Young, and Animals in
Motion are the first eight volumes in this excellent nature series. The
books are filled with instructive, realistic illustrations (to help
young readers understand the concepts presented), informative text boxes
containing interesting facts (that help to sustain the reader’s
interest), and easy-to-do, fun experiments (providing a hands-on
approach to learning).

Animals and Their Mates informs children about the extraordinary ways
animals behave when it comes to attracting, fighting for, or protecting
a mate. Readers will learn about how animals use all five senses to
attract a mate, their performance rituals, the mating season, and mating
places (for example, the red-eyed tree frog mates on a leaf overhanging
water; when the tadpoles hatch, they fall into the water below, where
they grow into frogs).

Animals gather in herds, flocks, packs, pods, gaggles, schools, and
other groups. Animal Groups looks at the advantages some animals gain by
living in groups. These include help with grooming, finding a mate,
caring for offspring, and enhanced defence and protection.

Each double-page spread introduces a new concept. Each concept is
listed in the index, which also includes species names. The volumes are
attractively designed, with lots of colour and detail. Both books are
highly recommended.

Citation

Kaner, Etta., “Animal Groups: How Animals Live Together,” Canadian Book Review Annual Online, accessed December 26, 2024, https://cbra.library.utoronto.ca/items/show/31867.