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Zusatztext 44619306 Informationen zum Autor Joanne O'Sullivan (Author) Klappentext From whales to manatees, pronghorn antelopes to monarch butterflies, travel along with North American animals as they make the trip of a lifetime. Follow the paths of nine very different types of animals, exploring how and why they take their road trips and the challenges they face along the way. Snakes slither along Southern Ilinois's Snake Road. Gray Whales swim down the California coast to Baja in Mexico and sandhill cranes wing their way through the midwest. Along the way, these animals on-the-go mate, molt and munch in really unique ways. Migrating polar bears cross through the center of Churchill, Manitoba and monarch butterflies may even cross through your back yard. Kids learn how and when to catch these commuting critters along their paths. Fabulous photos from the National Wildlife Foundation showcase these amazing animals. Bonus: fun facts about each creature and their habitats.Ready to go on a journey? It's a wild trip through rushing rivers, across frozen ice floes, and through stormy skies. It will take you from Mexico across the Great Plains, through Pacific waters, and as far north as the Arctic Circle. Your travel companions are some of America's most interesting animals. Why Migrate? Migration is the seasonal movement of wildlife from one place to another for food or breeding. Animals migrate for survival, not fun. Their lives revolve around the seasons and the environment. In fall, animals migrate south, where food is still abundant. In spring, they migrate north, where food is once again becoming available so they can reproduce. Animals don't use calendars or information in books to tell them when to migrate. Instead, the amount of daylight and temperatures triggers their migration instinct. Zusammenfassung From whales to manatees! pronghorn antelopes to monarch butterflies! travel along with North American animals as they make the trip of a lifetime. Follow the paths of nine very different types of animals! exploring how and why they take their road trips and the challenges they face along the way. Snakes slither along Southern Ilinois's Snake Road. Gray Whales swim down the California coast to Baja in Mexico and sandhill cranes wing their way through the midwest. Along the way! these animals on-the-go mate! molt and munch in really unique ways. Migrating polar bears cross through the center of Churchill! Manitoba and monarch butterflies may even cross through your back yard. Kids learn how and when to catch these commuting critters along their paths. Fabulous photos from the National Wildlife Foundation showcase these amazing animals. Bonus: fun facts about each creature and their habitats. ...
O'Sullivan invites readres to join North American animals who regularly take to the "Herptile Highway," the "Polar Bear Parkway," "Bison Boulevard," or "Salmon Street."
Whether driven by seasonal changes in food sources, the "need to breed," or, like monarch butterflies, more mysterious urges, some animals travel hundreds or even thousands of miles over cyclical routes. The author highlights a dozen creatures and mentions others. She marvels at the seemingly miraculous navigation skills of salmon and gray whales and sounds ominous notes about rapidly declining populations of monarchs and polar bears; she describes efforts to create safer crossings over paved roads for migratory snakes and amphibians ("herptiles") in Illinois' Shawnee National Forest and migration corridors through fenced-in land for pronghorn antelopes in Wyoming and elsewhere. Along with maps and photos aplenty, she tucks in kid-friendly factual snippets about each creature, as well as specific locations where each can be observed on its habitual round. Though many of the photographs go uncaptioned and so add little beyond eye candy, this broad and breezy overview will stimulate young animal lovers' "need to read" about one of the natural world's behavioral wonders.
Budding biologists who have taken first steps with the likes of Marianne Bertes' Going Home: The Mysteries of Animal Migration, illustrated by Jennifer DiRubbio (2010), will find themselves drawn further down that road.
-Kirkus Reviews
Ranger Rick, the National Wildlife Federation's nature-loving raccoon and magazine star, helps children follow the migratory paths of nine animals across land, sea, and sky. A section on "herptiles" (reptiles and amphibians) takes readers to southern Illinois where some 50 species of snakes and amphibians migrate across "Snake Road" each spring and autumn; a segment about grey whales traces their 10,000-mile journey from Alaska to Mexico, "one of the world's longest animal migrations." Photographs, migration maps, and resources for readers who hope to witness firsthand some of these migrations round out a solid introduction to some impressive feats of animal ambulation.
-Publishers Weekly
This well-researched effort, crowded with photos, maps, and text boxes, introduces the migratory habits of a dozen (mostly) North American animals. O'Sullivan explores migration by land (examining snakes, pronghorns, bison, and polar bears), by sea (salmon, manatees, and gray whales), and by sky (cranes and monarch butterflies). In addition to a few pages of general information, each entry contains some "Quick Facts" (the animal's range, how many miles it travels, which season it journeys), material on ways in which people are working to protect the species in question, maps of migration paths, and a list of resources for observing these creatures in the wild. The writing is accessible, while the layout is busy yet attractive. The book ends with an extensive index and suggested sites for further study. VERDICT A fine overview of the topic; ideal for researchers and browsers.
*-School Library Journal 
Autorentext
Joanne O'Sullivan (Author)
Klappentext
From whales to manatees, pronghorn antelopes to monarch butterflies,
travel along with North American animals as they make the trip of a lifetime.
Follow the paths of nine very different types of animals, exploring how and why they take their road trips and the challenges they face along the way. Snakes slither along Southern Ilinois's Snake Road. Gray Whales swim down the California coast to Baja in Mexico and sandhill cranes wing their way through the midwest. Along the way, these animals on-the-go mate, molt and munch in really uni…