Environmental Science & Ecosystems, Marine Life - General & Miscellaneous, Freshwater & Marine Ecology, Animal Habitats, Ecosystems, Biology - Marine Biology
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Overview
Describes the physical characteristics and ecosystem of a coral reef and how such a habitat may be conserved.Describes the physical characteristics and ecosystem of a coral reef and how such a habitat may be conserved.
Synopsis
You are about to go on an amazing journey. Grab your backpack and your notebook, and come with us to the Great Barrier Reef. Discover where you would find a sea cucumber and the size of a giant clam. Use the map to help you find your way along the longest and most thrilling coral reef in the world. Your field guide will tell you all you need to know about the amazing animals that live among the coral. Learn about the effects human actions have on coral reefs. You will discover why it is important to protect coral reefs.Editorials
School Library Journal
Gr 2-6These colorful books have engaging, informative texts and a pleasing format, but they are not without flaws. As the authors guide adventurers along the Great Barrier Reef or the length of the Mississippi-Missouri rivers, children learn how these ecosystems function and about the plants and animals that inhabit them. The maps give clear, well-ordered overviews of the trips and coordinate page numbers with each section of them. Plentiful, full-color photographs enhance the well-organized information. However, the accompanying illustrations prove a weak point. Errors appear (in Coral Reef, a labeled "cowrie" shows a bonnet shell), as does poor label placement (the illustration of an anemone is almost completely covered by its own label as well as another from an adjacent illustration). Size perspective is confusing (in River a hummingbird appears to be as large as a full-grown alligator's head). The glossary is not always helpful or accurate. Readers are told that filter "means to sieve out" and that parasites are "animals or plants that live in or on other plants or animals." Some children may not understand the word "sieve" any better than "filter" while others may misconstrue that birds living in or on trees are parasites. Serviceable presentations, marked by some missteps.Lisa Wu Stowe, Great Neck Library, NYBook Details
Published
June 28, 2006
Publisher
Heinemann
Pages
32
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9781403487971