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Michelle Lord - Nature Recycles-How About You?

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Michelle Lord Nature Recycles-How About You?
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    Nature Recycles-How About You?
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    Arbordale Publishing
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    2013
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Nature Recycles-How About You?: summary, description and annotation

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From sea urchins in the Atlantic Ocean to bandicoots on the Australian savanna, animals recycle all over the world. Explore how different animals in different habitats use recycled material to build homes, protect themselves, and get food. This fascinating collection of animal facts will teach readers about the importance of recycling and inspire them to take part in protecting and conserving the environment by recycling in their own way. This nonfiction picture book with a cuddle factor includes a 4-page For Creative Minds section in the back of the book and a 50-page cross-curricular Teaching Activity Guide online. Nature Recycles-How About You? is vetted by experts and designed to encourage parental engagement. Its extensive back matter helps teachers with time-saving lesson ideas, provides extensions for science, math, and social studies units, and uses inquiry-based learning to help build critical thinking skills in young readers. The Spanish translation supports ELL and dual-language programs. The interactive ebook reads aloud in both English and Spanish with word highlighting and audio speed control to promote oral language skills, fluency, pronunciation, text engagement, and reading comprehension. Written in clear, lively prose, Nature Recycles is an ideal book to introduce recycling. - School Library Journal

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Table of Contents
Read To Me - photo 1

Read To Me

The decorator sea urchin lives in the Atlantic Ocean The water is warm - photo 2
The decorator sea urchin lives in the Atlantic Ocean The water is warm - photo 3
,
The decorator sea urchin lives in the Atlantic Ocean The water is warm but he - photo 4

The decorator sea urchin lives in the Atlantic Ocean. The water is warm, but he covers up. Urchin wears colorful algae, rocks, or coral. He wears ocean refuse like old oyster shells. These coverings protect him from rough waves and from the suns strong rays. The decorations might even help the urchin hide from predators. He looks ready for a party dressed in his recycled green and pink outfit.

Urchin recycles How about you The hermit crab cannot grow his own - photo 5
Urchin recycles.
How about you?
The hermit crab cannot grow his own shell He finds a sea snails shell in the - photo 6
The hermit crab cannot grow his own shell. He finds a sea snails shell in the sand. He makes it his new home. The shell protects his soft body from predators. When he outgrows it, he will search for a larger home.
Hermit crab helps keep the earth beautiful too. He cleans the shore by eating rotting ocean debris. The beach would be a mess without him.
Crab recycles How about you Tea-kettle Tea-kettle the Carolina - photo 7
Crab recycles.
How about you?
Tea-kettle Tea-kettle the Carolina wren sings In April the female lays - photo 8

Tea-kettle.Tea-kettle, the Carolina wren sings. In April, the female lays five eggs in Dads old boot. The wren and her mate gathered twigs, spider webs, leaves, trash, and snakeskin. They built a cozy nest from these discarded materials. They used feathers and dog hair too. This made a warm bed for their eggs.

Wren recycles How about you Yip Yip Yip In the hot Sonoran - photo 9
Wren recycles.
How about you?
Yip Yip Yip In the hot Sonoran Desert an elf owl searches for a place - photo 10

Yip.Yip.Yip. In the hot Sonoran Desert, an elf owl searches for a place to nest. Her yellow eyes spot an old woodpecker hole in the hundred-year-old saguaro cactus. She reuses this abandoned hole. This recycled hollow is a safe home for her and her three chicks.

Owl recycles How about you A veined octopus lives in the Indian Ocean - photo 11
Owl recycles.
How about you?
A veined octopus lives in the Indian Ocean He explores the ocean floor - photo 12

A veined octopus lives in the Indian Ocean. He explores the ocean floor. Octopus finds empty coconut halves. He carries the coconut halves for later use. Poof! When the octopus senses trouble, he claps the coconut together and hides inside.

Octopus recycles How about you Splash Smash Waves crash around - photo 13
Octopus recycles.
How about you?
Splash Smash Waves crash around the Galapagos Islands Up in the branches - photo 14

Splash!Smash! Waves crash around the Galapagos Islands. Up in the branches, the woodpecker finchs short tongue cannot reach his food. This bird uses a discarded cactus spine. The spine was a perch, but now it is
a tool that can be used again and again. He holds the tool in his beak. He plucks out a juicy grub. Dinnertime!

Finch recycles How about you The strong smell of manure fills the air - photo 15
Finch recycles.
How about you?
The strong smell of manure fills the air A shiny dung beetle rolls rhino poop - photo 16

The strong smell of manure fills the air. A shiny dung beetle rolls rhino poop into a ball. The beetle eats the waste of grass-eating animals. It uses
the waste in its burrow to feed its hatchlings. The beetle reduces the amount of dung in grasslands. By returning the nutrients to the soil, this recycling process is good for the earth.

Beetle recycles How about you Sizzle Scorch A huge tower bakes - photo 17
Beetle recycles.
How about you?
Sizzle Scorch A huge tower bakes on the hot savanna Sand and dead plants - photo 18

Sizzle.Scorch. A huge tower bakes on the hot savanna. Sand and dead plants are turned into
a new nest by some mound-building termites. When they abandon their mound; snakes, birds, or mammals move in. These animals recycle the mound too. They use it as a shelter of their own.

Termites recycle How about you Water rushes down the stream Here a - photo 19
Termites recycle.
How about you?
Water rushes down the stream Here a caddisfly larva builds a case around - photo 20

Water rushes down the stream. Here, a caddisfly larva builds a case around itself. Instead of brick or log walls, it recycles small pebbles, sand, or other discarded river items. Homemade glue sticks it all together. The larvas little stone house protects it from hungry trout. Larva helps keep the river clean too. It eats dead leaves and debris.

Larva recycles How about you Drip Drip Drop Deep in the - photo 21
Larva recycles.
How about you?
Drip Drip Drop Deep in the rainforest a bromeliad plant fills with - photo 22

Drip.Drip.Drop. Deep in the rainforest, a bromeliad plant fills with rain. The poison dart frog carries his babies on his back. He looks for a home for his tadpoles. He drops each tadpole into its own water-filled bromeliad leaf or even a Brazil nut pod tossed out by a blue and gold macaw. The tiny father feeds them until they grow into froglets. Frog reuses leaves and

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