Poop Eaters

From the Series The Scoop on Poop
Format Price Qty
$19.95

Why do rabbits and guinea pigs feed on their own droppings? How is munching on hyena dung helpful to an African leopard tortoise? And why might you spot scientists carrying buckets of fox poop and dirty diapers into the woods? To humans, eating poop sounds disgusting, but many members of the animal kingdom regularly chow down on poop! This title will engross readers—and gross them out!

Filled with information perfectly suited to the abilities and interests of an early elementary audience, this colorful, fact-filled book gives readers a chance not only to learn, but also to develop their powers of observation and critical thinking. With fascinating photographs and surprising, high-interest facts about a material that we don’t usually read about, the book makes learning about excrement poop-sitively amazing!

Interest Level Kindergarten - Grade 3
Reading Level Grade 2
Copyright 2018
BISACS JNF051050
Genre Nonfiction
Publisher Bearport Publishing
Imprint Bearport Books
Series The Scoop on Poop
Language English
Number of Pages 24
Lexile 860
ISBN 9781684022441
Title Format Reinforced book
Release Date 2017-07-19
Author Ellen Lawrence
Features Activities for further learning, Author/Illustrator biography, Correlations, Glossary of key words, Index, Online learning supplement, Sources for further research, Table of contents
Dewey 591.5
Graphics Full-color photographs
Dimensions 10 x 8
Guided Reading Level P
ATOS Reading Level 4.6
 

Booklist Review for Poop Eaters

This study, one of six in the certain-to-be-popular Scoop on Poop series, begins with the cecotropes that little fuzzy bunnies excrete and then eat, and ends with a truly memorable photo of pooping whales. In between, Lawrence explains why certain animals eat poop: rodents and cassowaries to give nutrients a second pass through their digestive systems, baby elephants to add helpful digestive bacteria from a parent, dung beetles to feed themselves and their offspring, and leopard tortoises to supplement a calcium-poor diet with the ground-up bones in hyena stool. Anatomical diagrams join big, bright, labeled color photos to provide cogent visuals. A closing activity (requiring only paper and colored pencils!) reinforces the theme that it’s all part of nature’s food chain. Science education of the alimentary sort, with large helpings of “gross!”

Author: Ellen Lawrence

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