Gr 1-4 Large, colorful photographs of plants and animals in attractive layouts create visually striking glimpses of life in various biomes. Unfortunately, visual appeal cannot compensate for the confusing presentations about the elements of a food chain. To some extent, Riggs makes it seem as though the relationships form a single continuous cycle that can be easily explained. In "Rainforests", for example, cacao leaves are eaten by leafcutter ants, which are eaten by a silky anteater, which is eaten by a boa, which is eaten by a jaguar. After the jaguar dies, nutrients from its body will replenish the earth and help nourish the cacao tree. How then do the depicted piranhas, orchids, quetzal, and poison dart frogs fit into this scheme? Why does a gorilla from a different continent appear? Similar problems plague the other volumes. "Deserts" seems to concentrate on the United States Southwest until a camel wanders across a landscape. No diagrams of a food chain or food web appear in the books to help explain the topic and alleviate confusion. Striking design is not enough to warrant purchase."Kathy Piehl, Minnesota State University, Mankato" Copyright 2010 Media Source Inc.
Eye-catching photos illustrate these introductory books on food chains. Each volume features key examples from the ecosystem (e.g., in Rainforests, a jaguar eats a boa constrictor); however, occasional unexplained creatures (e.g., piranhas in the same volume with no mention of rainforest bodies of water) confuse the issue. The use of different colors for new sentences might help early readers, but it's mostly distracting. Reading list. Glos., ind. Review covers these Food for Life titles: Deserts, Mountains, Oceans, and Rainforests.
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