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Extremely Gross Animals

Stinky, Slimy and Strange Animal Adaptations​

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

It's survival of the grossest kind!

Snot. Vomit. Spit. Poop. Everyone knows these are gross, right? Well, for some animals, they're crucial ingredients for survival! This book explores more than 30 of these animals and their grossest of the gross habits, from dung beetles who live for feces, to hagfish who cover themselves in gooey slime to escape predators, to bullfrogs who puke up their entire stomachs for cleaning purposes. It's all so icky. And so awfully interesting!

Kids will need to hold their noses before diving into this one! (Barf bags not included.)

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    • Kirkus

      May 15, 2021
      From poop-eating dung beetles to wasp larvae in zombified worms, animals survive and thrive in ways humans may find gross. After reminding her readers that definitions of gross can be cultural as well as innate, Eamer digs right into her disgusting subject, framing her examples to show how what appears to us as distasteful can serve as an animal's survival skill. Spread by spread she shows how a wide variety of animals might eat, use, or mimic poop, slime and snot, spit, and bad smells. She introduces creatures that discard parts of their bodies and others that attach themselves to and use others' bodies. Each page opens with an amusing headline, the narrative text describing examples in two or three short sections, each also with a header. The lively design includes captioned stock photographs, often annotated with comments. A fulmar chick vomits a smelly red oil, and the speech bubble says "Blech!" The discarded tails of chameleon geckos squeak. In some cases, such as the ability of velvet worms to spit glue, animal skills have inspired scientific research and practical applications in the human world. Readers are reminded that scientists must move beyond the grossness and ask further questions. There's plenty of factual information here, but the appeal is the eww factor. Perfect for middle-grade fans of Jess Keating's Gross as a Snot Otter (2019). (This book was reviewed digitally.) Put this on your middle-grade menu. (glossary, sources, index) (Nonfiction. 7-10)

      COPYRIGHT(2021) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • The Horn Book

      January 1, 2021
      The table of contents gives readers a taste (ew) of what's in store: poop, mucus, spit, gas, and more. Eamer goes beyond the gross hook, however, explaining in an introduction, "Many of these animals actually survive on revolting substances and thrive on gross habits." A lively and accessible page design includes close-up photos, text boxes, and design elements to up the ick-factor. Eamer's detailed text strikes the right balance between intriguingly disgusting facts (hagfish produce slime "by the bucketful in less than a second") and solid information (scientists are looking at using "hagfish slime as a natural replacement for petroleum-based fibers"). "Some gross extras," a glossary, selected sources, and an index conclude this well-organized offering.

      (Copyright 2021 by The Horn Book, Incorporated, Boston. All rights reserved.)

Formats

  • OverDrive Read

Languages

  • English

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