Fr. 10.90

Save the...Elephants

Inglese · Tascabile

Spedizione di solito entro 1 a 3 settimane (non disponibile a breve termine)

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Informationen zum Autor Sarah L. Thomson and Chelsea Clinton Klappentext "Did you know that elephants can't jump? How about that no two elephants have ears that are exactly alike? Or that elephants all walk on tiptoe? Perfect for all animal lovers--and elephant fans in particular--this book is filled with information that young readers will love to learn. From where elephant habitats are found to what it's like to be an elephant to why elephants are endangered and who has been working hard to save them, this book gives readers all the facts they know to become elephant experts"-- Leseprobe 1 Jungles, Grasslands, and Temples:    Where Elephants Live An elephant isn’t hard to spot. It’s the biggest animal that lives on land. If you’re going to look for one, you’d better head to the grasslands or forests of Africa or to the jungles of Southeast Asia.You’ll find a different kind, or species, of elephant in each place. Elephants in Africa Once there were elephants in all of Africa south of the Sahara. Today elephants live in only thirty-seven of Africa’s fifty-­four countries, as far north as Mali and as far south as the nation of South Africa. Elephant habitats, or the places they can safely live, have shrunk in half over the last forty years. You can tell an African elephant by its flapping ears—­they are shaped a little like the continent of Africa itself. And if you get close enough to peer at its trunk, you’ll see that the African elephant has two flexible parts on the end. It can use these just like you use a finger and a thumb—­to pick up something small. African savanna elephants are the biggest elephants around. They’re also called bush elephants, and they can be ten or even thirteen feet tall at the shoulder, and their heads are higher still! The biggest ones weigh around seven tons. That’s about as much as three pickup trucks. African forest elephants are a little smaller. They weigh about five and a half tons, a little more than two pickup trucks. Being about the same weight as a Tyrannosaurus rex has some advantages for an animal like an elephant. There aren’t many predators who want to tackle a seven-­ton animal. At a water hole or a lake, other animals make way. If the elephant spots some leaves at the very top of a tree that would be out of reach for most? No problem—­it can stretch its trunk and snatch those leaves up. But there is one problem with being so big. Elephants need to eat a lot , around 300 pounds of food a day. (If you had an elephant’s appetite, you could eat about 330 apples for breakfast, 400 hot dogs for lunch, and 400 plates of spaghetti for dinner—­and then do that all again the next day.) Eating is pretty much an elephant’s full-­time job. It can spend sixteen hours a day munching food. So the right habitat for an elephant must have a lot of food available. What kind of food? Plants. Elephants are herbivores. They do not eat meat. To get enough food, elephants need to live somewhere warm where plants can grow all year round. The best habitat for an elephant is around ninety-­five degrees Fahrenheit most of the time. An African forest elephant spends its time in rain forests, eating leaves, fruits, seeds, branches, and bark. The forest trees and bushes provide all the food that this elephant needs. An African savanna elephant eats grass, leaves, bark, and sometimes even trees that aren’t too big. They’ll eat fruit, flowers, and nuts as well. These elephants may live in forests, and they can also be found in deserts. (Even in a desert, elephants can find enough food. Desert elephants often prefer to eat grass during the rainy season and trees when it’s dry.) Many savanna elephants live on wide, grassy plains called—­you guessed it—­savannas. There they wander, sometimes for hundreds of miles a year, eating as they go. <...

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Autori Chelsea Clinton, Sarah L Thomson, Sarah L. Thomson
Editore Philomel Books
 
Lingue Inglese
Raccomandazione d'eta' 6 a 9 anni
Formato Tascabile
Pubblicazione 13.09.2022
 
EAN 9780593404249
ISBN 978-0-593-40424-9
Pagine 96
Dimensioni 135 mm x 194 mm x 7 mm
Serie Save the...
Categoria Libri per bambini e per ragazzi > Saggi / saggi illustrati > Animali, piante, natura, ambiente

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