Mammal Mania: 30 Activities and Observations for Exploring the World of Mammals
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About this ebook
This full-color book of marvelous mammals?provides 30 hands-on activities to give interested children an overview of the wide varieties of mammals in their world
How big is a blue whale? Why does a sloth crawl from the safety of a tree to the ground once a week? How does a vampire bat feed?
Young nature enthusiasts will find answers to these questions and learn all sorts of fascinating facts about mammals in this full-color, interactive book. Mammal Mania explores what makes mammals unique, as well as their anatomy, behavior, and conservation needs.
Readers will learn to build a squirrel feeder, write a putrid poem, make an animal tracking station, and much more.
Thirty hands-on activities promote observation and analysis, writing and drawing, math and science, and nature literacy skills.
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Young Naturalists is a kid-friendly series that introduces zoology and botany for upper elementary and middle-grades readers.
Lisa J. Amstutz
Lisa J. Amstutz is the author of more than 80 children's books. Her work has also appeared in a wide variety of magazines and newspapers. A former outdoor educator, Lisa specializes in topics related to science, nature, and agriculture. Her background includes a B.A. in Biology from Goshen College and an M.S. in Environmental Science/Ecology from the University of Virginia. Lisa lives with her family on a hobby farm in rural Ohio.
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Book preview
Mammal Mania - Lisa J. Amstutz
OTHER TITLES IN THE YOUNG NATURALISTS SERIES
Amazing Amphibians: 30 Activities and Obeservations for Exploring Frogs, Toads, Salamanders, and More
Awesome Snake Science! 40 Activities for Learning About Snakes
Birdology: 30 Activities and Observations for Exploring the World of Birds
Insectigations: 40 Hands-on Activities to Explore the Insect World
Plantology: 30 Activities and Observations for Exploring the World of Plants
Treecology: 30 Activities and Observations for Exploring the World of Trees and Forests
Book Title of Mammal ManiaCopyright © 2021 by Lisa J. Amstutz
All rights reserved
First edition
Published by Chicago Review Press Incorporated
814 North Franklin Street
Chicago, Illinois 60610
ISBN 978-1-64160-436-9
Library of Congress Control Number: 2020952455
Cover design: Jonathan Hahn
Cover photos: FRONT: giraffe, Melanie van de Sande/Pixabay; squirrel, Gilles Gonthier/Flickr; sloth, Stefan Laube (Tauchgurke)/Wikimedia Commons; dolphins, Pexels/Pixabay. BACK: elephant, laurentmarx/Pixabay; service dog, Found Animals Foundation/Flickr.
Interior design: Sarah Olson
Interior illustrations: Jim Spence
Printed in the United States of America
5 4 3 2 1
To those who will inherit this marvelous Earth
Alexas_Fotos/Pixabay
Contents
Acknowledgments
Introduction
1:What Is a Mammal?
Try This! The Great Stuff Sort
Try This! In Cold Blood
Try This! Make a Mammal-Watching Kit
2:Meet the Mammals
Try This! Eat Like a Whale
Try This! Sending Sound Waves
Try This! Using a Dichotomous Key
3:Parts of a Mammal
Look For: Take a Night Hike
Listen For: Put on Your Deer Ears
Try This! Build Like a Beaver
4:Home Sweet Home
Try This! Warm as a Whale
Try This! Watch ’Em Sweat
Try This! Following the Clues
5:Mammals Munch
Try This! Fridge Food Chain
Try This! Become a Tooth Sleuth
Try This! Find a Food Chain
6:The Web of Life
Try This! Why Are Polar Bears White?
Try This! Write a Putrid Poem
Look For: Make a Tracking Station
7:Life Goes On
Try This! Follow Your Nose
Look For: Be a Mammal Detective
Try This! A Day in the Life
8:Mammal Chat
Try This! Talk Like a Bat
Listen For: Make a Sound Map
Listen For: Underwater Sounds
9:Working with Mammals
Try This! Write to an Animal Scientist
Try This! Mammals in the News
Try This! Write a Mammal Song
10:How You Can Help
Try This! Research an Endangered Mammal
Try This! Make a Squirrel Feeder
Try This! Learn About Your State Mammal
Glossary
Orders of Mammals
Online Resources
Teacher’s Guide
Bibliography
A pair of dolphins surface. Pexels/Pixabay
Acknowledgments
Iam so grateful for the love and support of my husband and kids, who continually inspire me. Huge thanks to my critique partners for their encouragement and thoughtful feedback, and to Dr. Lisa L. Walsh for sharing her scientific expertise. And finally, many thanks to Victoria Selvaggio for her ongoing support and friendship and to editor Jerome Pohlen, who brought this book to life.
A herd of elephants in Kenya. Rick Bergstrom/Flickr
Introduction
If you want to see a mammal up close and personal, take a look in the mirror! While we don’t often think of ourselves as animals, humans are classified as mammals and have many things in common with other animals in this group. Of course, we have some important differences that set us apart, too.
Mammals live almost everywhere on Earth—from the icy waters of Antarctica to the scorching desert sands. They can be as small as a bumblebee or as big as an airplane. Some mammals, such as cats and dogs, make good pets. Others help humans do work. Horses and oxen can pull plows; dogs can help people with disabilities, herd sheep, or sniff out bombs.
These fascinating creatures are also important parts of ecosystems and food chains. Some eat plants, and others eat animals. Some pollinate plants. Many provide food for other animals, including humans. Hamburgers, yogurt, cheese, bacon, and ham all come from mammals—do you know which ones?
While mammals have been studied more closely than many groups, we still have much to learn about them. New high-tech tools are helping scientists study how mammals are related to each other and how they live—and even how their ancestors lived. These tools can also show us how to help mammals that are threatened by diseases, pollution, and habitat loss. Scientists and conservationists are working hard to find ways to protect endangered species before it is too late.
In this book, you’ll find lots of fascinating facts about mammals. Each chapter includes three activities to help you discover more. It can be difficult to identify mammal species, and there are too many to include them all here. But you will learn how to study them carefully and observe their differences.
It’s fun to go looking for mammals, but always tell an adult where you are going. You don’t need to go far—you can probably find mammals or signs of mammals in your local park or even your backyard. Look for burrows or tunnels in the ground, and check trees for squirrels or other mammals that sleep or nest there. Morning and evening are good times to look for animals such as deer, rabbits, bats, and raccoons, which are active when the light is dim. Also look for tracks, pieces of fur, claw marks on trees, and scat (animal poop).
IMPORTANT! If you see a wild mammal, no matter how cute and cuddly it looks, do not touch it. Wild animals may bite if they are frightened or cornered. Some can carry disease as well. If you find an injured animal, ask an adult to help you contact your local wildlife rehabilitation center.
A sea lion is a marine mammal. oliver.dodd/Flickr
1
What Is a Mammal?
Ch-ch-ch-ch-ch. A squirrel chatters in a tree. A robin gathers twigs to build its nest. A garter snake slithers by. All of these are animals, but only one of them is a mammal. Can you guess which one? If you guessed the squirrel, you are correct! A robin is a bird, and a garter snake is a reptile.
Mammals come in many shapes and sizes. Whales are mammals, and so are mice. These animals look very different. One is big and one is small. One lives in water and the other on land. One has no legs; the other has four. Yet despite their differences, they have some key things in common. In this chapter, you will explore what makes a mammal a mammal—and not a bird, fish, reptile, insect, or amphibian.
Squirrel. Gilles Gonthier/Flickr
Robin. Kristof vt/Wikimedia Commons
Garter snake. Steve Jurvetson/Wikimedia Commons
Linnaeus’s Big Idea
For thousands of years, scientists did not have a good way to sort living things into groups. This made it hard to record and study them. People tried many different systems. Then, in the 1700s, a Swedish scientist named Carl Linnaeus came along. Linnaeus loved to study plants. He wanted to organize his plant collection. So, he came up with a plan. This turned into a whole new way of classifying all living things.
Linnaeus’s big idea was to group things based on what they had in common. He first divided them into big groups called kingdoms. Linnaeus had three kingdoms: plants, animals, and stones. Today, most scientists use six kingdoms. These kingdoms only include living things, not rocks. Scientists have other ways to categorize those.
Each kingdom is divided into smaller and more specialized groups: kingdom, phylum, class, order, family, genus, and species. As the groups get smaller, their members become more and more alike. For instance, a class is a fairly large group within a kingdom. The mammals have their own class: Mammalia. They are different from birds, amphibians, reptiles, insects, or fish. But mammals can be very different from one another.
A weasel and a walrus are mammals that belong to the same order (Carnivora), which is named after the many meat-eating animals in the group. But they don’t have much else in common! Lions and tigers, on the other hand, belong to the same order (Carnivora), family (Felidae), and genus (Panthera). Animals in the same genus are closely related. These big cats look and act in similar ways. Members of the same species—two snow leopards, for example—are as alike as two animals can be. They can breed with one another and make more animals of the same species.
Not everyone liked Linnaeus’s ideas about grouping living things at first. They preferred their own ways of doing things. But as his students traveled the world and passed his ideas on, eventually the naming system caught on. And although some