• Non-Fiction
  • Flying Frogs and Walking Fish Leaping Lemurs, Tumbling Toads, Jet-Propelled Jellyfish, and More Surprising Ways That Animals Move

Flying Frogs and Walking Fish Leaping Lemurs, Tumbling Toads, Jet-Propelled Jellyfish, and More Surprising Ways That Animals Move

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flying frogs and walking fish

A red-lipped batfish waddles across the sea floor on its fins, searching for small sea creatures to eat. Other animals may fly or glide, or jet-propel themselves to get around. These creatures come equipped with legs, wings, or tentacles, and they often move from place to place in surprising ways. In the latest eye-catching escape into the kingdom of Animalia, Caldecott Honor-winning team Jenkins and Page show how animals roll, fly, walk, leap, climb, swim and even flip! This fascinating and fun illustrated nonfiction melds science, art, biology, and the environment together in a detailed and well-researched book about how animals move in our world today.---from the publisher

40 pages                                    978-0544630901                       Ages 4-7

Keywords:  movement, how things work, anatomy, animals, zoology, information, nonfiction, science, Science Curriculum, biology, 4 year old, 5 year old, 6 year old, 7 year old

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