|
![]() |
|||
|
||||
OverviewA small fly buzzes around a plant with beautiful white flowers looking for a sweet snack of nectar. Slowly, the fly finds what it wants, and lands on the plant's bright red leaves. Suddenly, as the fly enjoys its meal, the leaf snaps shut. The fly is trapped. The fly didn't realize it had landed on a meat-eating plant. Can you believe there are plants that eat insects? Some can even trap small rodents and frogs. Author Nathan Aaseng tells your readers all about these amazing meat-eating plants, from how they trap their prey to what they like for dinner. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Nathan AasengPublisher: Enslow Publishing Imprint: Enslow Publishing Dimensions: Width: 19.50cm , Height: 0.80cm , Length: 23.20cm Weight: 0.277kg ISBN: 9780766036727ISBN 10: 0766036723 Pages: 48 Publication Date: 16 January 2011 Recommended Age: From 10 to 14 years Audience: Children/juvenile , Children / Juvenile Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print ![]() This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of ContentsReviewsThis book answers the urban myth about whether giant, people-eating plants exist and how they devour their prey. Over 600 carnivorous plants survive in moist and acid soil around the world including the popular Venus-flytrap. The three categories of plant consumption include flypaper, pitfall, and trigger, from plants, fungi, grass, and seeds. The reader may want to read the last chapter first because it contains the foundation of these species. Although the book gives the illusion of being a simple picture book, each topic turns denser, using long and complex sentences to provide accurate and descriptive information that encourages readers to discover plants on their own. Though few and far between, the dynamic photographs with colorful captions allow for a brief break from the daunting text. Generally in science books vocabulary words are boldfaced and defined in the regular text and then redefined in the glossary. The Bizarre Science series does not distinguish these words, so readers do not know when a word is defined in the glossary., Children's Literature This book answers the urban myth about whether giant, people-eating plants exist and how they devour their prey. Over 600 carnivorous plants survive in moist and acid soil around the world including the popular Venus-flytrap. The three categories of plant consumption include flypaper, pitfall, and trigger, from plants, fungi, grass, and seeds. The reader may want to read the last chapter first because it contains the foundation of these species. Although the book gives the illusion of being a simple picture book, each topic turns denser, using long and complex sentences to provide accurate and descriptive information that encourages readers to discover plants on their own. Though few and far between, the dynamic photographs with colorful captions allow for a brief break from the daunting text. Generally in science books vocabulary words are boldfaced and defined in the regular text and then redefined in the glossary. The ""Bizarre Science"" series does not distinguish these words, so readers do not know when a word is defined in the glossary., Children's Literature "This book answers the urban myth about whether giant, people-eating plants exist and how they devour their prey. Over 600 carnivorous plants survive in moist and acid soil around the world including the popular Venus-flytrap. The three categories of plant consumption include flypaper, pitfall, and trigger, from plants, fungi, grass, and seeds. The reader may want to read the last chapter first because it contains the foundation of these species. Although the book gives the illusion of being a simple picture book, each topic turns denser, using long and complex sentences to provide accurate and descriptive information that encourages readers to discover plants on their own. Though few and far between, the dynamic photographs with colorful captions allow for a brief break from the daunting text. Generally in science books vocabulary words are boldfaced and defined in the regular text and then redefined in the glossary. The ""Bizarre Science"" series does not distinguish these words, so readers do not know when a word is defined in the glossary., Children's Literature" Author InformationTab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |