Tag: nonfiction science picture books (Page 7 of 7)

Handle with Care: Story of a Butterfly Farm

Several exciting new science and nature-related picture books are coming out this spring. Frankly it was hard to decide which to share first, but today let’s start with Handle With Care: An Unusual Butterfly Journey (Junior Library Guild Selection) by Loree Griffin Burns and with photographs by Ellen Harasimowicz.

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Have you ever visited one of the many butterfly exhibits that seem to be popping up all over? The ones that allow you to enter a greenhouse or pavilion full of live butterflies?

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Sara longwing

Isn’t it a magical experience?

Have you ever wondered where all those colorful butterflies come from? Handle with Care answers that question.

It turns out it is an amazing journey. The book starts with a mysterious foil-covered package that arrives at the Butterfly Garden at the Museum of Science in Boston. Inside the box are nestled brightly colored pupae that will soon turn into butterflies for the exhibit. The package came from a butterfly farm far away in Costa Rica.

Author Loree Griffin Burns and photographer Ellen Harasimowicz traveled to the farm to research the story of how butterflies are raised. They found out that captive butterflies are mass raised like any other livestock, except they live in large greenhouses instead of in a pasture. Readers will likely enjoy the amazing photographs of the process and the people who make it happen.

Related activities:

1. Take a trip to a butterfly exhibit

Handle with Care is very likely to inspire a trip to a butterfly exhibit. Here in Arizona we have seasonal butterfly exhibitions at the Desert Botanical Garden in Phoenix and at the Tucson Botanical Garden, as well as Butterfly Wonderland year round in Scottsdale.

I hadn’t been to the newly-opened Butterfly Wonderland, so I went this weekend.

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It was a photographer’s dream.

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If you go, encourage your children to bring a camera, if allowed. Photographs are great ways to record the different kinds of butterflies and learn their names. Keep a digital or physical scrapbook to record your trip.

I found out that Butterfly Wonderland gets their butterflies from South America, Africa and all the way from Asia!

If you can’t get to a butterfly exhibit in person, the Florida Museum’s Butterfly Rainforest has a live feeding station webcam, rainforest canopy cam, and a chrysalis cam so you can watch the butterflies feed, fly and emerge in real time.

Before you go on a field trip note:  Even though butterflies are for the most part innocuous, be aware that some children (and adults) may fear or have a phobia about insects, including butterflies.

2. Learn about butterfly life cycles/metamorphosis

Children can explore the butterfly life cycle through the book, with photographs of all the stages and a complete description in the back, plus comparisons to the life cycles of some other insects.

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Butterflies lay their eggs on the leaves of the plants the caterpillars feed on.

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The larval stage of butterflies, or caterpillars,  feed on plants, often only one or a few kinds.

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The pupal stage for butterflies are often called chrysalids. The butterfly exhibits receive pupae for butterfly farms.

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Some of the pupae are incredibly beautiful.

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Many butterfly exhibits have an area where you can observe the adult butterflies emerge from the pupae.

See a related post about butterfly science

3. Butterfly behaviors

Butterfly exhibits and gardens are wonderful places to observe butterfly behaviors, such as basking, feeding, perching, puddling, and patrolling.

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This postman butterfly is basking on a part of a sidewalk warmed by the sun. If it is cool out, it is not uncommon to see butterflies basking, particularly first thing in the morning.

at-top Cethosia biblis perakana (male)Butterfly exhibits offer many opportunities to watch butterflies feeding on various sweet solutions. This is a colorful butterfly feeder.

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If you look closely, you may be able to see a butterfly using its proboscis to drink nectar from a flower.

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Sometimes the butterflies appear to rest on plants, but often it is their way to “see and be seen,” especially by rivals and potential mates. This behavior is called perching.

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It would be easy to miss this tiny clearwing butterfly. It is puddling on a leaf by inserting its proboscis into a wet clump of dirt. Butterflies, particularly males, are thought to take up important minerals and nutrients this way. The behavior is called puddling because it is often observed around damp patches or puddles on the ground.

Male butterflies may actively fly around looking for mates or even guard territories against rival males. Patrolling isn’t as easy to document via photographs, so here is an enchanting video showing an admiral butterfly patrolling. (Note: there is a pop-up ad.)

 

Handle With Care: An Unusual Butterfly Journey (Junior Library Guild Selection) is a lovely book for youngsters that will surely inspire a trip to a butterfly exhibit. You will want to use it to accompany units on life cycles, farming, and insects, as well. Read it and watch children’s imaginations take flight!

Age Range: 6 – 10
Series: Junior Library Guild Selection (Millbrook Press)
Library Binding: 32 pages
Publisher: Millbrook Pr Trade (January 1, 2014)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 0761393420
ISBN-13: 978-0761393429

Disclosures: The book was provided electronically for review via NetGalley. I am an affiliate with Amazon so I can provide you with cover images and links to more information about books and products. As you probably are aware, if you click through the highlighted title link and purchase a product, I will receive a very small commission, at not extra cost to you. Any proceeds help defray the costs of hosting and maintaining this website.

If you are interested in children’s nonfiction, you might want to visit the Nonfiction Monday blog and see what other new books bloggers have found.

nonfictionmonday

Science Picture Books For Kids 2012

Are you looking for some top-notch science picture books for kids? I have generated a list of some of the best from titles nominated in the Cybils nonfiction picture book category and from the National Science Teacher’s Association 2012 trade book list.

“My review” links take you to full reviews of the books at Wrapped In Foil blog, many with suggestions for hands-on activities. “Related science activities” links take you to posts here at Growing With Science, often inspired by the book. Linked titles go to Amazon for further information.

We’re hosting STEM Friday this Friday, so look for more about science books for kids all week!

Check out these 2012 Science Picture Books:


A Leaf Can Be . . . (Millbrook Picture Books)
with poetic text by Laura Purdie Salas and breathtaking illustrations by Violeta Dabija

My review

Related science activities

Life in the Ocean: The Story of Oceanographer Sylvia Earle by Claire A. Nivola

My review

A Place for Bats
by Melissa Stewart and illustrated by Higgins Bond
Awesome Autumn by Bruce Goldstone

My review

Related science activities

Nic Bishop Snakes
by Nic Bishop
Related science activities

and more related science activities

A Rock Is Lively
by Dianna Hutts Aston and illustrated by Sylvia Long

Also by Dianna Hutts Aston and illustrated by Sylvia Long:

A Butterfly Is Patient

My review

Related Science activities

Plant a Little Seed
by Bonnie Christensen
Can We Save the Tiger? by Martin Jenkins and illustrated by Vicky White

My review

The Boy Who Harnessed the Wind: Young Readers Edition by William Kamkwamba and Bryan Mealer and illustrated by Elizabeth Zunon

My review

Related science activities

The Story of Silk: From Worm Spit to Woven Scarves (Traveling Photographer)
by Richard Sobol (Traveling Photographer)

My review

Note:  although this looks like a picture book, the text is more like a chapter book.

Polar Bears, Penguins, and Other Mysterious Animals of the Extreme Cold (Extreme Animals in Extreme Environments) by Ana Maria Rodriguez
Let's not forget Bird Talk: What Birds Are Saying and Whyby Lita Judge

and the other recent children’s books about birds from earlier this month

Eggs 1, 2, 3: Who Will the Babies Be?
by Janet Halfmann and illustrated by Betsy Thompson

Also by Janet Halfmann:

Little Black Ant on Park Street (Smithsonian's Backyard Collection)

See my review

North: The Amazing Story of Arctic Migration by Nick Dowson and illustrated by Patrick Benson
For the Birds: The Life of Roger Tory Peterson by Peggy Thomas and illustrated by Laura Jacques
Island: A Story of the Galápagos by Jason Chin

My Review

Also by Jason Chin
Coral Reefs

My review of Coral Reefs

The Honeybee Man by Lela Nargi and illustrated by Kyrsten Brooker

Edit: Now there’s a list of 2012 science books for middle grade children as well.

Science Picture Books From Cybils

Have you been over to visit the Cybils nomination lists yet? cybils2010

What are Cybils? The acronym stands for children’s and young adult bloggers literary awards. Bloggers who specialize in children’s and young adult books have developed the Cybils awards to highlight some of the best books published in the previous year. Back in September people nominated their favorite books by genre. Now the judges are reading and reviewing all the books to pick one winner from each category.  Although there is a lot of excitement about which books will be chosen as the best, going through the nomination lists is also a great way to find interesting new things to read.

To save you some time, I went through the list of nominated nonfiction books in the picture book category and selected some science and nature books that you might find useful. (By the way, once again I am a round II judge for nonfiction picture book category.) Soon I’ll tackle the middle grade/young adult books.

Nonfiction Picture Books – Science and Nature
(The titles are linked to take you to Amazon for more information)

 Pop!: The Invention of Bubble Gum by Meghan McCarthy
Never Smile at a Monkey: And 17 Other Important Things to Remember

By Steve Jenkins

Moon Bear by Brenda Z. Guiberson
Hurricanes! by Gail Gibbons

We love Gail Gibbons, see my brief bio for more about her.

Bugs and Bugsicles: Insects in the Winter by Amy S. Hansen

See my review

Astro: The Steller Sea Lion by Jeanne Walker Harvey

See my review

Little Black Ant on Park Street (Smithsonian's Backyard Collection)

by Janet Halfmann

See my review

Growing Patterns
by Sarah Campbell
 Little Red Bat by Carole Gerber
Insect Detective by Steve Voake
A Place for Frogs
by Melissa Stewart
Bones by Steve Jenkins
Kingdom: Savage Safari
by Nam Nguyen
Meet the Howlers! by April Pulley Sayre
Mammoths and Mastodons: Titans of the Ice Age by Cheryl Bardoe

See my review

Changing of the Guard: The Yellowstone Chronicles by Ted Rechlin
Come See the Earth Turn By Lori Mortensen

The Story of Leon Foucault

Dinosaur Mountain: Digging into the Jurassic Age by Deborah Kogan Ray
EcoMazes: 12 Earth Adventures
by Roxie Munro
The Shocking Truth About Energy
By Loreen Leedy
The Life of Rice: From Seedling to Supper (Traveling Photographer)

By Richard Sobol

The Buzz on Bees: Why Are They Disappearing?
by Shelley Rotner
Summer Birds: The Butterflies of Maria Merian by Margarita Engle

Maria Merian was an incredible woman.

Yucky Worms by Vivian French

More Cybils nominees about science and nature:

Have you read any of these books? Do you have any suggestions?

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