Whistling Thorn

by Helen Cowcher

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Description

Explains how the acacia evolved its own protection against browsing animals and helped create a balanced natural environment.

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4 reviews
A very interesting story. Great for teaching children about how different parts of nature survive, and find ways to survive. The pictures stay in tune with the quiet nature of the African plains. You actually feel like you are there watching the story play out.
A simple, but effective tale of how acacia bushes in Africa evolved to have thorns that house ants that annoy giraffes when they're feeding and thus keep them from eating too many leaves from one bush at a time. So how the acacia bush learned to protect itself, or, rather, how a balance was achieved between the acacia bushes and the giraffes. (Also mentions rhinoceroses as eaters of acacia bushes, but not ones that eat enough at one time to harm a bush, hence no protection was needed against them.)

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8+ Works 2,897 Members

Classifications

Genres
Children's Books, Picture Books
DDC/MDS
583.321Natural sciences & mathematicsPlants (Botany)Eudicots and CeratophyllalesRosalesLeguminosæ
LCC
QK495 .M545 .C68ScienceBotanyBotanySpermatophyta. PhanerogamsAngiosperms

Statistics

Members
95
Popularity
330,777
Reviews
3
Rating
½ (3.50)
Languages
Afrikaans, Bengali, English, Turkish
Media
Paper
ISBNs
14
ASINs
1