<p>A beaver slaps its tail on the water to warn other beavers of approaching danger. A mother bat returning to the cave can locate her baby among two or three million other bats by using a special cry. And the male hippopotamus marks his territory by spinning his tail and scattering his dung.<p>Thes
Slap, squeak, & scatter: how animals communicate
- Publisher
- Houghton Mifflin Harcourt
- Year
- 2001
- Category
- Fiction
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
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Anyone who has ever owned a pet or watched animals in the wild or in the zoo knows that animals communicate. What everyone might not know is how and why animals talk to each other. In How Animals Communicate, prizewinning author Rebecca Stefoff takes readers on a tour of what animals are saying, how
79 pages : 24 cm
<p><b>Hands-on fun for you and your toddler as you learn about animals. From cuddly kittens to powerful tigers, this is the perfect busy animal book for pre-schoolers! </b><br>Your children can play as they learn with this delightful animal book! From jumping kangaroos to baby birds, there are lots
Saying it with sound -- Saying it with smell -- Body language -- Sending signals -- Lighting up -- Talking with humans.;A Stellar sea lion pup recognizes its mother's call, even with thousands of other noisy sea lions about. A verve monkey shouts "ha-ha-ha" to warn of an eagle passing overhead. A pe