Case of the Monkeys That Fell From the Trees: And Other Mysteries in Tropical Nature
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Average customer review:Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #625005 in Books
- Published on: 2003-04-01
- Original language: English
- Binding: Hardcover
- 171 pages
Editorial Reviews
From School Library Journal
Grade 6-9-Scientists are the sleuths in these 12 ecological mysteries set in the tropical forests of Central and South America. Each chapter describes a puzzling natural phenomenon and details the research conducted to explain it. For example, in the title study, a biologist investigates the sudden death of seven apparently healthy howling monkeys. Other cases look at why ithomiine butterflies are attracted to army ant swarms and if islands of tropical forests left amid newly created pastures and croplands can be enough to sustain some forest wildlife. Only one question examined remains unsolved. Realistic pen-and-pencil drawings of flora and fauna are interspersed throughout the book. A minor flaw-while most of the drawings are of good quality, the few depictions of people are awkward. Two maps and a detailed bibliography of original source material are included. Quinlan's book is well organized and clearly written, with scientific terms and concepts explained as they appear. Besides presenting some fascinating case studies in a style that conveys the thrill of the scientific chase, it also provides information on the different kinds of tropical forests and how they function. While general introductions to tropical forests such as April Pulley Sayre's Tropical Rainforest (21st Century, 1995) are available, Monkeys is unique in its approach and will appeal to both students of natural history and browsers with a taste for the unusual.
Karey Wehner, formerly at San Francisco Public Library
Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information, Inc.
From Booklist
Gr. 5-8. For scientists, one question frequently leads to another. In this book, wildlife biologist Susan Quinlan, the author of The Case of the Mummified Pigs: And Other Mysteries in Nature (1995), presents a number of questions or "mysteries" concerning plants and animals in the tropical forests of South and Central America and explains how scientists answered those questions. Researching poison-dart frogs in the lab, John Daly discovered that each generation was less toxic than the last. This finding led him to test how the frogs' diet affected their poisons. A study of the howler monkeys' role in spreading the seeds of fruit-bearing plants led a team of scientists to investigate the roles of dung beetles and mice in burying, unearthing, and eating the seeds found in monkey dung. Each chapter presents another mystery with the observations and clear thinking that resulted in its solution. The author's drawings, washed with gray, illustrate the text. A chapter-by-chapter bibliography of sources, mainly studies reported in scientific journals, is appended. An intriguing introduction to the process of scientific study and to the interconnected plants and animals of tropical forests. Carolyn Phelan
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved
Customer Reviews
A thorougly lively, intriguing, and informative discussion
Mysteries which revolve around nature begin when scientists note unusual events in the tropics and ask questions. Susan Quinlan's Case Of The Monkeys That Fell From The Trees reads like a series of detective stories, following the course of investigations as scientists piece together clues about nature. Case Of The Monkeys That Fell From The Trees presents young readers with a thorougly lively, intriguing, and informative discussion.
