Animal Athletes
Animal Athletes
Impalas are at risk from predators, such as lions and cheetahs, because they live in open areas with few hiding places. Living in large groups gives them some protection, but their incredible athletic jumping ability is key to their survival! If they are chased, the herd runs and jumps in many different directions. This confuses the predator, which doesn’t know which impala to chase.
Impalas do a type of jump known as stotting. They lift all four legs off the ground at once, and bounce up and down. They often do this jump before they run away. Researchers think that the impala might be showing predators that they are fit and healthy, and not worth chasing.
The six-volume “Astonishing Animals” series examines the physical and behavioral adaptations of a variety of animals which help them to survive. Each title is comprised of 13 chapters as well as a table of contents, a glossary, an index and a brief list of books and websites for further investigation. Animals featured in the series are representative of all of the major groups and range from the microscopic tardigrade to the seven-metre-long beaked whale. Some of the animals will be familiar to readers while others are quite rare and unique. Besides the main body of the text, there are Fact File boxes which, with the exception of the title about animal celebrities, tell where the animal is found, its habitat, size and diet. (In the case of Animal Celebrities, the Fact File box states the animal’s date of birth and death, where it lived, and its “hobbies”.) As well, smaller “Wow!” text boxes provide interesting trivia, some examples being that a 270-kg octopus can squeeze through a 2.5 cm opening and that chimpanzees’ nests contain lower levels of bacteria than human beds. An attractive layout and abundant, eye-catching colour photographs add to the series’ visual appeal.
Several of the animal kingdom’s record-breakers, in terms of their ability to run, fly, leap, dive, lift many times their body weight or spot prey from a great distance, are highlighted in Animal Athletes. This title includes information about the speedy cheetah and the shortfin mako shark, the ultra-flexible octopus and California sea lion, the high-jumping flea and impala and the acrobatic spinner dolphin. Other animals featured include Peregrine falcons, vultures, ants, horned dung beetles and Cuvier’s beaked whales.
Enjoyable and engaging, with just enough information to pique the reader’s interest, the “Astonishing Animals” series does a good job of introducing readers to some incredible animals.
Gail Hamilton is a former teacher-librarian in Winnipeg, Manitoba.