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Nonfiction
Comprehension Skill
Text Features
Captions
Labels
Text Boxes
Glossary
Science Content
Ecosystems
ISBN 0-328-13816-9
Vocabulary
Extended Vocabulary
community
desert
ecosystem
environment
grassland
population
tundra
wetland
baleen
blowhole
blubber
krill
lichen
permafrost
predator
regurgitate
Picture Credits
Every effort has been made to secure permission and provide appropriate credit for photographic material.
The publisher deeply regrets any omission and pledges to correct errors called to its attention in subsequent editions.
Photo locators denoted as follows: Top (T), Center (C), Bottom (B), Left (L), Right (R), Background (Bkgd).
Opener: Terry Andrewartha/Nature Picture Library; 3 Jerry Young/DK Images; 4 (BR) Jerry Young/DK Images;
5 Pete Oxford /Nature Picture Library; 6 Tom Walker/Visuals Unlimited; 7 (BR) Frans Lanting/Minden Pictures;
8 Terry Andrewartha/Nature Picture Library; 9 (TC) Fritz Polking/Visuals Unlimited;11 (T) Bryan and Cherry Alexander/
Alamy Images; 11 (B) Theo Allofs /Visuals Unlimited; 12 (B) Gordon Wiltsie/NGS Image Collection, (BR) Jerry Young/
DK Images; 13 (TR) Jerry Young/DK Images; 14 (B) James Watt/Visuals Unlimited; 15 Norbert Rosing/
NGS Image Collection; 17 (T) Doug Allan /Nature Picture Library; 17 (B) Bryan and Cherry Alexander/Alamy Images;
19 (B) Fritz Polking /Visuals Unlimited; 20 (B) Paul Nicklen/NGS Image Collection, (CR) Stephen Haywood/DK Images;
22 Jerry Young/DK Images; 23 Andy Rouse /NHPA Limited.
Unless otherwise acknowledged, all photographs are the copyright of Dorling Kindersley, a division of Pearson.
ISBN: 0-328-13816-9
Copyright Pearson Education, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Printed in the United States of America.
This publication is protected by Copyright, and permission should be obtained from the publisher prior to any
prohibited reproduction, storage in a retrieval system, or transmission in any form by any means, electronic,
mechanical, photocopying, recording, or likewise. For information regarding permission(s), write to
Permissions Department, Scott Foresman, 1900 East Lake Avenue, Glenview, Illinois 60025.
3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 V010 13 12 11 10 09 08 07 06 05
by Kristin Cashore
3. How does an arctic fox get at prey thats
below ground?
4.
Write to explain
how penguin mothers and fathers care
for their eggs. Include details from
the book.
5.
Introduction
Have you ever spun a globe? Do you
remember the North and South Poles?
The Arctic is the area at the top of the Earth,
around the North Pole. It is mostly frozen
water. This water is called the Arctic Ocean.
The Antarctic is the area at the bottom of
the Earth, around the South Pole. Most of the
Antarctic is taken up by a frozen land mass
called Antarctica. The Antarctic Ocean
surrounds Antarctica.
North Pole
The rosebay
willowherb can
be found on the
Arctic tundra.
Polar Bears
The polar bears of the Arctic are the worlds
largest land predators. An adult male polar
bear can weigh up to fifteen hundred pounds!
Polar bears search for food on land and in the
sea. They cover an enormous territory while
searching for the seals that they eat.
Polar bears are excellent swimmers and
divers. They can swim for hours without rest.
Their webbed forepaws help them to swim.
Their blubber allows them to float.
Polar bears blend into
their white landscape.
Snow Dens
Penguins
Penguins live in the Southern Hemisphere.
They are flightless birds. Instead of flying, they
slide along the ice and swim. Penguins can dive
very deep and swim very fast. Their diet includes
fish and krill.
Antarctic penguins range in height from about
twenty inches to more than three feet. Their
feathers are thick and waterproof. In addition,
penguins have a thick
layer of blubber.
Penguins breed in huge
colonies. Right after laying her
egg, the mother emperor
penguin goes to sea to feed.
The father balances the egg
on his feet, covering it with
a warm flap of skin.
Keeping Warm
Penguin chicks
sometimes huddle
together to protect
themselves from
the severe
temperatures.
10
11
Arctic Foxes
The Arctic fox roams the Arctic tundra. It
stands about 25 to 30 cm tall, and weighs only
3 to 7 kg. It has a double layer of fur, small, furry
ears, and short legs. Its thick foot-hair keeps it
warm and helps it grip the ice. The foxs thick,
white winter fur is shed in the summer for a
thinner, brownish-gray coat.
The Arctic fox will eat almost anything, but it
specializes in catching rodents. It listens for
movement below the snow. When it hears a
rodent, the fox jumps up and down to break
through the snow and catch its prey. If there are
too few rodents available, the Arctic fox will
feed on the animal remains left behind
by polar bears.
12
13
Whales
The largest animals in the
world include whales. Blue
whales can be one hundred
feet long! Whales are
mammals, which means they
When a whale
must rise to the surface of the
exhales, it releases
a spray of water
water to breathe. When they
through its blowhole.
breathe, they push air through
blowholes in the tops of their heads.
Whales have thick layers of blubber that keep
them warm. Many types of whales migrate to the
poles during summer to feed on the rich sea life.
Toothed whales eat fish, octopus, squid, and
other sea animals.
The humpback whale sings
many different songs.
14
15
Seals
Seals are excellent swimmers and divers.
Their diet includes fish, squid, and crustaceans.
Like whales, seals are mammals. They can stay
under water for a very long time before
surfacing for air. Blubber and a thick layer
of fur keep seals warm.
Arctic seals, such as harp, hooded, and
ringed seals, migrate in search of food and
breeding grounds. Ringed seals are a polar bears
usual meal. Polar bears, arctic foxes, toothed
whales, and sharks all hunt Arctic seals. Arctic
seals live a dangerous life!
Ice Holes
Seals create breathing
holes in the ice by chewing
with their teeth, scratching
with their claws, and
bashing with their heads.
crabeater seal
16
17
Birds
Arctic tern
18
19
Caribou
Caribou are large mammals. They range
across the Arctic tundra. Both male and female
caribou grow antlers. Male caribou are called
bulls. Their antlers can grow to be four feet
across. The bull uses his antlers to attract female
caribou and fight other bulls.
It only takes newborn caribou about an hour
and a half to learn how to run! Soon after it is
born, a caribou is running with the herds.
Caribou Moss
Caribou moss is a lichen.
It is the caribous most
important winter food.
Caribou smell caribou moss
through the snow. They dig
down deep to get to it.
20
Caribou populations
migrate great distances across the
tundra in search of good grazing land. In the
spring and summer, they eat grasses and flowering
plants. In the winter they survive on lichens.
Caribou hooves are shaped perfectly for digging
into the snow. Their hairs have a special structure
that traps air and keeps them warm. Caribou are
very strong swimmers. They paddle across rivers
and the cold waters of the Arctic Ocean.
21
Arctic Wolves
Arctic wolves live on the North American
tundra. They also live in northern Greenland
and on islands close to the North Pole. Arctic
wolves are smaller than most other wolves.
Adults are only about three feet long. They have
long, thick, white fur that insulates them from
the harsh Arctic temperatures.
Like other wolves, Arctic wolves live and
hunt in small communities called packs. About
six wolves make up a pack. Each pack has a
huge territory. The pack roams its territory
searching for caribou, hares, and other prey.
Wolf Senses
Wolves are known for
their excellent hearing,
keen eyesight, and strong
sense of smell. A wolfs
senses are critical to its
success as a hunter.
22
23
Vocabulary
Glossary
community
Extended Vocabulary
baleen
desert
baleen
bony platesblowhole
attached to the jaws
ecosystem of certain whales.
blubber
Hairlike bristles
environment
krill and sieve food
fringe the plates
grassland
lichen
blowhole
the top of a whales
population the hole onpermafrost
head through
which it breathes
tundra
predator
wetland
regurgitate
blubber
thick, insulating
layers of fat under
the skin of many animals inhabiting
the Arctic and the Antarctic
krill
Write to explain
how penguin mothers and fathers care
for their eggs. Include details from
the book.
5.
lichen
Picture Credits
Every effort has been made to secure permission and provide appropriate credit for photographic material.
The publisher deeply regrets any omission and pledges to correct errors called to its attention in subsequent editions.
Opener: Terry Andrewartha/Nature Picture Library; 3 Jerry Young/DK Images; 4 (BR) Jerry Young/DK Images;
5 Pete Oxford /Nature Picture Library; 6 Tom Walker/Visuals Unlimited; 7 (BR) Frans Lanting/Minden Pictures;
8 Terry Andrewartha/Nature Picture Library; 9 (TC) Fritz Polking/Visuals Unlimited;11 (T) Bryan and Cherry Alexander/
Alamy Images; 11 (B) Theo Allofs /Visuals Unlimited; 12 (B) Gordon Wiltsie/NGS Image Collection, (BR) Jerry Young/
DK Images; 13 (TR) Jerry Young/DK Images; 14 (B) James Watt/Visuals Unlimited; 15 Norbert Rosing/
NGS Image Collection; 17 (T) Doug Allan /Nature Picture Library; 17 (B) Bryan and Cherry Alexander/Alamy Images;
19 (B) Fritz Polking /Visuals Unlimited; 20 (B) Paul Nicklen/NGS Image Collection, (CR) Stephen Haywood/DK Images;
22 Jerry Young/DK Images; 23 Andy Rouse /NHPA Limited.
predator
Unless otherwise acknowledged, all photographs are the copyright of Dorling Kindersley, a division of Pearson.
ISBN: 0-328-13816-9
Copyright Pearson Education, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Printed in the United States of America.
This publication is protected by Copyright, and permission should be obtained from the publisher prior to any
prohibited reproduction, storage in a retrieval system, or transmission in any form by any means, electronic,
mechanical, photocopying, recording, or likewise. For information regarding permission(s), write to
Permissions Department, Scott Foresman, 1900 East Lake Avenue, Glenview, Illinois 60025.
3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 V010 13 12 11 10 09 08 07 06 05
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