National Geographic Kids USA - September 2017

(Marvins-Underground-K-12) #1

THE WILDLIFE


WARRIOR
Juliana Machado Ferreira works to save
animals stolen from Brazil’s wild. She
recalls rescuing birds seized by smugglers.
“When I worked with an organization called SOS
Fauna, we rescued blue-fronted Amazon parrots that
had been stolen as chicks and were being transported
by traffickers. You could tell the birds hadn’t been
well cared for. After we eventually returned them to
their natural habitat, we watched as they tasted the flowers,
seeds, and fruits of their home. Over time their health improved
dramatically. When you rescue a mistreated animal and return it to
where it belongs, the change in them is unbelievable.
“Moments like these are why I work to combat the illegal buying and selling
of wildlife. I want to help police fight the criminals and encourage lawmakers
to pass laws against these terrible crimes.”


STUDY:
Environmental studies,
zoology, and geography
WATCH: Rio
READ: Forbidden Creatures:
Inside the World of Animal
Smuggling and Exotic
Pets by Peter Laufer

WANT TO BE
A WILDLIFE WARRIOR?

“Remember that wild animals


aren’t pets; they need to be
free. Every animal has the

right to exist and fulfill its
role in nature.”

THE PLANT BIOLOGIST
Mark Olson studies plants in the jungles
of Africa and Central America. He talks
about soaring in a paraglider over the
treetops of Mexico’s forests.
“Once as I was flying across the treetops of one
of Mexico’s tropical dry forests, a white-throated
magpie-jay—a crow-like bird with a long tail—
followed behind me, screeching the whole way!
Unfamiliar insects buzz around you, and unusual sce
fill the air. It’s another world in the tree canopy.
“I fly in a paraglider to study the treetops, which
can be terrifying. But it’s helpful to get a bird’s-eye
view. Up here you can see animals that you’d never
spot from the ground. Sometimes curious animals
check me out. You can walk through a rain forest
and think it looks like every other rain forest. But
when you identify the plants on the ground and
spend time in the treetops you realize how unique
each jungle is.”

STUDY:Botany
(the study of plants), micro-
biology, and mathematics
WATCH: The documentary
What Plants Talk About
READ: Living Sunlight:
How Plants Bring the Earth
to Life by Molly Bang and
Penny Chisholm

WANT TO BE
A PLANT BIOLOGIST?

MACHADO FERREIRA
PREPARES TO WEIGH
AND HYDRATE A BIRD
IN BAHIA, BRAZIL.

JULIANA MACHADO
FERREIRA HOLDS
A GREEN-WINGED
SALTATOR.

NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC KIDS 29


MARK OLSON SCALES
A TREE IN MEXICO’S
SIERRA DE LOS TUXTLAS
TROPICAL RAIN FOREST.

NOW
SHOWING!

natgeokids.com/jungle

HYACINTH MACAW

SCARLET MACAW

“Next time you’re in the
woods,reallylook at

the plants.For example,


how manydifferent leaf
shapescan you find?”

BLUE-FRONTED
AMAZON PARROTS
HAVE BLUE FEATHERS
ABOVE THEIR BEAKS.

WATCH EXPLORER
ANDRÉS RUZO
TREK THROUGH A
RAIN FOREST.
Free download pdf