Childrens Illustrated Animal Atlas

(Marvins-Underground-K-12) #1

13


Washington, D.C.

Black-tailed
prairie dog

These grass-eating
rodents live in underground
prairie-dog towns. They greet
family with a kiss, and have
different warning calls for
different predators.

This shrub’s
flower spikes
provide food
for mammals
and nectar
for insects.

American black bear
Good swimmers and climbers, black
bears feast on fruits, nuts, and roots, and
sometimes ants and grubs. There are
twice as many of them in the world as
there are all other bear species combined.

Despite their name, gray squirrels
can also have white or reddish fur.

Gray fox
As big as a medium-sized dog, gray
foxes live in broad-leaved forests. They
make their dens in hollow trees, and
both parents care for the cubs.

Gray squirrel
Double-jointed ankles help gray
squirrels scamper up and down
trees. Their teeth never stop growing,
so they have to wear them down on
nuts and tree bark.

Location
Most of the continent’s
eastern forests stretch
from the Mississippi River
Valley eastward, all the
way to the Atlantic Ocean.

La

ke

M

ic

hi

ga

n

Lake^ Superi
or

Ohio

Raccoons are highly
intelligent. They can
live in towns or the
country and will eat
almost anything!

Northern raccoon

White-
tailed deer

Only male deer grow
antlers. White-tails
often escape predators
by swimming across
lakes or rivers.

Striped
skunk

If threatened, the
skunk sprays a horrible-
smelling musk from
glands under its tail.

Northern
cardinal

This is North America’s
only marsupial. It can
outsmart danger by
playing dead for up
to four hours.

Virginia
opossum
Great
horned owl

Sugar
maple

SCALE


250 kilometers

0

0

250 miles

This bright-red bird can
sing more than 24 songs.
When courting, males offer
females the best seeds.

Sugar maples provide sap
for maple syrup. Their
leaves turn orange-gold
and red in the fall.

Lak

e^ Superior

Mississippi

Eastern


forests


Deciduous and coniferous forests cover eastern


North America. There are mountains and river


valleys here, too. Animals have to be smart to


survive in areas densely populated with humans.


HABITAT KEY


Mountains

Cold desert

Hot desert

N


S


W E


This large owl’s feathery
“horns” look like ears,
but its real ears are much
farther down on its skull.

AT
LA
N
T
IC

O
CE
A
N

HABITAT KEY


Temperate
grasslands

Tropical
grasslands

Mountains

Coniferous
forests

Deciduous
forests

US_012_013_Great_plains_Eastern_Forests.indd 13 31/03/2017 14:
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