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9 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
The Frog Scientist, July 9, 2009
This review is from: The Frog Scientist (Scientists in the Field Series) (Hardcover)
Meet Dr. Tyrone Hayes, frog scientist extraordinaire. The author opens the book by taking us along on a field trip with Dr. Hayes and his graduate students as they collect leopard frogs from a Wyoming pond. Dr. Hayes will take the frogs back to his Berkeley lab to study how the commonly used pesticide atrazine affects their development. It feels like you're with the group at the pond in the cool morning air, splashing through water, squelching through mud, brushing clouds of mayflies from your face, and trying to wrangle the wily hoppers with big nets.
The second chapter flashes back in time to show us how a tough little African-American kid who grew up in a segregated south loved reptiles and amphibians so much that he ended up graduating from Harvard and UC Berkeley. That was 1989, the very year that scientists discovered that frogs were dying at an alarming rate around the world.
Fast forward to the future, when Dr. Hayes goes to work for the chemical company that makes atrazine. The firm wanted him to test the pesticide on frogs. But they didn't like what he found. Tiny amounts of the chemical "feminized" male frogs; they produced eggs in their testes rather than sperm! Obviously, they could not father future frogs. No wonder American frogs were dying out. But the company wouldn't allow Dr. Hayes to publish his findings, so he left to pursue his studies elsewhere.
The author skillfully takes the reader through the experiment that Dr. Hayes designed to test his hypothesis that atrazine causes feminized male frogs. Her writing is clear and concise, and she makes complex scientific concepts easy to understand and accessible to young readers. Profiles of Dr. Hayes' young lab assistants at work brighten the lively writing.
Spectacular color photos of numerous species of frogs, and of Dr. Hayes and his team at work in the field and in the laboratory further bring the story to life. These are real people, doing important work that potentially affects human beings as well as frogs. When real life is this dramatic and exciting, who needs fiction? This is one of the best nonfiction books I've read this year.
Connie Goldsmith
Chidren's book reviewer for California Kids, a Sacramento regional parenting publication.
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Fantastic Nonfiction Title for Tweens and Teens, January 19, 2010
This review is from: The Frog Scientist (Scientists in the Field Series) (Hardcover)
Once I started reading this book, I loved it. I thought the author did an
excellent job of using and explaining scientific terms in a very readable way.
The text flowed nicely, and did read like a story. The pictures are fantastic, and add a beautiful visual element to the page-turning narrative.
Tyrone's story was inspiring, and he's a good role model to kids who may not be
interested in school, or science specifically, about the possibilities that are
out there. It also tied researchers' work, that kids might see as boring, into
the very real concerns that kids today have (about the environment).
I handed the book over to my 6th grade daughter. She loves to read. . . .
fiction. But once she started reading, she didn't get up off the couch, and
actually asked her brother to turn off the TV when he left the room. She really
liked it. I asked if she would read other books like that, and she still said
that she prefers fiction, but she did like this book, and thinks that people who
like non-fiction would really like it.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
The Story behind the Science, June 10, 2010
This review is from: The Frog Scientist (Scientists in the Field Series) (Hardcover)
This is a wonderful non-fiction book that reads like a story. The book follows scientist Tyrone Hayes and his experiments as he attempts to discover why frogs all over the world are disappearing. With over a hundred species going extinct since 1980, I love how the book does not take a simple approach to this complex problem with many sources, including pesticides, fungal attacks, encrouching species, and habitat loss. The story has a similarly nuanced view of Hayes' struggles in school, his abiding love of science, and the help he gets along the way from mentors and friends encouraging him to continue his work. This heart warming story will encourage young readers think big questions about science, one of my great loves as well, and with a high reading level and challenging non-fiction content, this is an excellent read for advanced readers 8+.
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