Do komodo dragons have toxic slobber? Is it true that a scorpion that sheds its tail dies of constipation? And can you really get high from licking toads? When we kids, we were told that all moths eat clothing, camels store water in their humps, and if you touch a baby bird, its parents will abandon it. Not true, say Nick Caruso and Dani Rabaiotti, who assess a host of rumors and half-truths related to animals, declaring each "true" or "poo." Illustrated throughout with Ethan Kocak's madcap cartoons, this book takes you to a world where woodpeckers have tongues coiled in their skulls, sea cucumbers throw their intestines at predators, and the octopus can detach a body part that human males would never, ever want to part with.
True Or Poo?: The Definitive Field Guide to Filthy Animal Facts and Falsehoods
Author: Nick Caruso & Dani Rabaiotti. Ethan Kocak, illus.
True Or Poo?: The Definitive Field Guide to Filthy Animal Facts and Falsehoods
Author: Nick Caruso & Dani Rabaiotti. Ethan Kocak, illus.
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