This book opens with a graceful Blue Whale making a journey from the southern oceans to the warmer waters of the tropics ...
"but today something is different. Her heart is slowing down. It is wearing out. It is pumping less and less oxygen to her lungs, brain, and other internal organs. This year she will not make it to the feeding waters in the north. Her vision blurs and darkens. Her breathing slows. Her awareness fades. Her heart quiets and finally stops. This year, this day, this moment, after ninety years of life, as all her living things must do at some point ... she dies."
This is not the end though. Her death creates a whole new ecosystem.
"Her body will provide shelter and food for millions of creatures for more than a hundred years. A whole new world will arise. Scientists call this whale fall."
Go back and think about the title - yes there is life after the death of the whale.
Talking about the life cycle of living things is always a topic in a Primary School or Elementary School syllabus. Life after Whale is a perfect book for this topic. I am going to say that again - Life after Whale is a perfect book and it is one that you really do need in your school library.
Here are some of my reading discoveries from this splendid book:
- The layers of wax in the ear canal of the whale can show her life journey.
- Her body will take over one month to sink to the bottom of the ocean.
- She lands on 'marine snow' which is microscopic bits of dead animals and plants.
- There are four phases of a whale fall ecosystem - different animals feed on different parts of the whale and the cycle is completed when the krill we meet at the beginning of the book is part of the cycle again at the end.
- Even after 150 years the bones are still providing food for marine creatures.
We have a new Science and Technology Syllabus K-6 coming out next year. Here are a few quotes from that document:
Stage 2 (Grades 3 and 4) Students compare living things and identify the life cycles which support the survival of plant and animal species.
Stage 2 (Grades 3 and 4) What are the similarities and differences between the life cycles of living things?
Life cycles of living things
Inquiry question: What are the similarities and differences between the life cycles of living things?
Students:
• identify that living things have life cycles
• conduct an investigation into the life cycle of plants and/or animals
Content Strand Summaries: Living World: The Living World strand explores living things and their needs. The key concepts developed within this strand are: living things have similar characteristics; are interdependent and interact with each other and their environment; living things and their features are related to the environments in which they live. Through this strand, students explore life cycles, structural adaptations and behaviours of living things. These developmental features and characteristics aid survival in particular environments.
It is the end of the school year here in Australia but if you can add this book to your library wish list or better if you can purchase it for your collection I suggest acting quickly. This book retails for AUS$35 but I found one online seller with copies for just AUS$28.
Jason Chin is the illustrator of Watercress which won the Caldecott Medal. I was lucky to read this book in a library last year and ever since I have hunted high and low so I could read it again - I was way too rushed last year. Alas this book is very expensive here in Australia and it is only available in a limited number of local and tertiary libraries.
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