Making sense of dog senses: how our furry friends experience the world
(Book)

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Contributors:
Latif, Raz, illustrator.
Published:
Toronto, ON ; Berkeley, CA : Owlkids Books, [2024].
Format:
Book
Physical Desc:
48 pages : color illustrations ; 25 cm
Lexile measure:
940L
Status:

Description

"The book's introduction puts canine senses into evolutionary perspective and includes theories about the origin of today's dogs. Each of the following five chapters opens with a real-life canine anecdote and goes on to examine one of the five main senses, explaining canine senses from both an evolutionary and scientific perspective. A concluding chapter explores whether or not dogs have senses that people do not and includes a round-up that compares the performance of dog and human senses. Sidebars throughout the book feature additional interesting facts and hands-on activities that let readers experience a dog's sensory abilities for themselves. The backmatter includes suggestions for further reading, a glossary, and an index. And of course, Raz's bright and incredibly cute illustrations strikes just the right balance of humorous delight in our dog friends with clear, solid science illustrations. Written in a super approachable tone and loaded with fascinating facts, Making Sense of Dog Senses presents readers with both curious and practical insights into their canine pals' behavior. For example, early dogs likely survived as scavengers that ate waste left behind by humans, so a taste for garbage and, yes, poop comes naturally to them. (This might still be a gross behavior but framed that way, it does makes sense.) And did you know that dogs have millions more olfactory receptors than humans and that their noses are built to reserve some air that they breathe in just for smelling? So why the butt sniffing? Dogs actually discern a lot of information about another dog from a whiff of that region, including the dog's health, eating habits and readiness to mate. A playful yet scientifically precise exploration of how dogs see, hear, taste, touch, and smell that will help readers better appreciate the canine point of view - and even explain all the butt sniffing."--

Also in This Series

Copies

Location
Call Number
Status
East Hampton New Juvenile
J 636.7 GIB
Due Mar 15, 2025
Location
Call Number
Status
Durham Children's Non-Fiction
j636.7 GIBEAULT
On Shelf
Essex Children's Nonfiction
J 636.7 GIB
On Shelf
Wallingford Children's Nonfiction
J 636.7 GIBEAULT
On Shelf

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More Details

Language:
Unknown
ISBN:
9781771475242, 1771475242
Lexile measure:
940

Notes

Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (page 48) and index.
Description
"The book's introduction puts canine senses into evolutionary perspective and includes theories about the origin of today's dogs. Each of the following five chapters opens with a real-life canine anecdote and goes on to examine one of the five main senses, explaining canine senses from both an evolutionary and scientific perspective. A concluding chapter explores whether or not dogs have senses that people do not and includes a round-up that compares the performance of dog and human senses. Sidebars throughout the book feature additional interesting facts and hands-on activities that let readers experience a dog's sensory abilities for themselves. The backmatter includes suggestions for further reading, a glossary, and an index. And of course, Raz's bright and incredibly cute illustrations strikes just the right balance of humorous delight in our dog friends with clear, solid science illustrations. Written in a super approachable tone and loaded with fascinating facts, Making Sense of Dog Senses presents readers with both curious and practical insights into their canine pals' behavior. For example, early dogs likely survived as scavengers that ate waste left behind by humans, so a taste for garbage and, yes, poop comes naturally to them. (This might still be a gross behavior but framed that way, it does makes sense.) And did you know that dogs have millions more olfactory receptors than humans and that their noses are built to reserve some air that they breathe in just for smelling? So why the butt sniffing? Dogs actually discern a lot of information about another dog from a whiff of that region, including the dog's health, eating habits and readiness to mate. A playful yet scientifically precise exploration of how dogs see, hear, taste, touch, and smell that will help readers better appreciate the canine point of view - and even explain all the butt sniffing."--,Provided by publisher.

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Citations

APA Citation (style guide)

Gibeault, S., & Latif, R. (2024). Making sense of dog senses: how our furry friends experience the world. Owlkids Books.

Chicago / Turabian - Author Date Citation (style guide)

Gibeault, Stephanie and Raz, Latif. 2024. Making Sense of Dog Senses: How Our Furry Friends Experience the World. Owlkids Books.

Chicago / Turabian - Humanities Citation (style guide)

Gibeault, Stephanie and Raz, Latif, Making Sense of Dog Senses: How Our Furry Friends Experience the World. Owlkids Books, 2024.

MLA Citation (style guide)

Gibeault, Stephanie, and Raz Latif. Making Sense of Dog Senses: How Our Furry Friends Experience the World. Owlkids Books, 2024.

Note! Citation formats are based on standards as of July 2022. Citations contain only title, author, edition, publisher, and year published. Citations should be used as a guideline and should be double checked for accuracy.

Staff View

Grouped Work ID:
92dc572f-465c-a388-1c60-dc01b8f5ba43
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Record Information

Last Sierra Extract TimeMar 05, 2025 05:59:57 PM
Last File Modification TimeMar 05, 2025 06:00:42 PM
Last Grouped Work Modification TimeMar 05, 2025 06:00:04 PM

MARC Record

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2641 |a Toronto, ON ; |a Berkeley, CA : |b Owlkids Books, |c [2024]
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300 |a 48 pages : |b color illustrations ; |c 25 cm
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504 |a Includes bibliographical references (page 48) and index.
5050 |a Introduction -- Vision -- Smell -- Taste -- Touch -- Hearing -- Conclusion.
520 |a "The book's introduction puts canine senses into evolutionary perspective and includes theories about the origin of today's dogs. Each of the following five chapters opens with a real-life canine anecdote and goes on to examine one of the five main senses, explaining canine senses from both an evolutionary and scientific perspective. A concluding chapter explores whether or not dogs have senses that people do not and includes a round-up that compares the performance of dog and human senses. Sidebars throughout the book feature additional interesting facts and hands-on activities that let readers experience a dog's sensory abilities for themselves. The backmatter includes suggestions for further reading, a glossary, and an index. And of course, Raz's bright and incredibly cute illustrations strikes just the right balance of humorous delight in our dog friends with clear, solid science illustrations. Written in a super approachable tone and loaded with fascinating facts, Making Sense of Dog Senses presents readers with both curious and practical insights into their canine pals' behavior. For example, early dogs likely survived as scavengers that ate waste left behind by humans, so a taste for garbage and, yes, poop comes naturally to them. (This might still be a gross behavior but framed that way, it does makes sense.) And did you know that dogs have millions more olfactory receptors than humans and that their noses are built to reserve some air that they breathe in just for smelling? So why the butt sniffing? Dogs actually discern a lot of information about another dog from a whiff of that region, including the dog's health, eating habits and readiness to mate. A playful yet scientifically precise exploration of how dogs see, hear, taste, touch, and smell that will help readers better appreciate the canine point of view - and even explain all the butt sniffing."-- |c Provided by publisher.
6500 |a Dogs |x Sense organs |v Juvenile literature.
6500 |a Dogs |x Physiology |v Juvenile literature.
6500 |a Dogs |x Behavior |v Juvenile literature. |0 http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh2010000358
6500 |a Senses and sensation |v Juvenile literature. |0 http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh2008111520
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