Summary
NEAR ST. ADOLPHE -- There's a cry of "tree frog!!!" and then a hearty "whoa -- it's huge!!!" and the scramble is on to get up close and personal with biodiversity.
Fort Richmond student Olwyn Friesen said she never had a chance to get into hands-on nature when she was a little kid: "The earlier we can teach them about sustainability and their impact on the environment -- this is a great way for them to see the things they're impacting," she said."If you don't have a habitat, you're a dead duck," said Friesen. Her dead ducks then became power lines and poles, positioned between the winter habitat and the summer habitat, and any migrating duck which touched them while trying to make the trip back the other way became a dead duck too.See the full content of this document
Extract
Hands-On Biodiversity Popular
Top science students mentor young classes
By Nick MartinNEAR ST. ADOLPHE -- There's a cry of "tree frog!!!" and then a...See the full content of this document
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