My First Book about the Alphabet of Butterflies & Moths - Amazing Animal Books - Children's Picture Books


Book Description

Introduction There are over 20,000 different species of butterflies in the World and over 130,000 different species of moths! Butterflies are very helpful to the environment, because they help pollinate many flowers and caterpillars are a main food source for birds. Butterflies have a very interesting life cycle. They first start out as tiny eggs, laid on a leaf. Next, they hatch as a caterpillar. They don't stay caterpillars for very long and all they do is eat. Third, after the caterpillar is as big as it can be, it forms a chrysalis around its self. Inside it begins changing into a butterfly. The last stage is when the butterfly breaks out of the chrysalis and can begin flying, pollinating, and mating.




The Butterfly Alphabet


Book Description

Introduces the letters of the alphabet through rhyming text and close-up examinations of letter-like markings on the wings of various species of butterflies.
















The Butterfly Alphabet Book


Book Description

Welcome to the wonder and beauty of butterflies! Look through the wings of a Transparent, marvel at the size of the Queen Alexandra Birdwing, and try to find the camouflaged Indian Leaf Butterfly! Learn about these amazing butterflies, and more, as you read from A to Z about a group of the world's most beautiful insects. Jerry Pallotta and Brian Cassie's fun, informative text, accompanied by Mark Astrella's detailed and breathtaking illustrations, will be a sure favorite with both the young butterfly lover and the experienced lepidopterist!




Not a Butterfly Alphabet Book


Book Description

This nature alphabet book from best-selling author Jerry Pallotta features moths (not butterflies!) of all shapes and sizes. Meet dozens of moths--and a few bonus creatures--with engaging text and a laugh-out-loud narrative, from A (Atlas Moth) to G (Green Lips Moth--no kissing allowed!) to J (Jersey Tiger Moth, whose underwings are a completely different color than their upper wings, not to be confused with their underwear) to Z (Zigzag Moth). Readers of all ages will be entertained (and learning!) with every page turn.