At Home with the Gopher Tortoise: The Story of a Keystone Species teaches young readers about the gopher tortoise and the more than 360 different kinds of animals that depend on it for survival. From owls to rabbits, from skunks to scorpions, the gopher tortoise provides creatures with shelter, food, or a place to raise their young. In this fascinating tale of ecological interdependency, glorious illustrations reveal the gopher tortoise's world both below and above ground, showing children how the fate of one species is important to so many others.
Madeleine Dunphy’s books have been published by Hyperion Books for Children, Millbrook Press, and her own publishing company, Web of Life Children’s Books—a publishing company devoted to publishing picture books about the environment. Madeleine is also a teacher, activist and mother.
Madeleine has taught special programs at the California Academy of Sciences, Lawrence Hall of Science, Museum of Children’s Art and at dozens of elementary schools in northern California and abroad. She has a BA in anthropology from the University of California at Santa Cruz and a MA in education from Mills College.
Madeleine has traveled extensively to research her various books. Her travels include visiting the mountain gorillas in the Democratic Republic of Congo, camping out in the Amazon rain forest in Peru, visiting Angkor Wat in Cambodia, and scuba diving with sea turtles in the Great Barrier Reef in Australia.
Madeleine lives in Oakland, California with her husband, daughter, dog, two cats and a hamster.
My son and I travel once a year to Florida. We love animals and we while we are there we try to visit at least one place dedicated to native habitats. We have visited a couple of turtle hospitals and learned a lot about the different kinds of turtles in Florida which we have extended to our learning about turtles in our own state (WA). But the exciting thing for me was learning about Keystone species. I have probably heard about them, but it took this book for the vocabulary to sink in. I know that entire ecosystems rely on certain species, but I didn't realize that how one animal might be designated the Keystone. Meanwhile, I am reading Prodigal Summer by Barbara Kingsolver. She talks about the importance of predators and the concept of how balance is upset by the removal of a predator. Her characters are slowly developing through the book around a Keystone character who has been removed suddenly and tragically. Back on topic, if you are not from Florida, you could still use this book. You could read the book and then explore your own local region and have the students argue which animal where you live is the Keystone of it's ecosystem.