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Ontario Nature - Federation of Ontario Naturalists

Education

Books

Habitats
Your home is your habitat, just the way an anthill is the habitat for an ant or a pond is the habitat for a fish. By re-creating some of these habitats you can get nose-to-nose with nature’s amazing creatures.

The Jumbo Book of Nature Science
Take a walk on the wild side and discover the incredible world around you in The Jumbo Book of Nature Science. It has more than 100 activities and experiments that explore nature indoors and outdoors and in every season.

Junior Naturalist Manual (PDF 14.6MB)
Download the Junior Naturalist Manual for information about administering a Junior Naturalist program in your area. Information about administration, programming and sample activities are included.

Voices for the Watershed: Environmental Issues in the Great Lakes-St. Lawrence Drainage Basin
Voices for the Watershed is a unique look at the singular and ecologically inter-connected region of the Great Lakes-St. Lawrence watershed, including the headwater and upland regions.

Wetlands
Whether you call it a swamp, a bog, a fen, a marsh, a slough, or a quagmire, a wetland is a remarkable world where land and water meet. Many plants and animals depend upon this unique ecosystem for survival.

Books - French

La série découvrons
Découvrons les arbres, Découvrons les fleurs, Découvrons les insectes, Décourvrons les mammals, Découvrons les oiseaux et Découvrons les reptiles.

Le monde des plantes
Ce livre t’introduit au monde des plantes tout en proposant des activités divertissantes.

Education Kits

Why Wetlands?
Ontario is home to four types of wetlands: marshes, swamps, bogs and fens. Discover how to identify these wetlands and learn about their characteristic plants and animals. Help students appreciate why we must conserve our remaining wetlands.

Wildlife in Jeopardy Education Kit
Over one hundred and fifty species of flora and fauna are officially designated at risk in Ontario. Of these, over forty are endangered and, without measures to protect them, may disappear from Ontario altogether. Five species are extinct - gone forever.

 
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