Let's Talk Fish and Wildlife
This booklet contains 24 pages each with a picture to color and a story
about one of Guam's animals. Choose the animals you want to color, print the
pages, and have fun! Or you can grab the whole booklet in one big gulp (single
pdf file, 1.4 MB)
Dear Student and Teacher:
Hafa Adai! The Department of Agriculture is proud to present you with this coloring book as part of the Division of Aquatic and Wildlife Resources' Public Awareness and Conservation Education (PACE) program.
This activity puts the student's coloring skills to work while providing information about animals which are native or common to our island. "Lets Talk Fish and Wildlife" features land animals and some of our island's more common reef fish. It includes species familiar to children or totally unknown to them because the animals have become extinct or rare. Endangered and extinct species are featured to give the children of today a glimpse of the rich and diverse wildlife population which existed on Guam prior to the arrival of the predatory brown tree snake.
It is our hope that through this activity book and other resource materials produced through the years by the PACE program, the children of Guam will develop an appreciation for their natural heritage and also realize the importance of conserving Guam's fish and wildlife resources, not only for their generation but for future generations as well.
Happy Coloring!
| Fish Sesyon/hiteng (rabbitfish) Halu'u (gray reef shark) Tataga' (bluespine unicornfish) Atulai (bigeye scad) Laggua (steephead parrotfish) Tarkitu (bluefin trevally) Guili (rudderfish) Satmoneti (goatfish) Hiyok (blue-banded surgeonfish) Invertebrates Gåmson (octopus) Ayuyu (coconut crab) |
Birds Ko'ko' (Guam rail) Åga (Mariana crow) Sihek (Micronesian kingfisher) Pulattat (common moorhen) Paluman sinisa (Philippine turtle-dove) Chichirika (rufous fantail) Tottot (Mariana fruit-dove) Mammals Fanihi (Maraiana fruit bat) Binadu (Philippine deer) Babuen hålomtåno' (wild pig) Reptiles Kulepbla (brown treesnake) Haggan (green sea turtle) Hilitai (monitor lizard) |
Dear Student and Teacher:
Hafa Adai! The Department of Agriculture is proud to present you with this coloring book as part of the Division of Aquatic and Wildlife Resources' Public Awareness and Conservation Education (PACE) program.
This activity puts the student's coloring skills to work while providing information about animals which are native or common to our island. "Lets Talk Fish and Wildlife" features land animals and some of our island's more common reef fish. It includes species familiar to children or totally unknown to them because the animals have become extinct or rare. Endangered and extinct species are featured to give the children of today a glimpse of the rich and diverse wildlife population which existed on Guam prior to the arrival of the predatory brown tree snake.
It is our hope that through this activity book and other resource materials produced through the years by the PACE program, the children of Guam will develop an appreciation for their natural heritage and also realize the importance of conserving Guam's fish and wildlife resources, not only for their generation but for future generations as well.
Happy Coloring!

