HHEEELLP Read the passage.
At first, people who visit Martha Gomez don’t see anything strange about her cat. The orange tabby jumps on a chair to get closer. He rubs against the visitors’ legs and purrs. If they don’t pet him, he won’t give up. But some people wonder about his name. Why is an orange cat called Mr. Green Genes?
“Do you want to see?” Gomez asks. She turns off the lights. Then she switches on a lamp that makes ultraviolet light, which is also called a black light. It’s the same kind of light used at parties to make white shirts and sneakers glow. Now the visitors can see that Mr. Green Genes is no ordinary cat. The black light shines on the cat, and his nose lights up. It glows a bright green. So do the insides of his ears. Gomez explains that her cat’s skin glows in ultraviolet light. His fur covers most of his skin, but if she shaved his fur, his whole body would glow.
Mr. Green Genes was born in Gomez’s lab at the Audubon Center for Research of Endangered Species in New Orleans. The scientists in the lab gave him the strange glow, but their goal isn’t to make a fluorescent pet. They are looking for ways to fight disease in humans, and they think that glowing cats can help.
Question:
Think about the descriptive details used to describe Mr. Green Genes. Then, list two or more details you would put on a descriptive details web about Mr. Green Genes.