首页
登录
职称英语
Part Ⅱ Reading Comprehension (Skimming and Scanning)Directions: In this part, y
Part Ⅱ Reading Comprehension (Skimming and Scanning)Directions: In this part, y
游客
2023-09-02
71
管理
问题
Part Ⅱ Reading Comprehension (Skimming and Scanning)
Directions: In this part, you will have 15 minutes to go over the passage quickly and answer the questions on Answer Sheet 1. For questions 1-7, choose the best answer from the four choices marked [A], [B], [C] and [D]. For questions 8-10, complete the sentences with the information given in the passage.
Cod in Trouble
A. In 1992, the devastating collapse of the cod stocks off the east coast of Newfoundland forced the Canadian government to take drastic measures and close the fishery. Over 40,000 people lost their jobs, communities are still struggling to recover and the marine ecosystem is still in a state of collapse. The disintegration of this vital fishery sounded a warning bell to governments around the world who were shocked that a relatively-sophisticated, scientifically-based fisheries management program, not unlike their own, could have gone so wrong. The Canadian government ignored warnings that their fleets were employing destructive fishing practices and refused to significantly reduce quotas citing the loss of jobs as too great a concern.
B. In the 1950s Canadian and US east coast waters provided an annual 100,000 tons in cod catches rising to 800,000 by 1970. This over fishing led to a catch of only 300,000 tons by 1975. Canada and the US reacted by passing legislation to extend their national jurisdictions over marine-living resources out to 200 nautical miles and catches naturally declined to 139,000 tons in 1980. However the Canadian fishing industry took over and restarted the over fishing and catches rose again until, from 1985, it was the Canadians who were landing more than 250,000 tons of northern cod annually. This exploitation ravaged the stocks and by 1990 the catch was so low (29,000 tons) that in 1992 (121/2000 tons) Canada had to ban all fishing in east coast waters. In a fishery that had for over a century yielded a quarter-million ton catches, there remained a biomass of less than 1700 tons and the Fisheries Department also predicted that, even with an immediate recovery, stocks need at least 15 years before they would be healthy enough to withstand previous levels of fishing.
C. The devastating fishing came from massive investment poured into constructing huge "draggers". Draggers haul enormous nets held open by a combination of huge steel plates and heavy chains and rollers that plough the ocean bottom. They drag up anything in the way, inflicting immense damage, destroying critical habitat and contributing to the destabilization of the northern cod ecosystem. The draggers targeted huge aggregations of cod while they were spawning, a time when the fish population is highly vulnerable to capture. Excessive trawling on spawning stocks became highly disruptive to the spawning process, and ecosystem. In addition, the trawling activity resulted in a physical dispersion of eggs leading to a higher fertilization failure. Physical and chemical damage to larvae caused by the trawling action also reduced their chances of survival. These draggers are now banned forever from Canadian waters.
D. Canadian media often cite excessive fishing by overseas fleets, primarily driven by the Capitalist ethic, as the primary cause of the fishing out of the north Atlantic cod stocks. Many nations took fish off the coast of Newfoundland and all used deep-sea trawlers, and many often blatantly exceeded established catch quotas and treaty agreements. There can be little doubt that non-North-American-fishing was a contributing factor in the cod stock collapse, and that the capitalist dynamics that were at work in Canada were all too similar for the foreign vessels and companies. But all of the blame cannot be put there, no matter how easy it is to do, as it does not account for the management of the resources.
E. Who was to blame? As the exploitation of the Newfoundland fishery was so predominantly guided by the government, we can argue that a fishery is not a private area, as the fisher lacks management fights normally associated with property and common property. The state had appropriated the property, and made all of the management decisions. Fishermen get told who can fish, what they can fish, and essentially, what to do with the fish once it is caught. In this regard then, when a resource such as the Newfoundland fishery collapses, it is more a tragedy of government negligence than a tragedy of the general public.
F. Following the 1992’s ban on northern cod fishing and most other species, an estimated 30,000 people that had already lost their jobs after the 1992 Northern Cod Moratorium took effect, were joined by an additional 12,000 fishermen and plant workers. With more than forty thousand people out of jobs, Newfoundland became an economic disaster area, as processing plants shut down, and vessels from the smallest dory to the monster draggers were made idle or sold overseas at bargain prices. Several hundred Newfoundland communities were devastated.
G. Europeans need only look across the North Atlantic to see what could be in store for their cod fishery. In Canada they were too busy with making plans, setting expansive goals, and then allocating fish, and lots of it, instead of making sound business plans to match fishing with the limited availability of the resource. Cod populations in European waters are now so depleted that scientists have recently warned that "all fisheries in this area that target cod should be closed." The Canadian calamity demonstrates that we now have the technological capability o find and annihilate every commercial fish stock, in any ocean and do irreparable damage to entire ecosystems in the process. In Canada’s case, a two billion dollar recovery bill may only be a part of the total long-term costs. The costs to individuals and desperate communities now deprived of meaningful and sustainable employment is staggering. [br] As to the Newfoundland fishery collapse, it is less a tragedy of the general public than a tragedy of ______.
选项
答案
government negligence
解析
该句中提到... a resource such as the Newfoundland fishery collapses,it is more a tragedy of government negligence than a tragedy of the general public.,即政府更应该负更多的责任,题干只是将两个比较的对象调换了位置,故答案为government negligence。
转载请注明原文地址:https://tihaiku.com/zcyy/2979547.html
相关试题推荐
Directions:Forthispart,youareallowed30minutestowriteacompositionon
Thehumancriterionforperfectvisionis20/20forreadingthestandardlin
Formanypeopletoday,readingisnolongerrelaxation.Tokeepuptheirwor
Formanypeopletoday,readingisnolongerrelaxation.Tokeepuptheirwor
Formanypeopletoday,readingisnolongerrelaxation.Tokeepuptheirwor
Formanypeopletoday,readingisnolongerrelaxation.Tokeepuptheirwor
Formanypeopletoday,readingisnolongerrelaxation.Tokeepuptheirwor
Formanypeopletoday,readingisnolongerrelaxation.Tokeepuptheirwor
Formanypeopletoday,readingisnolongerrelaxation.Tokeepuptheirwor
Formanypeopletoday,readingisnolongerrelaxation.Tokeepuptheirwor
随机试题
Thoughthecityisnoisy,mostpeopleliketoliveinit.Therearereallyma
LatinAmericanandChineseofficialshaveopenedtwodaysoftalksontradea
甲单位为一家中央级行政单位,乙、丙、丁单位为甲单位的下属事业单位(均实行中央级行
在Word的编辑状态下,当前输入的文字显示在()。A.鼠标光标处 B.插入点
某男患者,65岁。患胃癌四年,晚期,已失去手术治疗价值,生命垂危。家属再三恳求医
有关SARS的传播途径正确的是()A.间接接触不易传播 B.隐性感染者也
我国封建社会教育的主要内容是()。A.“四书”“五经” B.《诗》《春秋》
请根据上述材料完成下列任务 [问题1][简答题] 什么是模型思想?
在销售前检查出不合格品并拒付费用的成本属于所有权总成本的()组成部分。A、交易前
与求助者心理问题有关的社会因素包括()。多选A.道德体验 B.生活事件
最新回复
(
0
)