首页
登录
职称英语
You should spend about 20 minutes on Questions 1-13 which are based on Reading P
You should spend about 20 minutes on Questions 1-13 which are based on Reading P
游客
2024-01-08
7
管理
问题
You should spend about 20 minutes on Questions 1-13 which are based on Reading Passage 1 below.
Health in the Wild
Many animals seem able to treat their illnesses themselves. Humans may have a thing or two to learn from them.
For the past decade Dr Engel, a lecturer in environmental sciences at Britain’s Open University, has been collating examples of self-medicating behaviour in wild animals. She recently published a book on the subject. In a talk at the Edinburgh Science Festival earlier this month, she explained that the idea that animals can treat themselves has been regarded with some scepticism by her colleagues in the past. But a growing number of animal behaviourists now think that wild animals can and do deal with their own medical needs.
One example of self-medication was discovered in 1987. Michael Huffman and Moham-edi Seifu, working in the Mahale Mountains National Park in Tanzania, noticed that local chimpanzees suffering from intestinal worms would dose themselves with the pith of a plant called Veronia. This plant produces poisonous chemicals called terpenes. Its pith contains a strong enough concentration to kill gut parasites, but not so strong as to kill chimps(nor people, for that matter; locals use the pith for the same purpose). Given that the plant is known locally as "goat-killer", however, it seems that not all animals are as smart as chimps and humans. Some consume it indiscriminately, and succumb.
Since the Veronia-eating chimps were discovered, more evidence has emerged suggesting that animals often eat things for medical rather than nutritional reasons. Many species, for example, consume dirt—a behaviour known as geophagy. Historically, the preferred explanation was that soil supplies minerals such as salt. But geophagy occurs in areas where the earth is not a useful source of minerals, and also in places where minerals can be more easily obtained from certain plants that are known to be rich in them. Clearly, the animals must be getting something else out of eating earth.
The current belief is that soil—and particularly the clay in it—helps to detoxify the defensive poisons that some plants produce in an attempt to prevent themselves from being eaten. Evidence for the detoxifying nature of clay came in 1999, from an experiment carried out on macaws by James Gilardi and his colleagues at the University of California, Davis. Macaws eat seeds containing alkaloids, a group of chemicals that has some notoriously toxic members, such as strychnine. In the wild, the birds are frequently seen perched on eroding riverbanks eating clay. Dr Gilardi fed one group of macaws a mixture of a harmless alkaloid and clay, and a second group just the alkaloid. Several hours later, the macaws that had eaten the clay had 60% less alkaloid in their bloodstreams than those that had not, suggesting that the hypothesis is correct.
Other observations also support the idea that clay is detoxifying. Towards the tropics the amount of toxic compounds in plants increases—and so does the amount of earth eaten by herbivores. Elephants lick clay from mud holes all year round, except in September when they are bingeing on fruit which, because it has evolved to be eaten, is not toxic. And the addition of clay to the diets of domestic cattle increases the amount of nutrients that they can absorb from their food by 10-20%.
A third instance of animal self-medication is the use of mechanical scours to get rid of gut parasites. In 1972 Richard Wrangham, a researcher at the Gombe Stream Reserve in Tanzania, noticed that chimpanzees were eating the leaves of a tree called Aspilia. The chimps chose the leaves carefully by testing them in their mouths. Having chosen a leaf, a chimp would fold it into a fan and swallow it. Some of the chimps were noticed wrinkling their noses as they swallowed these leaves, suggesting the experience was unpleasant. Later, undigested leaves were found on the forest floor.
Dr Wrangham rightly guessed that the leaves had a medicinal purpose—this was, indeed, one of the earliest interpretations of a behaviour pattern as self-medication. However, he guessed wrong about what the mechanism was. His(and everybody else’s)assumption was that Aspilia contained a drug, and this sparked more than two decades of phytochemical research to try to find out what chemical the chimps were after. But by the 1990s, chimps across Africa had been seen swallowing the leaves of 19 different species that seemed to have few suitable chemicals in common. The drug hypothesis was looking more and more dubious.
It was Dr Huffman who got to the bottom of the problem. He did so by watching what came out of the chimps, rather than concentrating on what went in. He found that the egested leaves were full of intestinal worms. The factor common to all 19 species of leaves swallowed by the chimps was that they were covered with microscopic hooks. These caught the worms and dragged them from their lodgings.
Following that observation, Dr Engel is now particularly excited about how knowledge of the way that animals look after themselves could be used to improve the health of livestock. People might also be able to learn a thing or two—and may, indeed, already have done so. Geophagy, for example, is a common behaviour in many parts of the world. The medical stalls in African markets frequently sell tablets made of different sorts of clays, appropriate to different medical conditions.
Africans brought to the Americas as slaves continued this tradition, which gave their owners one more excuse to affect to despise them. Yet, as Dr Engel points out, Rwandan mountain gorillas eat a type of clay rather similar to kaolinite—the main ingredient of many patent medicines sold over the counter in the West for digestive complaints. Dirt can sometimes be good for you, and to be "as sick as a parrot" may, after all, be a state to be desired.
Questions 1-4
Do the following statements agree with the information given in Reading Passage 1? In boxes 1-4 on your answer sheet, write
TRUE if the statement agrees with the information
FALSE if the statement contradicts the information
NOT GIVEN if there is no information on this [br] Birds, like Macaw, often eat clay because it is part of their natural diet.
选项
A、真
B、假
C、Not Given
答案
B
解析
该题目判断上较有难度。利用细节信息“Macaw”和“clay”定位于原文第四段第三、四句话“Macaws eat seeds containing alkaloids,a group of chemicals that hassome notoriously toxic members,such as strychnine.In the wild,the birds are frequentlyseen perched on eroding riverbanks eating clay”。原文这里虽然提及吃泥土是很多鸟类的行为(对应原文“the birds are frequently secn perched on eroding riverbanks eatingclay”),但是题目里的因果关系“Birds,like Macaw,often eat clay because it is part oftheir natural diet”却有问题,它们并不是因为泥土是“natural diet”的一部分才吃,而是因为原文后面提及的为了“detoxify”才吃的。题目信息与原文信息不相符,所以答案为False。
转载请注明原文地址:https://tihaiku.com/zcyy/3343767.html
相关试题推荐
ReadingtheepicknowntousastheIliadisvastlydifferentfromthe______expe
African-Americanfilmmakersshouldbeinanenviableposition,fors
African-Americanfilmmakersshouldbeinanenviableposition,fors
Aftertwominutesinthesteamchamber,sweatbegantoflowin______fromeveryh
Peopleshouldnottakegoodconstitutionforgranted,forhumangeneticcodeis
SASH:WAIST::A、sock:handB、fringe:ankleC、ring:wristD、epaulet:shoulder
Afool,especiallyifhehasthemisfortuneofknowinganything,should______it
Directions:Eachofthefollowingreadingcomprehensionquestionsisbasedonth
Hispenchantforlearninghistoryshouldprovetobe______duringhisstudiesto
Sendingarobotintospacetogatherinformationisaviableoption,butshould
随机试题
Postgraduatedilemmas[A]Decidingwhetherornottobecomeapostgr
[originaltext]In1968,thecityofPhiladelphia,Pennsylvania,hadaproble
WhyDrugTestingIsNeededA)Theillicitdrugtradein
[originaltext]W:Nowwehavesomequestionsaboutyourworkexperience.Couldy
某计算机系统由下图所示的部件构成,假定每个部件的千小时可靠度都为R,则该系统的千
《国务院办公厅关于加强旅游市场综合监管的通知》提出打造全国治理体系“一盘棋”,设
关于深筋膜描述正确的是A、封闭的结缔组织小囊,内含滑液 B、不与骨膜相连 C
实践证明:我们人民的团结,社会的稳定,民主的发展,国家的统一,都要靠()A、
1998-24.花剥苔主病为 A.脾胃气虚B.胃阴不足C.胃中热盛D.胃
下列有关刑事责任的说法正确的是()。A.故意犯罪应当负刑事责任 B.过失犯罪不
最新回复
(
0
)