首页
登录
职称英语
You should spend about 20 minutes on Questions 14-26, which are based on Reading
You should spend about 20 minutes on Questions 14-26, which are based on Reading
游客
2025-02-15
0
管理
问题
You should spend about 20 minutes on Questions 14-26, which are based on Reading Passage 2 below.
SAVING THE SOIL
More than a third of the Earth’s top layer is at risk. Is there hope for our planet’s most precious resource?
A More than a third of the world’s soil is endangered, according to a recent UN report. If we don’t slow the decline, all farmable soil could be gone in 60 years. Since soil grows 95% of our food, and sustains human life in other more surprising ways, that is a huge problem.
B Peter Groffman, from the Cary Institute of Ecosystem Studies in New York, points out that soil scientists have been warning about the degradation of the world’s soil for decades. At the same time, our understanding of its importance to humans has grown. A single gram of healthy soil might contain 100 million bacteria, as well as other microorganisms such as viruses and fungi, living amid decomposing plants and various minerals.
That means soils do not just grow our food, but are the source of nearly all our existing antibiotics, and could be our best hope in the fight against antibiotic-resistant bacteria. Soil is also an ally against climate change: as microorganisms within soil digest dead animals and plants, they lock in their carbon content, holding three times the amount of carbon as does the entire atmosphere. Soils also store water, preventing flood damage: in the UK, damage to buildings, roads and bridges from floods caused by soil degradation costs £233 million every year.
C If the soil loses its ability to perform these functions, the human race could be in big trouble. The danger is not that the soil will disappear completely, but that the microorganisms that give it its special properties will be lost. And once this has happened, it may take the soil thousands of years to recover.
Agriculture is by far the biggest problem. In the wild, when plants grow they remove nutrients from the soil, but then when the plants die and decay these nutrients are returned directly to the soil. Humans tend not to return unused parts of harvested crops directly to the soil to enrich it, meaning that the soil gradually becomes less fertile. In the past we developed strategies to get around the problem, such as regularly varying the types of crops grown, or leaving fields uncultivated for a season.
D But these practices became inconvenient as populations grew and agriculture had to be run on more commercial lines. A solution came in the early 20th century with the Haber-Bosch process for manufacturing ammonium nitrate. Farmers have been putting this synthetic fertiliser on their fields ever since.
But over the past few decades, it has become clear this wasn’t such a bright idea. Chemical fertilisers can release polluting nitrous oxide into the atmosphere and excess is often washed away with the rain, releasing nitrogen into rivers. More recently, we have found that indiscriminate use of fertilisers hurts the soil itself, turning it acidic and salty, and degrading the soil they are supposed to nourish.
E One of the people looking for a solution to this problem is Pius Floris, who started out running a tree-care business in the Netherlands, and now advises some of the world’s top soil scientists. He came to realise that the best way to ensure his trees flourished was to take care of the soil, and has developed a cocktail of beneficial bacteria, fungi and humus* to do this. Researchers at the University of Valladolid in Spain recently used this cocktail on soils destroyed by years of fertiliser overuse. When they applied Floris’s mix to the desert-like test plots, a good crop of plants emerged that were not just healthy at the surface, but had roots strong enough to pierce dirt as hard as rock. The few plants that grew in the control plots, fed with traditional fertilisers, were small and weak.
F However, measures like this are not enough to solve the global soil degradation problem. To assess our options on a global scale we first need an accurate picture of what types of soil are out there, and the problems they face. That’s not easy. For one thing, there is no agreed international system for classifying soil. In an attempt to unify the different approaches, the UN has created the Global Soil Map project. Researchers from nine countries are working together to create a map linked to a database that can be fed measurements from field surveys, drone surveys, satellite imagery, lab analyses and so on to provide real-time data on the state of the soil. Within the next four years, they aim to have mapped soils worldwide to a depth of 100 metres, with the results freely accessible to all.
G But this is only a first step. We need ways of presenting the problem that bring it home to governments and the wider public, says Pamela Chasek at the International Institute for Sustainable Development, in Winnipeg, Canada. ’Most scientists don’t speak language that policy-makers can understand, and vice versa.’ Chasek and her colleagues have proposed a goal of ’zero net land degradation’. Like the idea of carbon neutrality, it is an easily understood target that can help shape expectations and encourage action.
For soils on the brink, that may be too late. Several researchers are agitating for the immediate creation of protected zones for endangered soils. One difficulty here is defining what these areas should conserve: areas where the greatest soil diversity is present? Or areas of unspoilt soils that could act as a future benchmark of quality?
Whatever we do, if we want our soils to survive, we need to take action now.
* Humus: the part of the soil formed from dead plant material
Questions 14-17
Complete the summary below.
Write ONE WORD ONLY from the passage for each answer.
Write your answers in boxes 14-17 on your answer sheet.
Why soil degradation could be a disaster for humans
Healthy soil contains a large variety of bacteria and other microorganisms, as well as plant remains and 【R14】______ It provides us with food and also with antibiotics, and its function in storing 【R15】______has a significant effect on the climate. In addition, it prevents damage to property and infrastructure because it holds 【R16】______.
If these microorganisms are lost, soil may lose its special properties. The main factor contributing to soil degradation is the 【R17】______carried out by humans. [br] 【R15】
选项
答案
carbon
解析
题目:它为我们提供食物和抗生素,它储存……的功能对环境有重大影响。通过动词storing的同义替换词locking...in可知,土壤还可以锁住碳性物质。因此答案为carbon。
转载请注明原文地址:https://tihaiku.com/zcyy/3957821.html
相关试题推荐
Afool,especiallyifhehasthemisfortuneofknowinganything,should______it
Sendingarobotintospacetogatherinformationisaviableoption,butshould
Inarecentstudy,DavidCressyexaminestwocentralquestionsconcerningEnglis
Inarecentstudy,DavidCressyexaminestwocentralquestionsconcerningEnglis
Inarecentstudy,DavidCressyexaminestwocentralquestionsconcerningEnglis
Intheearlytwentiethcentury,theideathatpianistsshouldbemusician-schola
Intheearlytwentiethcentury,theideathatpianistsshouldbemusician-schola
Intheearlytwentiethcentury,theideathatpianistsshouldbemusician-schola
WriterJohnWorthensuggestedthat,insomecases,biographersshouldbe(i)____
Thatcritic’swritingissoobscureanddensethatuponfirstreading,onefinds
随机试题
Inrecentyears,traditionalprintednewspapershavefacedaseriouschallen
TheSeattleTimesCompanyisonenewspaperfirmthathasrecognizedtheneed
Thequalityofuniversitylifeisdecliningunderstrainfromthehigheredu
全国水资源一级分区主要湿地面积比例最大的河流是:() A.松花江 B.黄
项目部要对施工升降机的使用建立相关的管理制度不包括()。A.司机的岗位责任制
下列关于轻微副作用的处理说法正确的是A:一旦用药后出现便秘,应立即停药 B:出
在碱性溶液中可使毒性增强的有机磷农药是A.敌百虫 B.乐果 C.氧乐果 D
下边四个图形中,只有一个是由上边的四个图形拼合(只能通过上、下、左、右平移)而成
正常情况下胃黏膜不会被胃液所消化,是由于A.胃液中不含有可消化胃黏膜的酶 B.
以下哪项不是感染性心内膜炎的临床表现A.皮肤、黏膜瘀点 B.皮下小结 C.脾
最新回复
(
0
)