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
2025-02-16
14
管理
问题
You should spend about 20 minutes on Questions 14-26, which are based on Reading Passage 2 below.
Why are so few tigers man-eaters?
A As you leave the Bandhavgarh National Park in central India, there is a notice which shows a huge, placid tiger. The notice says, ’You may not have seen me, but I have seen you.’ There are more than a billion people in India and Indian tigers probably see humans every single day of their lives. Tigers can and do kill almost anything they meet in the jungle — they will even attack elephants and rhino. Surely, then, it is a little strange that attacks on humans are not more frequent.
B Some people might argue that these attacks were in fact common in the past. British writers of adventure stories, such as Jim Corbett, gave the impression that village life in India in the early years of the twentieth century involved a state of constant siege by man-eating tigers. But they may have overstated the terror spread by tigers. There were also far more tigers around in those days(probably 60,000 in the subcontinent, compared to just 3,000 today). So in proportion, attacks appear to have been as rare then as they are today.
C It is widely assumed that the constraint is fear; but what exactly are tigers afraid of? Can they really know that we may be even better armed than they are? Surely not. Has the species programmed the experiences of all tigers with humans into its genes to be inherited as instinct? Perhaps. But I think the explanation may be more simple and, in a way, more intriguing.
D Since the growth of ethology1 in the 1950s, we have tried to understand animal behaviour from the animal’s point of view. Until the first elegant experiments by pioneers in the field, such as Konrad Lorenz, naturalists wrote about animals as if they were slightly less intelligent humans. Jim Corbett’s breathless accounts of his duels with man-eaters in truth tell us more about Jim Corbett than they do about the animals. The principle of ethology, on the other hand, requires us to attempt to think in the same way as the animal we are studying thinks, and to observe every tiny detail of its behaviour without imposing our own human significances on its actions.
E I suspect that a tiger’s fear of humans lies not in some preprogrammed ancestral logic but in the way he actually perceives us visually. If you try to think like a tiger, a human in a car might appear just to be part of the car, and because tigers don’t eat cars the human is safe — unless the car is menacing the tiger or its cubs, in which case a brave or enraged tiger may charge. A human on foot is a different sort of puzzle. Imagine a tiger sees a man who is 1.8m tall. A tiger is less than lm tall but he may be up to 3m long from head to tail. So when a tiger sees the man face on, it might not be unreasonable for him to assume that the man is 6m long. If he met a deer of this size, he might attack the animal by leaping on its back, but when he looks behind the man, he can’t see a back. From the front the man is huge, but looked at from the side he all but disappears. This must be very disconcerting. A hunter has to be confident that it can tackle its prey, and no one is confident when they are disconcerted. This is especially true of a solitary hunter such as the tiger and may explain why lions — particularly young lionesses who tend to encourage one another to take risks — are more dangerous than tigers.
F If the theory that a tiger is disconcerted to find that a standing human is both very big and yet somehow invisible is correct, the opposite should be true of a squatting human. A squatting human is half the size and presents twice the spread of back, and more closely resembles a medium-sized deer. If tigers were simply frightened of all humans, then a squatting person would be no more attractive as a target than a standing one. This, however, appears not to be the case. Many incidents of attacks on people involve villagers squatting or bending over to cut grass for fodder or building material.
G The fact that humans stand upright may therefore not just be something that distinguishes them from nearly all other species, but also a factor that helped them to survive in a dangerous and unpredictable environment.
Questions 14-18
Reading Passage 2 has seven paragraphs labelled A-G.
Which paragraph contains the following information?
Write the correct letter A-G in boxes 14-18 on your answer sheet. [br] an explanation of tiger behaviour based on the principles of ethology
选项
答案
E
解析
Section beginning: If you try to think like a tiger...
转载请注明原文地址:https://tihaiku.com/zcyy/3959504.html
相关试题推荐
DothefollowingstatementsagreewiththeviewsofthewriterinReadingPassag
DothefollowingstatementsagreewiththeviewsofthewriterinReadingPassag
DothefollowingstatementsagreewiththeviewsofthewriterinReadingPassag
Youshouldspendabout20minutesonQuestions27-40,whicharebasedonReading
Youshouldspendabout20minutesonQuestions27-40,whicharebasedonReading
Youshouldspendabout20minutesonQuestions27-40,whicharebasedonReading
DothefollowingstatementsagreewiththeinformationgiveninReadingPassage
DothefollowingstatementsagreewiththeinformationgiveninReadingPassage
Youshouldspendabout20minutesonQuestions14-26,whicharebasedonReading
Youshouldspendabout20minutesonQuestions14-26,whicharebasedonReading
随机试题
Inthepopularmind,theInternetistherealizationoftheglobalvillage,
America’sNationalOceanicandAtmosphericAdministrationiscelebratingthe
已知等成本曲线与等产量曲线既不相交也不相切,此时,要达到等产量曲线所表示的产出水
CR与DR系统应用比较,相同点是A.应用于常规摄影 B.操作方式 C.成像方
从包含5000个项目的总体中抽取100个组成样本。平均值为200美元,标准差为3
健康风险评估是一种以大量基础的流行病学数据与个人数据比较以推估个人患病或死亡风险
在欣赏《保卫黄河》这一课的学习过程中,为了让学生对授课内容有更深刻的理解,教师在
引起秋冬季小儿腹泻的主要病原体是A.柯萨奇病毒 B.腺病毒 C.轮状病毒
关于慢性支气管炎的发病因素,下列哪一项是错误的A.呼吸部防御功能和免疫功能低下
患者,女性,10岁,左膝关节肿胀半年,近期低热,无外伤史,检查:左膝关节肿胀,轻
最新回复
(
0
)