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gwd1-12

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楼主
发表于 2004-9-7 11:14:00 | 只看该作者

gwd1-12

Q9 to Q12:


      Over the last 150 years, large


            stretches of salmon habitat have


            been eliminated by human activity:


Line     mining, livestock grazing, timber


  (5)     harvesting, and agriculture as well


as recreational and urban devel-


opment.  The numerical effect is


obvious:  there are fewer salmon


in degraded regions than in pris-


(10)    tine ones; however, habitat loss


also has the potential to reduce


genetic diversity.  This is most


evident in cases where it results


in the extinction of entire salmon


(15)    populations.  Indeed, most


analysts believe that some kind


of environmental degradation


underlies the demise of many


extinct salmon populations.


(20)    Although some rivers have


            been recolonized, the unique


            genes of the original populations


have been lost.


      Large-scale disturbances in


(25)    one locale also have the potential


to alter the genetic structure of


populations in neighboring areas,


even if those areas have pristine


habitats.  Why?  Although the


(30)    homing instinct of salmon to their


natal stream is strong, a fraction


of the fish returning from the sea


            (rarely more than 15 percent)


stray and spawn in nearby


(35)   streams.  Low levels of straying


are crucial, since the process


provides a source of novel


genes and a mechanism


           by which a location can be


(40)   repopulated should the fish


there disappear.  Yet high rates


of straying can be problematic


because misdirected fish may


interbreed with the existing stock


(45)    to such a degree that any local


adaptations that are present


become diluted.  Straying


rates remain relatively low when


environmental conditions are


(50)    stable, but can increase dramati-


cally when streams suffer severe


disturbance.  The 1980 volcanic


eruption of Mount Saint Helens,


for example, sent mud and debris


(55)    into several tributaries of the


Columbia River.  For the next


couple of years, steelhead trout


(a species included among the


salmonids) returning from the


(60)    sea to spawn were forced to


find alternative streams.  As


a consequence, their rates of


straying, initially 16 percent,


rose to more than 40 percent


(65)    overall.


      Although no one has quantified


changes in the rate of straying


as a result of the disturbances


caused by humans, there is no


(70)    reason to suspect that the effect


would be qualitatively different


than what was seen in the


aftermath of the Mount Saint


Helens eruption.  Such a dra-


(75)    matic increase in straying from


damaged areas to more pristine


streams results in substantial


gene flow, which can in turn lower


the overall fitness of subsequent


generations.


Q12:


The author mentions the “aftermath of the Mount Saint Helens eruption” (lines 73-74) most likely in order to




  • provide an example of the process that allows the repopulation of rivers whose indigenous salmon population has become extinct

  • indicate the extent to which the disturbance of salmon habitat by human activity in one stream might affect the genetic structure of salmon populations elsewhere

  • provide a standard of comparison against which the impact of human activity on the gene flow among salmon populations should be measured

  • show how salmons’ homing instinct can be impaired as a result of severe environmental degradation of their natal streams

  • show why straying rates in salmon populations remain generally low except when spawning streams suffer severe environmental disturbance

  • 正确答案是C,我选D。谁能帮忙看看?

    沙发
    发表于 2005-10-22 11:31:00 | 只看该作者

    我也选了D,不知道为什么答案是C

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