QUESTIONS 41-50: Read the passage and choose the correct answer to each of the questions below (2.5 pts).
El Nino and Seabirds
A. Rhythm of the seasons cannot always be relied upon. At times the tropical Pacific Ocean and large expanses of the global atmosphere seem to be marching to the beat of a different drummer, disrupting the normal patterns of countless species of plants and animals along with hundreds of millions of human beings. So they want to anticipate these occasional lapses in the march of the seasons and help societies plan accordingly, scientists are seeking to understand these competing rhythms: the strongest of which is the alternation between the “normal climate” and a different but still recurrent set of climatic conditions in the Pacific region called El Nino.
B. Seabirds are prominent and highly visible components of marine ecosystems that will be affected by global climate change. The Bering Sea region is particularly important to seabirds; populations there are larger and more diverse than in any similar region in North America - over 90% of seabirds breeding in the continental United States are found in this region. Seabirds, so named because they spend at least 80% of their lives at sea, are dependent upon marine resources for food. As prey availability changes in response to climatically driven factors such as surface sea temperature and extent of sea ice, so will populations of seabirds be affected.
C. Seabirds are valued as indicators of healthy marine ecosystems and provide a “vicarious use value” or existence value - people appreciate and value seabirds simply because they are there and enjoy them through venues such as pictures, nature programs, and written accounts without ever directly observing seabirds in their native environment. A direct measure of this value is demonstrated by Federal legislation that established specific national wildlife refuges to protect seabirds and international treaty obligations that provide additional protection for seabirds. Seabirds are also an important subsistence resource for many who live within the Bering Sea Region. Furthermore, the rich knowledge base about seabirds makes them a valuable resource as indicator species for measurement of change in the marine environment.
D. The most abundant breeding species in Alaska are northern fulmars, storm-petrels, kittiwakes, murres, auklets and puffins. These species also form the largest colonies. Fulmars, storm-petrels and kittiwakes are surface feeders, picking their prey from the surface or just below the surface; murres, auklets, and puffins dive for their food. Fulmars nest primarily on island groups in and around the Bering Sea. They take a wide variety of prey (e.g., fish, squid, zooplankton, jellyfish) from the surface or just below the surface. Storm-petrels are strictly nocturnal and nest below ground in either burrows or crevices between rocks. They forage on zooplankton and squid; in some areas they are dependent upon small fish such as capelin and sand lance caught at the surface. Black-legged kittiwakes are widespread throughout Alaska, Canada and Eurasia while red-legged kittiwakes are found only in the Bering Sea region. Both are surface feeders although black-legged kittiwakes feed primarily on small fish and forage over the continental shelf and shelf break; red-legged kittiwakes feed primarily on myctophids and will forage beyond the shelf break.
E. Marine mammals have exhibited similar signs of food stress in recent years. Harbor seals at Tugidak Island in the Gulf of Alaska declined by about 85% between 1976 and 1988. Steller sea lion populations declined by 36% in the Gulf of Alaska between 1977 and 1985, and by another 59% between 1985 and 1988. Northern fur seals declined about 35% by 1986 from their average numbers in the 1970s, although numbers had rebounded somewhat (20%) by 1990. Associated with the declines in Steller sea lions are declines in birth rate, fewer breeding females, fewer pups, decreased adult body condition, decreased juvenile survival, and a change in population age structure.
F. Walker noticed that monsoon seasons with low-index conditions are often marked by drought in Australia, Indonesia, India, and parts of Africa. He also claimed that low-index winters tend to be unusually mild in western Canada. One of his British colleagues chided him in print for suggesting that climatic conditions over such widely separated regions of the globe could be linked. In his reply Walker predicted, correctly, that an explanation would be forthcoming, but that it would require a knowledge of wind patterns above ground level, which were not routinely being observed at that time.
G. The need for long-term time series. It seems obvious that without good baseline data ornithologists are doomed to be surprised by the arrival of El Nino every few years. Even when ornithologists and ecologists are at hand to take advantage of an incoming El Nino, lack of preexisting data, and of monitoring afterwards, makes it difficult to understand responses of birds to the successive El Nino, La Nina, and “normal” years. Indeed, according to Jaksic, during the last century there were 12 El Nino years and 12 La Nina years, thus leaving about 76 ‘normal’ years in between. Thus, by heavily concentrating attention on only 12% of the time span El Nino, and of neglecting possibly another 12%, ornithologists are essentially ignoring what happens during 76% of the time. This situation may be remedied only as long as data are logged on a regular or continuous basis, that is, as long-term time series. The recipe prescribed by Schreiber & Schreiber to understand El Nino, effects on birds still stands: ‘…carry out long-term studies that will shed further light on the interactions between global atmospheric cycles, oceanographic phenomena, and avian populations.’
H. Populations of seabirds in Alaska are larger and more diverse than any similar region in the Northern Hemisphere. The extensive coastal estuaries and offshore waters of Alaska provide breeding, feeding and migrating habitats for 66 species of seabirds. At least 38 species of seabirds, over 50 million individuals, breed in Alaska. Eight Alaskan species breed only here and in adjacent Siberia. Five additional species range through the North Pacific, but their populations are concentrated in Alaska. In addition to breeding grounds, Alaskan waters also provide important wintering habitat for birds that breed in Canada and Eurasia. Shearwaters, which breed in the southern hemisphere, are the most numerous species in Alaskan waters during the summer.
I. As another indication that food has been limiting in recent years, several largescale die-offs of seabirds, mostly surface-feeding species, have been observed in the Gulf of Alaska during the last decade, most notably in 1983, 1989 and 1993. But Hatch thinks that it is too early to decide the these die-offs reports are somehow connected with effect of El Nino. Byrd and Tobish believe that high rainfall can affect survival of chicks in earthen burrows, and incidence of big storms with high winds during the chick-rearing period can cause mortality for chicks of species nesting on cliff- ledges, but this view has not been considered as convincing evidence.
Questions 41-48. Choose the correct letter A, B, C, or D. Write your answers in boxes 41-48 on your answer sheet.
Do the following statements agree with the information given in the passage? In boxes 49-50 on your answer sheet, write
YES if the statement agrees with the claims of the writer
NO if the statement contradicts the claims of the writer
NOT GIVEN if it is impossible to say what the writer thinks about this
Why do scientists want to investigate El Nino phenomenon at the beginning of the passage?
QUESTIONS 41-50: Read the passage and choose the correct answer to each of the questions below (2.5 pts).
El Nino and Seabirds
A. Rhythm of the seasons cannot always be relied upon. At times the tropical Pacific Ocean and large expanses of the global atmosphere seem to be marching to the beat of a different drummer, disrupting the normal patterns of countless species of plants and animals along with hundreds of millions of human beings. So they want to anticipate these occasional lapses in the march of the seasons and help societies plan accordingly, scientists are seeking to understand these competing rhythms: the strongest of which is the alternation between the “normal climate” and a different but still recurrent set of climatic conditions in the Pacific region called El Nino.
B. Seabirds are prominent and highly visible components of marine ecosystems that will be affected by global climate change. The Bering Sea region is particularly important to seabirds; populations there are larger and more diverse than in any similar region in North America - over 90% of seabirds breeding in the continental United States are found in this region. Seabirds, so named because they spend at least 80% of their lives at sea, are dependent upon marine resources for food. As prey availability changes in response to climatically driven factors such as surface sea temperature and extent of sea ice, so will populations of seabirds be affected.
C. Seabirds are valued as indicators of healthy marine ecosystems and provide a “vicarious use value” or existence value - people appreciate and value seabirds simply because they are there and enjoy them through venues such as pictures, nature programs, and written accounts without ever directly observing seabirds in their native environment. A direct measure of this value is demonstrated by Federal legislation that established specific national wildlife refuges to protect seabirds and international treaty obligations that provide additional protection for seabirds. Seabirds are also an important subsistence resource for many who live within the Bering Sea Region. Furthermore, the rich knowledge base about seabirds makes them a valuable resource as indicator species for measurement of change in the marine environment.
D. The most abundant breeding species in Alaska are northern fulmars, storm-petrels, kittiwakes, murres, auklets and puffins. These species also form the largest colonies. Fulmars, storm-petrels and kittiwakes are surface feeders, picking their prey from the surface or just below the surface; murres, auklets, and puffins dive for their food. Fulmars nest primarily on island groups in and around the Bering Sea. They take a wide variety of prey (e.g., fish, squid, zooplankton, jellyfish) from the surface or just below the surface. Storm-petrels are strictly nocturnal and nest below ground in either burrows or crevices between rocks. They forage on zooplankton and squid; in some areas they are dependent upon small fish such as capelin and sand lance caught at the surface. Black-legged kittiwakes are widespread throughout Alaska, Canada and Eurasia while red-legged kittiwakes are found only in the Bering Sea region. Both are surface feeders although black-legged kittiwakes feed primarily on small fish and forage over the continental shelf and shelf break; red-legged kittiwakes feed primarily on myctophids and will forage beyond the shelf break.
E. Marine mammals have exhibited similar signs of food stress in recent years. Harbor seals at Tugidak Island in the Gulf of Alaska declined by about 85% between 1976 and 1988. Steller sea lion populations declined by 36% in the Gulf of Alaska between 1977 and 1985, and by another 59% between 1985 and 1988. Northern fur seals declined about 35% by 1986 from their average numbers in the 1970s, although numbers had rebounded somewhat (20%) by 1990. Associated with the declines in Steller sea lions are declines in birth rate, fewer breeding females, fewer pups, decreased adult body condition, decreased juvenile survival, and a change in population age structure.
F. Walker noticed that monsoon seasons with low-index conditions are often marked by drought in Australia, Indonesia, India, and parts of Africa. He also claimed that low-index winters tend to be unusually mild in western Canada. One of his British colleagues chided him in print for suggesting that climatic conditions over such widely separated regions of the globe could be linked. In his reply Walker predicted, correctly, that an explanation would be forthcoming, but that it would require a knowledge of wind patterns above ground level, which were not routinely being observed at that time.
G. The need for long-term time series. It seems obvious that without good baseline data ornithologists are doomed to be surprised by the arrival of El Nino every few years. Even when ornithologists and ecologists are at hand to take advantage of an incoming El Nino, lack of preexisting data, and of monitoring afterwards, makes it difficult to understand responses of birds to the successive El Nino, La Nina, and “normal” years. Indeed, according to Jaksic, during the last century there were 12 El Nino years and 12 La Nina years, thus leaving about 76 ‘normal’ years in between. Thus, by heavily concentrating attention on only 12% of the time span El Nino, and of neglecting possibly another 12%, ornithologists are essentially ignoring what happens during 76% of the time. This situation may be remedied only as long as data are logged on a regular or continuous basis, that is, as long-term time series. The recipe prescribed by Schreiber & Schreiber to understand El Nino, effects on birds still stands: ‘…carry out long-term studies that will shed further light on the interactions between global atmospheric cycles, oceanographic phenomena, and avian populations.’
H. Populations of seabirds in Alaska are larger and more diverse than any similar region in the Northern Hemisphere. The extensive coastal estuaries and offshore waters of Alaska provide breeding, feeding and migrating habitats for 66 species of seabirds. At least 38 species of seabirds, over 50 million individuals, breed in Alaska. Eight Alaskan species breed only here and in adjacent Siberia. Five additional species range through the North Pacific, but their populations are concentrated in Alaska. In addition to breeding grounds, Alaskan waters also provide important wintering habitat for birds that breed in Canada and Eurasia. Shearwaters, which breed in the southern hemisphere, are the most numerous species in Alaskan waters during the summer.
I. As another indication that food has been limiting in recent years, several largescale die-offs of seabirds, mostly surface-feeding species, have been observed in the Gulf of Alaska during the last decade, most notably in 1983, 1989 and 1993. But Hatch thinks that it is too early to decide the these die-offs reports are somehow connected with effect of El Nino. Byrd and Tobish believe that high rainfall can affect survival of chicks in earthen burrows, and incidence of big storms with high winds during the chick-rearing period can cause mortality for chicks of species nesting on cliff- ledges, but this view has not been considered as convincing evidence.
Questions 41-48. Choose the correct letter A, B, C, or D. Write your answers in boxes 41-48 on your answer sheet.
Do the following statements agree with the information given in the passage? In boxes 49-50 on your answer sheet, write
YES if the statement agrees with the claims of the writer
NO if the statement contradicts the claims of the writer
NOT GIVEN if it is impossible to say what the writer thinks about this
Why do scientists want to investigate El Nino phenomenon at the beginning of the passage?
Quảng cáo
Trả lời:
Đáp án đúng: B
Giải thích:
Dựa vào câu: At times the tropical Pacific Ocean and large expanses of the global atmosphere seem to be marching to the beat of a different drummer, disrupting the normal patterns of countless species of plants and animals along with hundreds of millions of human beings. (Đôi khi, Thái Bình Dương nhiệt đới và những vùng rộng lớn của bầu khí quyển toàn cầu dường như đang di chuyển theo nhịp điệu khác, phá vỡ các quy luật bình thường của vô số loài thực vật và động vật cùng với hàng trăm triệu con người.)
Câu hỏi cùng đoạn
Câu 2:
Why do scientists use seabirds as important subjects when observing climate change world-widely?
Why do scientists use seabirds as important subjects when observing climate change world-widely?
Đáp án đúng: A
Giải thích:
Dựa vào câu: As prey availability changes in response to climatically driven factors such as surface sea temperature and extent of sea ice, so will populations of seabirds be affected. (Khi nguồn thức ăn sẵn có thay đổi do các yếu tố khí hậu như nhiệt độ bề mặt biển và phạm vi băng biển, quần thể chim biển cũng sẽ bị ảnh hưởng.)
Câu 3:
What happened for marine mammals that live in Tugidak Island in Gulf of Alaska?
What happened for marine mammals that live in Tugidak Island in Gulf of Alaska?
Đáp án đúng: C
Giải thích:
Dựa vào câu: Associated with the declines in Steller sea lions are declines in birth rate, fewer breeding females, fewer pups, decreased adult body condition, decreased juvenile survival, and a change in population age structure. (Sự suy giảm số lượng sư tử biển Steller có liên quan đến tỷ lệ sinh giảm, số lượng con cái sinh sản giảm, số lượng con non giảm, thể trạng của con trưởng thành suy yếu, tỷ lệ sống sót của con non giảm và sự thay đổi trong cấu trúc tuổi của quần thể.)
Câu 4:
According to J. Walker, what happens in the monsoon seasons notably?
According to J. Walker, what happens in the monsoon seasons notably?
Đáp án đúng: D
Giải thích:
Dựa vào câu: Walker noticed that monsoon seasons with low-index conditions are often marked by drought in Australia, Indonesia, India, and parts of Africa. (Walker nhận thấy rằng mùa gió mùa với điều kiện chỉ số thấp thường đi kèm với hạn hán ở Úc, Indonesia, Ấn Độ và một số vùng của châu Phi.)
Câu 5:
In paragraph F, what is closest in meaning to “chided”?
Đáp án đúng: A
Giải thích: Từ “chided” gần nghĩa nhất với “blamed” (đổ lỗi).
Câu 6:
In paragraph G, what is closest in meaning to “avian”?
Đáp án đúng: B
Giải thích: “Avian populations” = quần thể chim. “Avian” có nghĩa là: thuộc về chim.
Câu 7:
Which of the following statements is NOT TRUE about the passage?
Which of the following statements is NOT TRUE about the passage?
Đáp án đúng: D
Giải thích:
Dựa vào câu: Associated with the declines in Steller sea lions are declines in birth rate, fewer breeding females, fewer pups, decreased adult body condition, decreased juvenile survival, and a change in population age structure. (Sự suy giảm số lượng sư tử biển Steller có liên quan đến tỷ lệ sinh giảm, số lượng con cái sinh sản giảm, số lượng con non giảm, thể trạng của con trưởng thành suy yếu, tỷ lệ sống sót của con non giảm và sự thay đổi trong cấu trúc tuổi của quần thể.)
Câu 8:
Which of the following statements is TRUE about the passage?
Which of the following statements is TRUE about the passage?
Đáp án đúng: D
Giải thích:
Dựa vào câu: Hatch thinks that it is too early to decide these die-offs reports are connected with El Niño. (Hatch cho rằng còn quá sớm để kết luận liệu những báo cáo về hiện tượng chết hàng loạt này có liên quan đến El Niño hay không.)
Câu 9:
Number of Shearwaters in the southern hemisphere feed most during the summer.
Number of Shearwaters in the southern hemisphere feed most during the summer.
Đáp án:
Đáp án đúng: YES
Giải thích:
Dựa vào câu: But Hatch thinks that it is too early to decide the these die-offs reports are somehow connected with effect of El nino. (Nhưng Hatch cho rằng còn quá sớm để kết luận liệu những báo cáo về hiện tượng chết hàng loạt này có liên quan đến ảnh hưởng của El Nino hay không.)
Câu 10:
The largescale die-offs of seabirds were observed in the Gulf of Alaska in the twenty-first century.
The largescale die-offs of seabirds were observed in the Gulf of Alaska in the twenty-first century.
Đáp án:
Đáp án đúng: NO
Giải thích:
Dựa vào câu: As another indication that food has been limiting in recent years, several largescale die-offs of seabirds, mostly surface-feeding species, have been observed in the Gulf of Alaska during the last decade, most notably in 1983, 1989 and 1993. (Một dấu hiệu khác cho thấy nguồn thức ăn đang bị hạn chế trong những năm gần đây là việc ghi nhận nhiều vụ chết hàng loạt chim biển, chủ yếu là các loài kiếm ăn trên mặt nước, tại Vịnh Alaska trong thập kỷ qua, đáng chú ý nhất là vào các năm 1983, 1989 và 1993.)
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CÂU HỎI HOT CÙNG CHỦ ĐỀ
Câu 1
Lời giải
Đáp án đúng: C
Lời giải
Đáp án đúng: temperature
Lời giải
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Câu 5
Lời giải
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