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Cheng Gang is a home renovation (整修) worker in Zhongzhai Town, southwest China’s Guizhou Province. Living in a three-story building with his family, he has a steady income. It is hard to imagine that he used to worry about where his next meal will come from a few years ago.

At that time, he lived in Daping Village and grew corn for a low income. The village sits in the steep mountains at an elevation of 1,800 meters, where wild monkeys are commonly seen. To the villagers, the naughty monkeys are both their old neighbors and a big trouble. Chen’s cornfields were damaged by them from time to time.

To protect the ecological environment while solving the problem of poverty, the government carried out a relocation policy by moving residents to Zhongzhai in early 2017. The policy has bought changes to Chen and other villagers. The goal of the policy was not just to relocate villagers but make their lives better and solve practical problems after the move.

The mountain roads were steep in Daping. Children had to walk five kilometers for over one hour to school. And during rainy days, falls were frequent occurrences. Now the children from the relocated households can go to a school that’s only about 100 meters away, with more qualified teachers and better facilities.

The happiest thing for Chen and his fellow villagers is that they have finally shaken off poverty after years of hoping. The town government provides free training courses on various working skills. Having learned how to renovate a house, Chen’s monthly income is about 3,000 yuan. His wife also found a job in a nearby tea mountain.

Meanwhile, their relocation has given wild monkeys a better environment in the nature reserve. There are about 2,000 wild monkeys in the world, of which around 730 inhabit the Mayang River National Reserve. As being neighbors with monkeys has become a thing of the past, people from Daping Village are embracing the new life they have hoped for.

【小题1】What do you know about Chen Gang according to the text?
A.Wild monkeys are his special friends.
B.He has lived in a three-story building since seven years ago.
C.He is paid a regular paycheck as a house renovation worker.
D.He lives in a house at an elevation of 1,800 meters in southwest China.
【小题2】Of the following things, what do the villagers hope for most?
A.A steady income.B.A three-story building
C.Moving out of the village.D.Getting rid of the wild monkeys.
【小题3】What do we know about the relocation policy?
A.It is a policy the villagers have hoped for.
B.The policy has benefited the children a lot.
C.All the villagers moved into three-story building.
D.Most villagers were given a job in a tea mountain.
【小题4】What can be the best title of the passage?
A.Protect Your Friends: Wild Monkeys.
B.A Relocation Policy to Help Shake Off Poverty.
C.Be a Renovation Worker for a Steady Income.
D.Relocate to Given the Children a Better Education.
20-21高三下·甘肃兰州·阶段练习
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Masks that helped save lives during the coronavirus pandemic are proving a deadly threat for wildlife.

Macaques (猕猴) have been spotted chewing the straps off old and tossed-aside masks in the hills outside Malaysia’s capital Kuala Lumpur — a potential choking threat for the diminutive monkeys. And in an incident that captured headlines in Britain, a gull (海鸥) was rescued by the RSPCA in the city of Chelmsford after its legs became tangled (缠绕) in the straps of a disposable (一次性的) mask for up to a week. The animal welfare charity was alerted after the bird was spotted, motionless but still alive, and they took it to a wildlife hospital for treatment before its release.

The biggest impact may be in the water, with green groups alarmed at the flood of used masks, latex (乳胶) gloves and other protective gear finding their way into already polluted seas and rivers. Conservationists in Brazil found one inside the stomach of a penguin after its body washed up on a beach, while a dead pufferfish was discovered caught inside another off the coast of Miami.

French campaigners Operation Mer Propre found a dead crab trapped in a mask in a saltwater lagoon near the Mediterranean in September.

Masks and gloves are “ particularly problematic” for sea creatures, says George Leonard, chief scientist from US-based NGO Ocean Conservancy.“When those plastics break down in the environment, they form smaller and smaller particles. Those particles then enter the food chain and impact entire ecosystems,” he added.

There has been a shift towards greater use of reusable cloth masks, but many are still choosing the lighter single-use varieties. Campaigners have urged people to throw them away properly and cut the straps to reduce the risk of animals becoming trapped. Oceans Asia has   also called on governments to increase fines for littering and encourage the use of washable masks.

【小题1】What is paragraph 2 mainly about?
A.Serious incidents of wildlife hunting.
B.Scientific research into wildlife living habits.
C.How wildlife is affected by disposable masks.
D.How human beings protect endangered wildlife.
【小题2】How do masks endanger sea animals?
A.Sea animals may get twisted by masks.
B.Sea animals can’t find their way home.
C.Sea animals have difficulties in finding food.
D.Sea animals are forced to leave their habitats.
【小题3】What is suggested in the last paragraph?
A.Putting bans on single-use masks.
B.Getting rid of used masks properly.
C.Giving mask producers heavy fines.
D.Reducing the risk of washable masks.
【小题4】Which sections of the newspaper can this passage be found?
A.Business.B.Education.
C.Lifestyle.D.Environment.

For eight years, Handshouse Studio has worked to create toys for Emily and Ruth, two Asian elephants at the Buttonwood Park Zoo in New Bedford.

The founders of the organization, Rick and Laura Brown, are both art teachers and created the “Toys for Elephants” program to challenge their students to make toys for Emily and Ruth and raise the quality of their lives at the zoo. Emily and Ruth were saved from a failed circus (马戏团) in Asia and were badly treated in their youth.

In the spring, the art students make the toys out of wood and other materials (材料). At the end of the semester, the class sends them to Emily and Ruth at the zoo.

This year, the Norwell Fire Department gave away old fire hoses (消防水龙带) to the class. “It’s interesting what use people find in old hoses,” Fire Chief Andrew Reardon said. “To create toys for elephants was certainly a first.” Reardon said they were happy to give Handshouse the old hose to make toys for the elephants and that it was a special chance to be a part of that. “It’s not every day you get to help make toys for elephants,” Reardon said.

Once at the zoo, the students set up their toys around the empty elephant house and quickly leave so Emily and Ruth may come in to play with their new toys. “The students have really embraced this and they really want to have a part to play in solving the serious problem of keeping animals in captivity (圈养),” Rick said.

Handshouse Studio decided to work with other zoos and art and design organizations around the world with the “Toys for Elephants” program. Already, they have been getting calls from all over the world, including New Zealand, Germany and Thailand.

【小题1】What is the purpose of the program from Handshouse Studio?
A.To teach students how to design handmade toys.
B.To attract visitors to the Buttonwood Park Zoo.
C.To save wild elephants from circuses in Asia.
D.To improve the lives of elephants at the zoo.
【小题2】How did the Norwell Fire Department support the program?
A.By volunteering at the park.
B.By making toys with the students.
C.By providing toy-making materials.
D.By raising money for Emily and Ruth.
【小题3】What does the underlined word “embraced” in paragraph 5 mean?
A.Missed.B.Accepted.C.Needed.D.Helped.
【小题4】What can we say about the program?
A.It has drawn worldwide attention.
B.It has made the zoo very-famous.
C.It has been a big step in art education.
D.It has shown the public the value of zoos.

Imagine a world without insects. It might sound good at first without creepy-crawly bugs and annoying flies in your apartment. However, the consequences would be disastrous.

The number of insects has dropped by more than half in the past decades, according to British biologist Dave Goulson, author of Silent Earth: Averting the Insect Apocalypse. As insects make up most of the known species on this planet, this data is not good news, The Guardian reported on July 25.

Insects are indeed on the path to extinction, according to the first global scientific review of insect population decline, which was published in the journal Biological Conservation in January 2019. The researchers say intensive agriculture has been the main cause of the decline. Pesticides, in particular, destroy insect habitats. Urbanization and climate change are also significant factors.

“Unless we change our ways of producing food, insects as a whole will go down the path of extinction in a few decades,” the researchers wrote in the review. “The repercussions (影响) this will have for the planet’s ecosystems are catastrophic to say the least.”

What would happen to Earth without insects? It’s almost impossible to predict, but the consequences would be far-reaching. We need insects to pollinate (授粉) crops, recycle plant and animal material, keep the soil healthy and much more. Without insects, many animals would have nothing to eat, and the predators of those animals would go hungry as well. The ecosystem would be thrown off balance.

“If insect species losses cannot be halted, this will have catastrophic consequences for both the planet’s ecosystems and for the survival of mankind,” said Francisco Sanchez-Bayo at the University of Sydney, Australia, one of the authors of the review.

The first step to halting this process is “to engender a society that values the natural world, both for what it does for us and for its own sake”, Goulson suggests. “The obvious place to start is with our children, encouraging environmental awareness from an early age.”

【小题1】What does the underlined word “disastrous” in paragraph 1 probably mean?
A.Highly helpful.B.Very interesting.
C.Extremely terrible.D.Impossible to predict.
【小题2】What is paragraph 3 mainly about?
A.Problems with intensive agriculture.
B.Causes of the decline in the insect population.
C.Factors causing insect habitat loss.
D.Influence of urbanization on insects.
【小题3】Why are insects so important to Earth?
A.They help slow down climate change.
B.They reduce the number of predators.
C.They have a great impact on the ecosystem.
D.They keep the soil dry and healthy.
【小题4】What does Goulson believe is key to preventing insect species losses?
A.Exploring the natural world often.
B.Providing insects with enough food.
C.Taking children to watch insects closely.
D.Raising public awareness of natural protection.

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