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All species of birds lay eggs, and most build a nest to hold their eggs. A few birds don't build a nest, incubate(孵化) eggs, or care for young at all. They leave the responsibility for raising their babies to other species. This breeding strategy is called brood parasitism(巢寄生), and it's done by birds called brood parasites.

Fewer than 1% of all birds are brood parasites. Over most of North America, the only brood parasite is the brown-headed cowbird. It makes sense for the brown-headed cowbird to be a brood parasite when you consider this bind's history. Long ago, its range was fairly restricted to the short grass prairies of the Great Plains,where it lived on seeds and insects if found on disturbed soil. How did the soil get disturbed? Big, heavy bison hooves broke up the prairie nod(草皮). When cowbirds followed the bison, they could find food on the ground, some even in and around the bison droppings, which held partly-digested seeds and attracted insects.

This worked great most of the year. But during the breeding season, the cowbirds would have had a problem if they nested like other birds. Bison herds move about constantly. Imagine what would happen if a cowbird started nesting and suddenly the bison left! Without "help" from the bison, how could she possibly feed her babies or herself if she stayed? Being a brood parasite, she stayed with the bison, knowing her babies were safe in the nests of birds who found food in other ways.

Female cowbirds will stay quietly in the tops of shrubs or trees, watching for nest-building activities. Once the cowbird locates the nest, she usually removes one egg. Many nesting birds don't even seem to notice a cowbird egg among their own eggs. Once the cowbird nestling hatches, the foster parents raise the nestling as if it were one of their own.

Cowbirds remain with their foster parents for about 13 days after they leave the nest,following and begging from adults who are often very much smaller than the baby cowbirds! But after about two weeks, the babies go off on their own, and somehow instinctively associate with other cowbirds.

【小题1】What do we learn about the brown-headed cowbird from the second paragraph?
A.It has always been a brood parasite.
B.It has always lived a mobile life.
C.It might build their own nests long ago.
D.It used to have strong ability of adjustment.
【小题2】What's the relation between the cowbird and the bison?
A.They depend on each other for everything.
B.The cowbird largely depends on the bison.
C.They have to move together.
D.They compete against each other for survival.
【小题3】The cowbird has become a brood parasite because________
A.it has to follow the bison all the time
B.it has lost its skill of building nest
C.it can't find proper places to build nests
D.it can't get food from the bison for its young
【小题4】The cowbird removes one egg from the nest probably to_________
A.make space for its own egg
B.reduce competitors for its young
C.reduce the burden of the nesting birds
D.fool the nesting birds
21-22高一上·山东菏泽·期中
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In a paper published recently in the journal Seabird, a RSPB team documented the training, testing and performance of scent dogs(嗅觉犬) .

Scent dogs have regularly been used for conservation for decades. They are particularly effective at detecting birds that breed (繁殖) in holes and are only active aboveground at night.

Many seabirds show these same characteristics and some, including European storm petrels (海燕), are well-known for their strong scent. However, using scent dogs to detect seabirds has not been common practice in the UK.

The storm petrel is the UK’s smallest seabird. They spend most of their time at sea, only coming to land to breed in summer. They come ashore under the cover of darkness and nest underground in holes. Manx shearwaters (大西洋鹱) are similarly ocean-loving, breeding on land in the UK before going to the South American coast for winter.

These two species are threatened in the UK. However, surveying them is difficult due to their behaviours. The RSPB researchers tried to detect them by using their dogs.

Dog A, called Islay, was trained to locate and indicate storm petrel feathers. Dog B, called Dewi, is used to detect Manx shearwater holes. Dewi had learnt to distinguish between occupied and unoccupied holes and lie down to indicate occupied holes.

The study found that, with sufficient training and reward, Islay could find the precise location of the storm petrel and differentiate between storm petrel and shearwaters cents with 100% reliability. However, care was needed to ensure no combination of scents occurred. Similarly, Dewi had a high success rate in finding shearwater nest holes, although he was less successful at locating deep holes, probably because there was less shearwaters cent at the entrance.

Mark Bolton, RSPB principal conservation scientist and lead author of the paper, says, “The recent use of scent dogs to locate the nest holes of storm petrels on the, Isle of May is further evidence of the potential of scent dogs for seabird monitoring and I hope that this study will encourage more conservation practitioners to use scent dogs in their work.”

【小题1】What do we know about the storm petrel?
A.It is the smallest bird in the world.
B.It returns to land during the winter.
C.It breeds on the South American coast.
D.It is active at night and has a strong scent.
【小题2】What could Islay do according to the study?
A.Distinguish the combination of scents.
B.Find the precise location of a small seabird.
C.Tell storm petrel and shearwaters cents apart.
D.Confirm the entrance to a shearwater nest hole.
【小题3】What does Mark Bolton think of their study?
A.It is significant for the Isle of May.
B.It aids seabird monitoring and conservation.
C.It improves the detection capacities of dogs.
D.It delivers ground-breaking insights into seabirds.
【小题4】What would be the best title for the text?
A.Scent dogs helping detect seabirds in holes
B.Scent dogs serving to find nests for seabirds
C.Scent dogs first used for guarding endangered animals
D.Scent dogs revealing scents of several kinds of seabirds

Otters (水獭) are known to be very social and intelligent creatures, but a new study by the University of Exeter has given new insight into their intellect.

Researchers gave otters “puzzle boxes (智力训练箱)”, some of which contained familiar food, while others held unfamiliar natural prey (猎物) — shore crab and blue mussels, which are protected by hard outer shells. For the familiar food — meatballs, a favorite with the Asian short-clawed otters in the study- the scientists had five different types of boxes, and the method to extract (提取) the food changed in each version, for example pulling a tab or opening a cap. The unfamiliar food presented additional problems because the otters did not know if the crab and mussels were safe to eat and had no experience of getting them out of their shells.

In order to decide whether food was safe and desirable to eat, the otters, which live at Newquay zoo and the Tamar Otter and Wildlife Centre, watched intently (专注地) as their companions inspected what was in the boxes and mimicked their behavior if the other otters sampled the treats.

However, they preferred to spend more time trying to figure out how to remove the meat from the shells on their own and relied less on the actions of their companions. Of the 20 otters in the study, 11 managed to extract the meat from all three types of natural prey.

“Much of the research into the extractive foraging (觅食) and learning capabilities of otters has centered on artificial food puzzles,” said the lead author, Alex Saliveros, of the Centre for Ecology and Conservation on Exeter’s Penryn campus in Cornwall. “Here, we were interested in investigating such skills in the context of unfamiliar natural food, as well as in relation to artificial food puzzles.”

Other animals employ social learning to decide what is safe to eat; rats, for example, prefer novel food types that they have smelled on the breath of other rats.

Scientists hope that understanding how otters cope with unfamiliar foraged food in their natural environment can help them train the animals to survive in the wild. “The captive (圈养的) otters in this study initially struggled with natural prey, but they showed they can learn how to extract the food,” said Saliveros. “Our findings suggest that if you give one otter pre-release training, it can pass some of that information on to others.”

【小题1】What is Paragraph 2 mainly about?
A.The purpose of the research.B.The process of extracting the food.
C.The discovery of the intellect.D.The ways of presenting the food.
【小题2】What does the underlined word “mimicked” probably mean in paragraph3?
A.Copied.B.Influenced.C.Translated.D.Monitored.
【小题3】What does the new study focus on?
A.Changes in otters’ learning capabilities.
B.Otters’ new response in artificial food puzzles.
C.Otters’ learning skills in different circumstances.
D.Relationships between otters’ various learning skills.
【小题4】What’s the significance of the findings?
A.They may help extract the food.B.They improve otters’ intelligence.
C.They can aid conservation efforts.D.They justify the early release of otters.
One thing the tour books don’t tell you about London is that 2,000 of its residents are foxes. They ran away from the city about centuries ago after developers and pollution moved in. But now that the environment is cleaner, the foxes have come home, one of the many wild animals that have moved into urban areas around the world.
“The number and variety of wild animals in urban areas is increasing,” says Gomer Jones, president of the National Institute for Urban Wildlife, in Columbia, Maryland. A survey of the wildlife in New York’s Central Park last year tallied the species of mammals, including muskrats, shrews and flying squirrels. A similar survey conducted in the 1890s counted only five species. One of the country’s largest populations of raccoons (浣熊) now lives in Washington D.C., and moose (驼鹿) are regularly seen wandering into Maine towns. Peregrine falcons(游隼) dive from the window ledges of buildings in the largest U.S. cities to prey on (捕食) pigeons.
Several changes have brought wild animals to the cities. Foremost is that air and water quality in many cities has improved as a result of the 1970s pollution-control efforts. Meanwhile, rural areas have been built up, leaving many animals on the edges of suburbs. In addition, urban wildlife refuges (避难处)have been created. The Greater London Council last year spent£750,000 to buy land and build 10 permanent wildlife refuges in the city. Over 1,000 volunteers have donated money and cleared rubble from derelict lots. One evening last year a fox was seen on Westminster Bridge looking up at Big Ben.
For peregrine falcons, cities are actually safer than rural cliff dwellings (悬崖栖息地). By 1970 the birds had died out east of the Mississippi because the DDT had made their eggs too thin to support life. That year, scientist Tom Cade of Cornell University began raising the birds for release in cities, for cities afforded abundant food.
Cities can attract wild animals without turning them harmful. The trick is to create habitats where they can be self-sufficient but still be seen and appreciated. Such habitats can even be functional. In San Francisco, the local government is testing different kinds of rainwater control basins to see not only which ones retain (保持) the cleanest water but which will attract the most birds.
【小题1】The first paragraph suggests that ________.
A.environment is crucial for wildlife
B.tour books are not always a reliable source of information
C.London is a city of fox
D.foxes are highly adaptable to environment
【小题2】Which of the following is NOT a reason that wildlife is returning to the cities?
A.Food is plentiful in the cities.
B.Wildlife is appreciated in the cities.
C.Wildlife refuges have been built in the cities
D.Air and water quality has improved in the cities
【小题3】The underlined word “tallied” in Para. 2 means __________.
A.distinguishedB.describedC.countedD.excluded
【小题4】It can be inferred from the passage that _________.
A.Londoners are putting more and more wild animals into their zoos.
B.Londoners are happy to see wild animals return to their city
C.Londoners are trying to move wild animals back to the countryside
D.Londoners have welcomed the wild birds, but found foxes a problem
【小题5】What is the passage mainly about?
A.Wildlife returning to large cities
B.Foxes returning to London
C.Wild animals living in zoos
D.A survey of wildlife in New York

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