There are recent reports of apparently drastic declines in amphibian populations and of extinctions of a number of the world's endangered amphibian species. These declines, if real, may be signs of a general trend toward extinction, and many environmentalists have claimed that immediate environmental action is necessary to remedy this "amphibian crisis," which, in their view, is an indicator of general and catastrophic environmental degradation due to human activity.
To evaluate these claims, it is useful to make a preliminary distinction that is far too often ignored. A declining population should not be confused with an endangered one. An endangered population is always rare, almost always small, and, by definition, under constant threat of extinction even without a proximate cause in human activities. Its disappearance, however unfortunate, should come as no great surprise. Moreover, chance events—which may indicate nothing about the direction of trends in population size—may lead to its extinction. The probability of extinction due to such random factors depends on the population size and is independent of the prevailing direction of change in that size.
For biologists, population declines are potentially more worrisome than extinctions. Persistent declines, especially in large populations, indicate a changed ecological context. Even here, distinctions must again be made among declines that are only apparent (in the sense that they are part of habitual cycles or of normal fluctuations), declines that take a population to some lower but still acceptable level, and those that threaten extinction (e.g., by taking the number of individuals below the minimum viable population). Anecdotal reports of population decreases cannot distinguish among these possibilities, and some amphibian populations have shown strong fluctuations in the past.
It is indisputably true that there is simply not enough long-term scientific data on amphibian populations to enable researchers to identify real declines in amphibian populations. Many fairly common amphibian species declared all but extinct after severe declines in the 1950s and 1960s have subsequently recovered, and so might the apparently declining populations that have generated the current appearance of an amphibian crisis. Unfortunately, longterm data will not soon be forthcoming, and postponing environmental action while we wait for it may doom species and whole ecosystems to extinction.
It can be inferred from the passage that the author believes which of the following to be true of the amphibian extinctions that have recently been reported?
They have resulted primarily from human activities causing environmental degradation.
They could probably have been prevented if timely action had been taken to protect the habitats of amphibian species.
They should not come as a surprise, because amphibian populations generally have been declining for a number of years.
They have probably been caused by a combination of chance events.
They do not clearly constitute evidence of general environmental degradation.
题目分析:
文章推断题:可以推断,关于最近的两栖动物灭绝,作者相信?
选项分析:
A选项:灭绝是人类活动(造成环境恶化的人类活动)导致的:文章第二段开始都在质疑这个观点。
B选项:灭绝是可以被预防的,如果及时采取行动保护两栖动物的栖息地:文章没有提保护栖息地会不会预防灭绝。
C选项:灭绝并不令人意外,因为两栖动物数量已经下降很多年了:文章提到数量近几年在波动,并没有一直下降。
D选项:灭绝是由多个偶发事件(chance event)导致的:并没有明确的数据说明灭绝是偶发事件导致的。
E选项:正确。他们没有清晰的组成“环境恶化”的证据:正确。作者认为数量下降并不一定标志着环境恶化,也有其他原因和影响。
C选项:They should not come as a surprise, because amphibian populations generally have been 【declining】 for [a number of years].灭绝并不令人意外,因为两栖动物数量已经下降很多年了:文章提到some amphibian populations have shown strong 【fluctuations】 [in the past].数量近几年在【波动】,并没有一直下降。
D选项:灭绝是由多个偶发事件(chance event)导致的: chance event只是灭绝的一种可能性原因,原文没有直接说【两栖动物的灭绝】就是有可能是因为chance event导致的
E选项:正确。他们没有清晰的组成“环境恶化”的证据:正确。作者认为数量下降并不一定标志着环境恶化,也有其他原因和影响。(显然在文中直接提到,比起D选项更合理)
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