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.
According to the passage, each of the following is true of endangered amphibian species EXCEPT:
They are among the rarest kinds of amphibians.
They generally have populations that are small in size.
They are in constant danger of extinction.
Those with decreasing populations are the most likely candidates for immediate extinction.
They are in danger of extinction due to events that sometimes have nothing to do with human activities.
题目分析:
文章细节题:濒临灭绝的两栖动物是:(除了)
选项分析:
A选项:他们是最稀少的物种。
B选项:他们数量很少。
C选项:他们在持续的濒临灭绝的危险中。
D选项:正确。数量正在下降的是最有可能立刻灭绝的:原文没提。
E选项:他们濒临灭绝可能是由于一些和人类活动无关的原因。
已经认定endanger了,所以定位在endanger概念解释那一段,而不是第一段的数量减少这一段
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