Over the last 150 years, large stretches of salmon habitat have been eliminated by human activity: mining, livestock grazing, timber harvesting, and agriculture as well as recreational and urban development. The numerical effect is obvious: there are fewer salmon in degraded regions than in pristine ones; however, habitat loss also has the potential to reduce genetic diversity. This is most evident in cases where it results in the extinction of entire salmon populations. Indeed, most analysts believe that some kind of environmental degradation underlies the demise of many extinct salmon populations. Although some rivers have been recolonized, the unique genes of the original populations have been lost.
Large-scale disturbances in one locale also have the potential to alter the genetic structure of populations in neighboring areas, even if those areas have pristine habitats. Why? Although the homing instinct of salmon to their natal stream is strong, a fraction of the fish returning from the sea (rarely more than 15 percent) stray and spawn in nearby streams. Low levels of straying are crucial, since the process provides a source of novel genes and a mechanism by which a location can be repopulates should the fish there disappear. Yet high rates of straying can be problematic because misdirected fish may interbreed with the existing stock to such a degree that any local adaptations that are present become diluted. Straying rates remain relatively low when environmental conditions are stable, but can increase dramatically when streams suffer severe disturbance. The 1980 volcanic eruption of Mount Saint Helens, for example, sent mud and debris into several tributaries of the Columbia River. For the next couple of years, steelhead trout (a species included among the salmon ) returning from the sea to spawn were forced to find alternative streams. As a consequence, their rates of straying, initially 16 percent, rose to more than 40 percent overall.
Although no one has quantified changes in the rate of straying as a result of the disturbances caused by humans, there is no reason to suspect that the effect would be qualitatively different than what was seen in the aftermath of the Mount Saint Helens eruption. Such a dramatic increase in straying from damaged areas to more pristine streams results in substantial gene flow, which can in turn lower the overall fitness of subsequent generations.
The primary purpose of the passage is to
argue against a conventional explanation for the extinction of certain salmon populations and suggest an alternative
correct a common misunderstanding about the behavior of salmon in response to environmental degradation caused by human activity
compare the effects of human activity on salmon populations with the effects of natural disturbances on salmon populations
differentiate the particular effects of various human activities on salmon habitats
describe how environmental degradation can cause changes in salmon populations that extend beyond a numerical reduction
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正确答案是 E。本文的主要目的是描述环境退化如何引起针对鲑鱼种群的变化,超越数量上的减少。A 选项说明什么传统的解释,而 B, C 和 D 三个选项关注的是人类活动对鲑鱼栖息地的影响,但并没有涉及到环境退化对鲑鱼种群的变化。
第一段:大片鲑鱼栖息地因人类活动而消失,带来的影响很明显:被人破坏的地区鲑鱼数量少于原始地区。however转折话题:栖息地的丢失还能减少基因多样化。明面上→整个群体的灭绝。实际上→环境退化致使许多鲑鱼种类灭绝。让步说尽管很多地区recolonize了,原本属于该地区独一无二的基因还是消失了。
第二段:本地区基因的消失还能影响周边地区,哪怕周边都是状况较好的原始地区。解释了一下原因,就是鲑鱼洄游过程中会产生stray走失现象,low rate的stray是必须的,原因略,high rate会导致misdirected的鲑鱼和当地品种杂交,以至稀释本地品种adaptation。在环境stable时,stray rate is low,环境被破坏,rate变高。举了个火山爆发导致鲑鱼涌向周边溪流的例子证明上述观点。
第三段的主旨在于,建立human activity导致的环境破坏和自然力量导致环境破坏间的等价关系。二者既然等价,那么就都能造成gene flow,使受污染环境的鱼群向pristine area流动,改变原始地区鱼群的gene,从而影响后代的fitness.
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