What was scientists' understanding of cryptic species?A.They occurred in equal numbers in all biogeographical regions.B.They were mostly found in insects and reptiles.C.They were likely to be in tropical rather than temperate regions.D.Both B and C.

题目

What was scientists' understanding of cryptic species?

A.They occurred in equal numbers in all biogeographical regions.

B.They were mostly found in insects and reptiles.

C.They were likely to be in tropical rather than temperate regions.

D.Both B and C.


相似考题

2."Hidden" Species May Be Surprisingly CommonCryptic species animals that appear identical but are genetically quite distant—may be much more widespread than previously thought. The findings could have major implications in areas ranging from biodiversity estimates and wildlife management, to our understanding of infectious diseases and evolution.Reports of cryptic species have increased dramatically over the past two decades with the advent of relatively inexpensive DNA sequencing technology. Markus Pfenninger and Klaus Schwenk, of the Goethe-Universitat, in Frankfurt, Germany, analyzed all known data on cryptic animal species and discovered that they are found in equal proportions throughout all major branches of the animal kingdom and occur in equal numbers in all biogeographieal regions.Scientists had previously speculated that cryptic species were predominantly found in insects and reptiles, and were more likely to occur in tropical rather than temperate regions. "Species that are seemingly widespread and abundant could in reality be many different cryptic species that have low populations and are highly endangered. " Says Pfenninger. Until the genetic information of all species in at least one taxon is thoroughly studied, no one will know just how many cryptic species exist. "It could be as high as 30%. " Pfenninger says."I'm extremely surprised by their results. " Says Alex Smith of the University of Guelph in Ontario, Canada. "It's a call to arms to keep doing the broad kind of genetic studies that we are doing. "Sampling as many individuals as possible, scientists hope to complete work on all fish and birds in another 5 to 10 years. Once either of these taxonomic groups is completed, Pfenninger says researchers will be able to decide how many cryptic species exist throughout the animal kingdom.Examples of cryptic species include the African elephant. A 2001 study found the elephants were actually two genetically distinct, non-interbreeding species, the African bush elephant and the African elephant. The species are currently listed as vulnerable and threatened, respectively, by the World Conservation Union (WCU).The reclassifications are more than an academic exercise. They define populations that have evolved independently of each other and whose genetic differences can have significant consequences. In the early 1900s misidentification of mosquito species based on morphology confused attempts to control malaria in Europe. Ultimately, what was thought to be a single species was actually made up of six sibling species, only three of which transmitted the disease. "The basic unit in biology is always the species, and you have to know what you are dealing with. " Pfenninger says. Much previous research is now no longer used, he says, because it is not clear what species was being studied.Which of the following about the significance of the research on cryptic species is NOT true?A.The results of the research can help the development of many other research areas.B.The results of the research can help the development of biodiversity estimates.C.The results of the research can help our understanding of infectious disease evolution.D.The results of the research can help our understanding of "survival of the fittest. "

参考答案和解析
正确答案:D
解析:短文的第二段第二句描述的是科学家目前的研究结果,第三段描述的是科学家在这之前对于cryptic species的理解。本题用的是过去式,问的是过去的状况,因此答案在第三段中,B和C均是答案,所以D是正确选择。
更多“What was scientists' understanding of cryptic species?A.They occurred in equal numbers in all biogeographical regions.B.They were mostly found in insects and reptiles.C.They were likely to be in tropical rather than temperate regions.D.Both B and C.”相关问题
  • 第1题:

    The audience, ______, enjoyed the performance.

    A. most of them were students

    B. most of whom were students

    C. whom they were students

    D. they were mostly students


    正确答案:B

  • 第2题:

    The insects would devour all our crops and kill our flocks and heads, if _____ for the protection we get from insect-eating animals.

    A. it is not

    B. it were not

    C. were it not

    D. they were not


    参考答案: B

  • 第3题:

    What might be the cause of the children’s sickness?

    A. The crops didn’t do well.

    B. There were too many insects.

    C. The visitors brought in diseases.

    D. The pesticides were overused.


    正确答案:B

  • 第4题:

    Social change is more likely to occur in societies where there is a mixture of different kinds of people than in societies where people are similar in many ways. The simple reason for this is that there are more different ways of looking at things present in the first kind of society. There are more ideas, more disagreements in interest, and more groups and organizations with different beliefs. In addition, there is usually a greater worldly interest and greater tolerance in mixed societies. All these factors tend to protnote social change by opening more areas of life to decision.
    In a society where people are quite similar in many ways, there are fewer occasions for people to see the need or the opportunity for change because everything seems to be the same. And although conditions may not be satisfactory, they are at least customary and undisputed.
    Within a society, social changes is also likely to occur more frequently and more readily in the material aspects of the culture than in the non-material, for example, in technology rather than in values; in what has been learned later in life rather than what was learned early; in the less basic and less emotional aspects of society than in their opposites; in the simple elements rather than in the complex ones; in form rather than in substance; and in elements that are acceptable to the culture rather than in strange elements.
    Furthermore, social change is easier if it is gradual. For example, it comes more readily in human relations on a continuous scale rather than one with sharp difference. This is one reason why change has not come more quickly to Black Americans as compared to other American minorities,because of the sharp difference in appearance between them and their white counterparts.
    According to the passage, which of the following is NOT true?

    A.Social change tends to meet with more difficulty in basic and emotional aspects of society.
    B.Disagreement with and argument about conditions tend to slow down social change.
    C.Social change is more likely to occur in the material aspect of society.
    D.Social change is less likely to occur in what people learned when they were young.

    答案:B
    解析:
    根据第二段“social changes is also likely to occur more frequently and more readily in the material aspects…in what has been learned later in life rather than what was learned early…in the less basic and less emotional aspects of society than in their opposites”可知A、C、D项都正确,而由第一段最后一句可知,不同的观点以及对现状不满可以加速社会变革,因此B项错误。

  • 第5题:

    Warmer climate will bake tropical bugs
      Global warming could cook tropical insects, with unpredictable knock-on effects, say researchers who warn that rising temperatures also_____(51)tropical frogs and lizards(蜥蜴).
      Temperatures are_____(52)to increase much faster in temperate(温和的)and polar(极地的)regions than in the tropics. But no-one had looked at how warming would affect insects and other cold-blooded animals_____(53)had evolved in tropical regions with little temperature variation.
      Curtis Deutsch at the University of California at Los Angeles and colleagues analysed data_____(54)insect survival and reproduction for 38 species in different ecosystems(生态系统), and then estimated how these values would_____(55)with predictions of climate change for the 21st century.
      The team found that the reproductive_____(56)of tropical insects tends to peak very close to the temperatures where they normally live, but_____(57)sharply at higher temperatures. This means that cranking up(提高)the heat only a small amount can exert a heavy toll, leaving insects unable to reproduce_____(58)enough to keep up their numbers.
      Temperate insects reproduce well over a broader range, and do not live as_____(59)to their thermal(热的)limit, so they can reproduce successfully when their climate warms more than in the tropics.
      "Tropical insects do very well in a narrow band of temperatures, but move them above that_____(60)and they die," says team member Josh Tewksbury of the University of Washington in Seattle.
      The heart of the_____(61)is temperature tolerance. Temperate-zone insects have evolved to survive the much broader temperature swings of seasonal climates, than have their tropical relatives.
      The_____(62)appears worse for animals that live in hot stable climate of the lower levels of tropical forests. Lizards in clear areas can find shade to cool down, but those living in the forest are already in the_____(63), and there's not much they can do to get cooler, Deutsch says.
      Too few tropical insects have been studied so far to_____(64)if any particular group will be particularly hard-hit, says Tewksbury. Insects play important_____(65)in forest ecology(生态学).
      The team are now starting to evaluate how temperature affects ecological interactions of insects with other species, including crops such as African corn.
    文章(51~65)

    _____
      A.treat
      B.threaten
      C.help
      D.protect


    答案:B
    解析:

  • 第6题:

    The author easily built a team of his company because __________.

    A.they were underpaid at their previous jobs
    B.they were turned down by other companies
    C.they were confident of the author and his business
    D.they were satisfied with the salaries in his company

    答案:C
    解析:
    文章第三段“I started to build a team who trusted me even though I didn’t have money forpaychecks yet.”由此可见,团队成员对作者及其创办的公司很有信心,否则不会不计后果地给他做事。故选C项。

  • 第7题:

    The earliest immigrants to North America found Indians already living there.The Indians numbered about 500,000 at that time.Their society was a primitive society,but they lived peacefully and welcomed the white strangers to the land.However,these early immigrants from Europe didn't want to share the land with the natives.They killed off many of the Indians,seized their land or pushed them off to lands farther away.Today the Indians,not more than half a million,live in poverty and misery on the land on which they were once masters.
    The earliest immigrants were the Spanish,who settled in the southern part of what is now the US.The next large group were the English,after the English came the French,Dutch,Irish,Germans,and other nationality groups,mostly European.
    Another early group to arrive were the Negroes.But they were brought in as slaves from Africa.They didn't win freedom till generations later.

    Who were the earliest people living in North America?

    A.The Spanis
    B.The Englis
    C.The Negroe
    D.The Indian

    答案:D
    解析:
    参见本文第一句。

  • 第8题:

    We were all there when the accident occurred.

    A: happened
    B:broke
    C:spread
    D: appeared

    答案:B
    解析:
    句意:事故发生时我们都在场。occur意为“发生”,与happen(发生)意义相近。 break打破,spread传播,appear出现。

  • 第9题:

    共用题干
    Sleeping

    People who sleep for more than eight hours a night do not live as long as those who
    sleep for six hours,according to the biggest study yet into sleep patterns and mortality(死
    亡率).
    Scientists have no explanation for the findings and do not know if they mean people who
    like a lie-in(睡懒觉)can extend their lives by sleeping less.
    Although it is a common belief that sleeping for at least eight hours a night is vital for
    health and well-being,the six-year study involving more than 1.1 million Americans older
    than 30 found that those who slept for less than eight hours were far from doing themselves
    any long-term harm.
    "Individuals who now average 6.5 hours of sleep a night can be reassured that this is a
    safe amount of sleep.From a health standpoint,there is no reason to sleep longer,"said
    Daniel Kripke , a professor of psychiatry(精神病学)at the University of California, San
    Diego.
    Dr. Kripke said,"We don't know if long sleep periods lead to death.Additional studies
    are needed to determine if setting your alarm clock earlier will actually improve your health."
    The scientists,who were funded by the American Cancer Society,found that the best
    survival rates were among the men and women who slept for seven hours a night.Those
    who slept for eight hours were 12 per cent more likely to die during the six-year period of the
    study,when other factors such as diet and smoking were taken into account.
    Even those who spent a mere five hours a night in bed lived longer than those who slept
    eight or more hours.However,an increasing death rate was found among those who slept
    for less than five hours.
    Dr. Kripke said,"Previous sleep studies have indicated that both short-and long-duration
    (持续时间)sleep had higher mortality rates. However, none of those studies were large
    enough to distinguish the difference between seven and eight hours a night,until now."

    All the participants were from the state of California.
    A:Right
    B:Wrong
    C:Not mentioned

    答案:C
    解析:

  • 第10题:

    单选题
    The skulls and pelvic bones of some species of dinosaur share characteristics with the skulls and pelvic bones of all modern birds. Even though not all dinosaurs have these characteristics, there are scientists who claim that all animals that do have these characteristics are dinosaurs.  If the statements above and the claim of the scientists are true, which of the following must also be true?
    A

    Birds share more characteristics with dinosaurs than they do with other animals.

    B

    Some ancient dinosaurs were indistinguishable from modern birds.

    C

    All animals whose skulls share the characteristics of those of modern birds also have pelvic bones that are similar to those of modern birds.

    D

    Modern birds are dinosaurs.

    E

    All dinosaurs are birds.


    正确答案: E
    解析:
    由文段可知,科学家根据一些恐龙的头盖骨和骨盆骨与所有现代鸟类的头盖骨和骨盆骨有许多相同特征,得出结论:所有具有这些特征的动物是恐龙,如果这个推理是正确的话,我们可以认为现代鸟类是恐龙,故本题选D项。

  • 第11题:

    单选题
    Which of the following is TRUE?
    A

    In the 1920s, women were limited to being teachers, nurses or office workers.

    B

    Women mainly paid their attention to how they were paid in the 1960s.

    C

    Women asked to change “all men are created equal” into “all human beings are created equal”.

    D

    No states have ever provided women with jobs in the government.


    正确答案: A
    解析:
    推理判断题。从文章的第四段第一句话The Women’s Liberation movement, which developed during the 1960s, has focused on economic rights such as ‘equal pay for equal work’ 可知,在20世纪60年代,美国妇女的权利运动主要集中在同工同酬方面,主要关注的是自己的经济地位。所以B项正确。A项错误,倒数第二段末句提到女性的职业主要有teachers, nurses or office workers,而不是在这几个职业上受到限制。C项错误,由末句可知,是妇女解放运动的领导认为all men are created equal的意思是所有人类平等,而不是只有男人平等。D项错误,由with jobs in the government.定位倒数第二段倒数第二句,可知只有很少的妇女在学术和政府方面担任高层。

  • 第12题:

    单选题
    Prolonged and unseasonable frosts produce frost rings in deciduous trees, which grow in moderate climates. Frost rings do not appear in any of the fossilized deciduous trees that have been found in Antarctica. Hence, it is unlikely that such frosts occurred in Antarctica at the time the fossilized trees lived.  Which of the following is an assumption on which the argument depends?
    A

    There are fossilized nondeciduous trees from Antarctica that bear frost rings.

    B

    Deciduous trees are more likely to bear frost rings than are other tree varieties.

    C

    The process of fossilization does not completely obscure frost rings in deciduous trees.

    D

    Present-day deciduous trees are more sensitive to changes in temperature than were the deciduous trees of ancient Antarctica.

    E

    Prolonged and unseasonable frosts that might have occurred in Antarctica when the now-fossilized trees were still living did not always produce frost rings in deciduous trees.


    正确答案: A
    解析:
    文段由“霜冻年轮没有出现在落叶树的化石中”这一现象,得到结论“南极洲的落叶树上没有霜冻”,但是如果形成化石的过程中会是霜冻年轮消失,那么该结论就不成立,故文段的推论蕴藏着C项假设,所以本题选C项。

  • 第13题:

    Socat snared wih Confucius the idea the__________ .

    A.all men were equal when they were born

    B.the lowr classes should be ruled gby the upper class

    C.the purpose of man was to seek freedom and wisdom

    D.people should not ask others to do what they did not want to


    正确答案:B

  • 第14题:

    What is true about the apartments Mies building Chicago's Lake Shore Drive?

    A.They ignored details and proportions.

    B.They were built with materials popular at that time.

    C.They were more spacious than neighboring buildings.

    D.They shared some characteristics of abstract art.


    正确答案:D
    解析:细节题。题干中的Chicago's Lake Shore Drive定位在第五段,该段都是具体介绍apartments的特征的。因此需要选项回原文一一对应判断答案。

  • 第15题:

    What do we know about the rich men in the 17th century?

    A.They tended to wear clothes without bottons.

    B.They were interested in historical matters.

    C.They were mostly dressed by servants.

    D.They drew their swords from the left.


    正确答案:D

  • 第16题:

    We were all there when the accident occurred

    A:happened
    B:broke
    C:spread
    D:appeared

    答案:A
    解析:
    本句意思:事故发生时我们都在那里。occur意思是“发生,出现”,与happen(出现,发生)意思相近。break打碎,折断;spread伸开,传播;appear显现,出现,似乎。

  • 第17题:

    Social change is more likely to occur in societies where there is a mixture of different kinds of people than in societies where people are similar in many ways. The simple reason for this is that there are more different ways of looking at things present in the first kind of society. There are more ideas,more disagreements in interest,and more groups and organizations with different beliefs. In addition, there is usually a greater worldly interest and greater tolerance in mixed societies. All these factors tend to promote social change by opening more areas of life to decision. In a society where people are quite similar in many ways, there are fewer occasions for people to see the need or the opportunity for change because everything seetns to be the same. And although conditions may not be satisfactory, they are at least customary and undisputed.
    Within a society, social change is also likely to occur more frequently and more readily in the material aspects of the culture than in the non-material, for example, in technology rather than in values; in what has been learned later in life rather than what was learned early; in the less basic mad less emotional aspects of society than in their opposites ; in the simple elements rather than in the complex ones; in form rather than in substance; and in elements that are acceptable to the culture rather than in strange elements.
    Furthermore, social change is easier if it is gradual. For example, it comes more readily in human relations on a continuous scale rather than one with sharp difference. This is one reason why change has not come more quickly to Black Americans as compared to other American minorities, because of the sharp difference in appearance between them and their white counterparts.
    According to the passage, which of the following is NOT true?A. Social change tends to meet with more difficulty in basic and emotional aspects of society.

    A. Social change tends to meet with more difficulty in basic and emotional aspects of society.
    B. Disagreement with and argument about conditions tend to slow down social change.
    C. Social change is more likely to occur in the material aspect of society.
    D. Social change is less likely to occur in what people learned when they were young.

    答案:B
    解析:
    根据第二段“social changes is also likely to occur more frequentry and more readily in the material aspects…in what has been leamed later in life rather than what was learned early.in the less basic and less emotional aspectsof societythanintheir opposites”可知A、C、D项都正确.而由第一段最后一句可知,不同的观点以及对现状不满可以加速社会变革.因此B项错误。

  • 第18题:

    The earliest immigrants to North America found Indians already living there.The Indians numbered about 500,000 at that time.Their society was a primitive society,but they lived peacefully and welcomed the white strangers to the land.However,these early immigrants from Europe didn't want to share the land with the natives.They killed off many of the Indians,seized their land or pushed them off to lands farther away.Today the Indians,not more than half a million,live in poverty and misery on the land on which they were once masters.
    The earliest immigrants were the Spanish,who settled in the southern part of what is now the US.The next large group were the English,after the English came the French,Dutch,Irish,Germans,and other nationality groups,mostly European.
    Another early group to arrive were the Negroes.But they were brought in as slaves from Africa.They didn't win freedom till generations later.

    Why didn't the immigrants share the lands with the natives?

    A.They thought the Indians were not friendly to the
    B.They wanted to seize the lands as their ow
    C.Because North America was first discovered by the
    D.Because the Indian people liked making war to the

    答案:B
    解析:
    参见第一段句子:“However,these early immigrants from Europe didn’t want to share the land with the natives.They killed off many of the Indians,seized their land or pushed them off to lands farther away.”

  • 第19题:

    Text 1"The love of money",St Paul memorably wrote to his protege Timothy,"is the root of all evil.""All"may be putting it a bit strongly,but dozens of psychological studies have indeed shown that people primed to think about money before an experiment are more likely to lie,cheat and steal during the course of that experiment.Another well-known aphorism,ascribed to Benjamin Franklin,is"time is money".If true,that suggests a syllogism:that the love of time is a root of evil,too.But a paperjust published in Psychological Science by Francesca Gino of Harvard and Cassie Mogilner of the University of Pennsylvania suggests precisely the opposite.Dr Gino and Dr Mogilner asked a group of volunteers to do a scries of what appeared to be aptitude tests.As is ofien the case in such experiments,though,what the voiunteers were told.and what the truth was,were rather different things.In the first test they were asked to make,within three minutes,as many coherent sentences as they could out of a set ofwords they had been presented with.What they were not told was that each of them had been assigned to one of three groups.Some volunteers'word sets were seeded with ones associated with money,such as"dollars","financing"and"spend".Some were seeded with words associated with time(eg,"clock",/'hours","moment").And some were seeded with neither.Thus unknowingly primed,the volunteers were ready for the second test.This was mathematical.They were given a sheet of paper with 20 matrices which each contained 12 numbers.two of which added up to ten(for example,3.81 and 6.19).They had to write down,on a separate answer sheet,how many of these pairs they could manage to find in five minutes.They were also given a packet ofmoney and told they could reward themselves with a dollar for each pair they discovered.This led Dr Gino and Dr Mogilner to suspect that self-reflection played a part in controlling uncthical behaviour during the test.They therefore conducted a third test in which,for half the volunteers,there was a mirror in the cubicle they were sitting in when doing the experiment.Volunteers primed to think about money cheated 39%of the time when a mirror was present but 67%when it was not.Those primed to think about time cheated 32%of the time in the presence of the mirror and 36%in its absence-results that are statistically indistinguishable.Finally,a fourth experiment asked primed volunteers to fill in a questionnaire before tackling the matrix.In among"filler"questions intended to disguise what was happening this asked them to rate how they felt about self-reflective statements like,"Right now,1 am thinking about who I am as a person."As in the previous tests,those primed with money words cheated more ofien than those primed with neutral words and far more ofien than those primed with time words.But whether someone cheated was also related to how strongly he felt about the self-reflective statements presented to him in the questionnaire.It seems,then,that thinking about time has the opposite effect on people from thinking about money.It makes them more honest than normal,rather than less so.Moreover,the more reflective they are,the more honest they become.There must be an aphorism in that.
    What can we infer from the tests?

    A.The subjects have been told their assignment
    B.Volunteers who had been primed with money ideas were more likely to cheat others.
    C.12%volunteers had been primed with time-related words.
    D.33%subjects had been primed with money-related words.

    答案:B
    解析:
    推理判断题。根据题干中的信息对应文章的第二段,文中介绍了他们喜欢用一些金钱相关的词语,而第四段说“被灌输金钱思想的志愿者在面对镜子时有39%的时间都在作弊,但是如果不面对镜子,志愿者有67%的时间都在作弊。”所以B项Volunteers who had been primed with money ideas were more likely to cheat others.与此对应。故B项为正确选项。【干扰排除】A项“受试者清楚自己的任务”,但是文中却说他们是被悄悄地安排,因此错误;c项与D项在段落的结尾处有对应,但是数字的运算是错误的,因此应当排除。

  • 第20题:

    共用题干
    Sleeping

    People who sleep for more than eight hours a night do not live as long as those who
    sleep for six hours,according to the biggest study yet into sleep patterns and mortality(死
    亡率).
    Scientists have no explanation for the findings and do not know if they mean people who
    like a lie-in(睡懒觉)can extend their lives by sleeping less.
    Although it is a common belief that sleeping for at least eight hours a night is vital for
    health and well-being,the six-year study involving more than 1.1 million Americans older
    than 30 found that those who slept for less than eight hours were far from doing themselves
    any long-term harm.
    "Individuals who now average 6.5 hours of sleep a night can be reassured that this is a
    safe amount of sleep.From a health standpoint,there is no reason to sleep longer,"said
    Daniel Kripke , a professor of psychiatry(精神病学)at the University of California, San
    Diego.
    Dr. Kripke said,"We don't know if long sleep periods lead to death.Additional studies
    are needed to determine if setting your alarm clock earlier will actually improve your health."
    The scientists,who were funded by the American Cancer Society,found that the best
    survival rates were among the men and women who slept for seven hours a night.Those
    who slept for eight hours were 12 per cent more likely to die during the six-year period of the
    study,when other factors such as diet and smoking were taken into account.
    Even those who spent a mere five hours a night in bed lived longer than those who slept
    eight or more hours.However,an increasing death rate was found among those who slept
    for less than five hours.
    Dr. Kripke said,"Previous sleep studies have indicated that both short-and long-duration
    (持续时间)sleep had higher mortality rates. However, none of those studies were large
    enough to distinguish the difference between seven and eight hours a night,until now."

    The findings indicate that it is all right to sleep for 6.5 hours a night.
    A:Right
    B:Wrong
    C:Not mentioned

    答案:A
    解析:

  • 第21题:

    共用题干
    第一篇

    The Relationship between IQ and Being a Vegetarian

    A Southampton University team found that people who were vegetarians (素食主义者)by 30 had recor-
    ded five IQ points higher on average at the age of]U.Researchers said it could explain why people with a
    higher IQ were healthier as a vegetarian diet was linked to lower heart disease and obesity(肥胖)rates.The
    study of 8,179 people was reported in the british Medical Journal.
    Twenty years after the IQ tests were carried out in 1970,366 of the participants said they were vegetarians一
    although more than 100 reported eating either fish or chicken.
    Men who were vegetarians had an IQ score of 106,compared with 101 for non-vegetarians;while female
    vegetarians averaged 104,compared with 99 for non-vegetarians.There was no difference in the IQ scores
    between strict vegetarians and those who said they were vegetarians but reported eating fish or chicken.
    Researchers said the findings were partly related to better education and higher class,but it remained
    statistically significant after adjusting for these factors.
    Vegetarians were more likely to be female,to be of higher social class and to have higher academic or
    vocational qualifications than non-vegetarians.However,these differenIces were not reflected in their annual
    income,which was similar to that of non-vegetarians.
    Lead researcher Catharine Gale said,"The findings that children with greater intelligence are more likely to
    report being vegetarians as adults,together with the evidence on the potential benefits of a vegetarian diet on
    heart health,may help to explain why a higher IQ in childhood or adolescence is linked with a reduced risk of
    coronary heart disease in adult life."
    But Dr Frankie Phillips of the British Dietetic Association said, "It is like the chicken and egg."Do
    pcople become vegetarians because they have avery high IQ or is it just that they are clever enough to be
    more aware of health issues?

    It was found in the research that______________.
    A:most of the participants became vegetarians 20 years after the IQ tests were carried out
    B:vegetarians who ate fish or chicken were of similar intelligence with strict vegetarians
    C:female vegetarians were more likely to have higher annual income than non-vegetarians
    D:vegetarians were more likely to have higher annual income than non-vegetarians

    答案:B
    解析:
    根据第一段第一句话“people who were vegetarians by 30 had ricorded five IQ points higher on average at the age of 10”可知聪明的孩子长大后更有可能成为素食主义者,因此A项正确。 根据第一段第二句“it could explain why...”可知这一结果可帮助解释B项中的现象。但B项并 非这次研究的结果。C、D选项并未在文中提及。因此该题正确答案为A。
    根据第二段可知,他们本身就是素食主义者,而并不是二十年后才成为素食主义者。 故A选项表述错误。根据第三段第二句“There was no difference in the IQ scores between strict vegetarians and those who said they were vegetarians but reported eating fish or chicken.”可知严格 的素食主义者和那些吃鱼或者鸡的素食主义者的智力没有差别,故B项表述与原文一致。根 据第五段可知素食主义者与非素食主义者的差别井未体现在年收入上,因此C项与D项均表 述错误。据此分析该题正确答案为B。
    浏览四个备选项可知该题主要考查素食主义者与非素食主义者的差别。通读全文可 知第五段讨论的正是两者的差别。通读该段,可知A、B、D三个选项与原文表述一致,D选项 中的professional是原文vocational的同义替换。C选项与原文表述不符。因此该题目正确答 案为C。
    根据题目中关键词Catharine Gale,可快速定位到第六段。通读该段可知Catharinc Gale 只是客观地讲述研究结果,并没有表示自己的立场。故D项objective(客观的)为正确答案。
    文章最后一句的意思是:人们成为素食主义者是因为他们智商高还是因为他们足够聪 明而更注意健康问题?由此可见Dr Frankie Phillip。认为素食和高智商的因果关系尚末明确, 就像弄不清楚是因为有蛋才有鸡,还是因为有鸡才有蛋一样。故C项为该题正确答案。第二篇 本文的主要内容是:要了解大自然知何回应气候变化需要监侧生命周期中的关健事件——开花、长叶、春天的第一阵蛙鸣——在世界范围内。但是数量有限的科学家的足连不可能遍及天下, 为了广泛收集数据以研究动植物随着气候变化会如何反应,科学家正求助于“公民科学家”。

  • 第22题:

    单选题
    In cases where asbestos were employed, it was recommended that it should be used in abonded form with materials such as cement,in order loose fibers were less likely to enter the air.
    A

    in order that

    B

    rather than

    C

    so that

    D

    other than


    正确答案: C
    解析:
    句意:石棉在使用时,应该和水泥之类的材料凝合,这样疏松的纤维才不会轻易挥发到空气中。in order that和so that都可以表示目的,但so that含有“避免某个结果的出现”之意,in order that则表示“促成某个目的的实现”。

  • 第23题:

    单选题
    Which of the following is not directly related to Neo-classicism in the eighteenth century?
    A

    Reason rather than emotion is emphasized.

    B

    Most of the writings were didactic and satirical.

    C

    Lyrical poetry flourished.

    D

    Poets found closed couplet the only possible verse form for serious work.


    正确答案: C
    解析:
    新古典主义强调理性和逻辑;强调文学作品的教育功能,作品说教性强;推崇偶句诗而非无韵诗,诗歌受到特定规律的约束。故选C。