首页
外语
计算机
考研
公务员
职业资格
财经
工程
司法
医学
专升本
自考
实用职业技能
登录
外语
Dinosaurs and Parental Care P1: "Parental care" refers to the level of investment provided by a mother and father to insure the
Dinosaurs and Parental Care P1: "Parental care" refers to the level of investment provided by a mother and father to insure the
admin
2018-10-18
68
问题
Dinosaurs and Parental Care
P1: "Parental care" refers to the level of investment provided by a mother and father to insure the development and survival of their offspring. The question of whether or not dinosaurs cared for their young has puzzled scientists for decades. A remarkable Oviraptor fossil shows the dinosaur sitting on its nest of eggs just as chickens do today. Not only is the dinosaur squatting on the nest, but its forelimbs are outstretched, perhaps to shade the eggs. Because behaviors are not preserved in the fossil record, we can only make inferences from indirect evidence. Most of our evidence comes from alleged dinosaur rookeries (places where nests are built). Several have been excavated in eastern Montana, where a dense concentration of dinosaur nests was found at a place now called Egg Mountain, most of which probably belonged to the hadrosaur Maiasaura. Preserved in these nests are the bones of baby dinosaurs. The finds at Egg Mountain and other sites around the world document that dinosaurs laid their eggs in nests.
P2: The nests at Egg Mountain are reported to be equally spaced, separated by a space corresponding to the length of an adult Maiasaura. From this arrangement scientists have inferred that the nests were separated in this way to allow incubation in a tightly packed nesting colony. Although this interpretation is disputable, the discovery of Oviraptor adults on top of egg clutches (as determined by embryos in some eggs) is relatively powerful evidence that at least these dinosaurs incubated their eggs.
P3: Evidence for parental care following hatching is much more controversial. The truth is probably biased by behavioral speculation based on indirect fossil evidence because the data is not always as unambiguous as might appear. At Egg Mountain, many nests contain baby dinosaur bones. Not all the dinosaurs in the nest are the same size, and the preserved partial skeleton was so small that its bones were originally mistaken for those of a fossilized crocodile. Besides, many of those small bones belong to jaws and teeth—teeth that show signs of wear. It seems reasonable to assume that the wear was caused by chewing the coarse plants that formed the hatchlings’ diet. During childhood, the young would never step outside the nest, so it seems reasonable to assume that all the food they consumed must have been brought to the rookery by foraging adults. This line of reasoning suggests that these animals had an advanced system of parental care, but a closer look at the evidence clouds this interpretation. Analysis of dinosaur embryos indicates that worn surfaces are present on the teeth of juveniles even before hatching. Just as a human baby moves inside the mother before birth, archosaurs also ground their teeth before birth, wearing the surface in some spots. Thus, the fossil evidence for an advanced parental care system in extinct dinosaurs is suggestive but inconclusive.
P4: In order to settle this debate for good, much research has been conducted regarding whether extinct dinosaurs had independently evolved parenting behaviors similar to those of modern-day organisms. Examination of the phylogenetic position of dinosaurs indicates that they share a common ancestor with and are most closely related to two living groups of animals—crocodiles and birds—both of which exhibit parental care. Although unappreciated, crocodiles do nevertheless exhibit parental care. Female crocodilians build nests and then remain nearby, guarding them, while the eggs incubate. When they are ready to hatch, the baby crocodiles vocalize; females respond by digging up the eggs and carrying the babies to the water. The young even communicate with each other while still in the egg by high-frequency squeaks (as birds do). Some evidence suggests that this squeaking is a cue to synchronize hatching. Since birds and crocodiles share a common ancestor, the simplest explanation for the characteristics they share (such as nest building and some form of parental care) is that they evolved only once—that these attributes were present in their common ancestor and passed on to its descendants. It appears likely, therefore, that the parental care exhibited by both crocodiles and birds did not evolve separately from different ancestors that did not exhibit parental care; rather, the behaviors are homologous (even though this cannot be directly observed, and we cannot be sure how elaborate early parental care was), inherited by each of these groups from their common ancestor that cared for its young.
P1: "Parental care" refers to the level of investment provided by a mother and father to insure the development and survival of their offspring. The question of whether or not dinosaurs cared for their young has puzzled scientists for decades. ■A remarkable Oviraptor fossil shows the dinosaur sitting on its nest of eggs just as chickens do today. Not only is the dinosaur squatting on the nest, but its foreiimbs are outstretched, perhaps to shade the eggs. ■Because behaviors are not preserved in the fossil record, we can only make inferences from indirect evidence. ■Most of our evidence comes from alleged dinosaur rookeries (places where nests are built). Several have been excavated in eastern Montana, where a dense concentration of dinosaur nests was found at a place now called Egg Mountain, most of which probably belonged to the hadrosaur Maiasaura. Preserved in these nests are the bones of baby dinosaurs. ■The finds at Egg Mountain and other sites around the world document that dinosaurs laid their eggs in nests.
In Paragraph 4, the author discusses birds and crocodiles in order to
选项
A、contrast patterns of parenting behavior in both living and extinct animals
B、provide evidence that sophisticated parental care behaviors evolved only relatively recently
C、demonstrate that parental care behaviors have continued to evolve since the time of the dinosaurs
D、support the theory that extinct dinosaurs probably inherited some kind of parental care system
答案
D
解析
【修辞目的题】文中提到鸟类与鳄鱼来自同一祖先,并从祖先那里继承了这种特质,因此说明它们的祖先也是有抚育行为的。而第四段第二句提到恐龙与鸟类以及鳄鱼也是共有祖先的。所以说明恐龙也从它们的祖先那里继承了抚育行为。
转载请注明原文地址:https://kaotiyun.com/show/OufO777K
0
托福(TOEFL)
相关试题推荐
£6.80本题有关该工作的工资待遇。录音原文中的…isprovided是题目plus…的同义替换。
Whichofthefollowingdoesthepassagemainlydiscuss?Theword"it"inline21refersto
Whatdoesthepassagemainlydiscuss?Theword"they"inline20refersto
WhichaspectoftheHomesteadActof1862doesthepassagemainlydiscuss?Theword"they"inline23refersto
ThepassagemainlydiscusseshowheatTheword"it"inline18refersto
Theword"it"inline3referstoInparagraph3,theauthormakeswhichofthefollowingstatementsaboutaspecies’survival?
随机试题
求函数f(x,y)=x2+4y2+xy+2在区域D上的最大值与最小值,其中D={(x,y)|-1}。
简述审美趣味是否健康的标准。
在比较疟疾与风温发热时,风温初起可见疟疾常发于
男性,62岁。1周前行龋齿拔除手术。近3天来畏寒、发热,咳嗽黄脓痰就诊,痰略有臭味。X线示左下肺脓肿。痰涂片革兰染色找见阴性杆菌,但普通培养无生长。其最可能的病原体是
甲乙二人系父子关系,因赡养问题甲将乙起诉到法院。法院受理后,两次传票传唤乙到庭,乙依然拒不到庭。对此,法院可对乙采取何种措施?()
公路水运工程安全生产监督管理的方针是坚持“安全第一、预防为主、综合治理”。()
中学生崔某在学校走廊内鼓掌喧闹,被副校长撞见。副校长拍打崔某后背几下,说:“你起哄什么,幸灾乐祸呀!”于是拽住崔某的衣服去八班。崔某边走边嚷:“校长凭什么打人?”崔某的班主任许老师上前打了崔某左面部两耳光。崔某感觉听力下降,耳鸣。经法医鉴定,崔某左耳被暴力
梨状隐窝位于()。
“有志者、事竞成,破釜沉舟,百二秦关终属楚;苦心人、天不负,卧薪尝胆,三千越甲可吞吴。”此联所涉及的历史事件分别发生在()。
LudwigvanBeethovenwasoneofthegreatest【B1】______whoeverlived.Hethoughtthatpeoplecouldbefreewhentheywrotemusic
最新回复
(
0
)