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
You should spend about 20 minutes on Questions 27-40 which are based on Reading Passage 3 below. Amateur Naturalists From the re
You should spend about 20 minutes on Questions 27-40 which are based on Reading Passage 3 below. Amateur Naturalists From the re
admin
2015-03-03
38
问题
You should spend about 20 minutes on Questions 27-40 which are based on Reading Passage 3 below.
Amateur Naturalists
From the results of an annual Alaskan betting contest to sightings of migratory birds, ecologists are using a wealth of unusual data to predict the impact of climate change.
A Tim Sparks slides a small leather-bound notebook out of an envelope. The book’s yellowing pages contain beekeeping notes made between 1941 and 1969 by the late Walter Coates of Kilworth, Leicestershire. He adds it to his growing pile of local journals, birdwatchers’ lists and gardening diaries. "We’re uncovering about one major new record each month," he says, "I still get surprised." Around two centuries before Coates, Robert Marsham, a landowner from Norfolk in the east of England, began recording the life cycles of plants and animals on his estate — when the first wood anemones flowered, the dates on which the oaks burst into leaf and the rooks began nesting. Successive Marshams continued compiling these notes for 211 years.
B Today, such records are being put to uses that their authors could not possibly have expected. These data sets, and others like them, are proving invaluable to ecologists interested in the timing of biological events, or phenology. By combining the records with climate data, researchers can reveal how, for example, changes in temperature affect the arrival of spring, allowing ecologists to make improved predictions about the impact of climate change. A small band of researchers is combing through hundreds of years of records taken by thousands of amateur naturalists. And more systematic projects have also started up, producing an overwhelming response. "The amount of interest is almost frightening," says Sparks, a climate researcher at the Centre for Ecology and Hydrology in Monks Wood, Cambridgeshire.
C Sparks first became aware of the army of "closet phenologists", as he describes them, when a retiring colleague gave him the Marsham records. He now spends much of his time following leads from one historical data set to another. As news of his quest spreads, people tip him off to other historical records, and more amateur phenologists come out of their closets. The British devotion to recording and collecting makes his job easier — one man from Kent sent him 30 years’ worth of kitchen calendars, on which he had noted the date that his neighbour’s magnolia tree flowered.
D Other researchers have unearthed data from equally odd sources. Rafe Sagarin, an ecologist at Stanford University in California, recently studied records of a betting contest in which participants attempt to guess the exact time at which a specially erected wooden tripod will fall through the surface of a thawing river. The competition has taken place annually on the Tenana River in Alaska since 1917, and analysis of the results showed that the thaw now arrives five days earlier than it did when the contest began.
E Overall, such records have helped to show that, compared with 20 years ago, a raft of natural events now occur earlier across much of the northern hemisphere, from the opening of leaves to the return of birds from migration and the emergence of butterflies from hibernation. The data can also hint at how nature will change in the future. Together with models of climate change, amateurs’ records could help guide conservation. Terry Root, an ecologist at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor, has collected birdwatchers’ counts of wildfowl taken between 1955 and 1996 on seasonal ponds in the American Midwest and combined them with climate data and models of future warming. Her analysis shows that the increased droughts that the models predict could halve the breeding populations at the ponds. "The number of waterfowl in North America will most probably drop significantly with global warming," she says.
F But not all professionals are happy to use amateur data. "A lot of scientists won’t touch them, they say they’re too full of problems," says Root. Because different observers can have different ideas of what constitutes, for example, an open snowdrop. "The biggest concern with ad hoc observations is how carefully and systematically they were taken," says Mark Schwartz of the University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee, who studies the interactions between plants and climate. "We need to know pretty precisely what a person’s been observing — if they just say ’I noted when the leaves came out’, it might not be that useful." Measuring the onset of autumn can be particularly problematic because deciding when leaves change colour is a more subjective process than noting when they appear.
G Overall, most phenologists are positive about the contribution that amateurs can make. "They get at the raw power of science: careful observation of the natural world," says Sagarin. But the professionals also acknowledge the need for careful quality control. Root, for example, tries to gauge the quality of an amateur archive by interviewing its collector. "You always have to worry — things as trivial as vacations can affect measurement. I disregard a lot of records because they’re not rigorous enough," she says. Others suggest that the right statistics can iron out some of the problems with amateur data. Together with colleagues at Wageningen University in the Netherlands, environmental scientist Arnold van Vliet is developing statistical techniques to account for the uncertainty in amateur phenological data. With the enthusiasm of amateur phenologists evident from past records, professional researchers are now trying to create standardized recording schemes for future efforts. They hope that well-designed studies will generate a volume of observations large enough to drown out the idiosyncrasies of individual recorders. The data are cheap to collect, and can provide breadth in space, time and range of species. "It’s very difficult to collect data on a large geographical scale without enlisting an army of observers," says Root.
H Phenology also helps to drive home messages about climate change. "Because the public understand these records, they accept them," says Sparks. It can also illustrate potentially unpleasant consequences, he adds, such as the finding that more rat infestations are reported to local councils in warmer years. And getting people involved is great for public relations. "People are thrilled to think that the data they’ve been collecting as a hobby can be used for something scientific — it empowers them," says Root.
Questions 27-33
Reading Passage 3 has eight paragraphs A-H.
Which paragraph contains the following information?
Write the correct letter A-H in boxes 27-33 on your answer sheet.
How people reacted to their involvement in data collection
选项
答案
H
解析
此题难度较高,对应段落H最后一句话“People are thrilled to think that the datathey’ve been collecting as a hobby can be used for something scientific…”,原文“thrilled”对应题目“reaction”,所以答案为H。
转载请注明原文地址:https://kaotiyun.com/show/s5NO777K
本试题收录于:
雅思阅读题库雅思(IELTS)分类
0
雅思阅读
雅思(IELTS)
相关试题推荐
Scientistshaveacknowledgedthattointerpretananimal’sthoughtprocessesinasoundmannerrequiresaheavydoseof______fr
Feministcriticshaveoftenponderedwhetherapostmodernlanguagemaybearticulatedthatobviatestheessentialistarro
African-Americanfilmmakersshouldbeinanenviableposition,forsincetheearly1990stherehasbeenasteadywaveof
Theprimaryimpulseofeachhumanbeingisto______himself,butthesecondaryimpulseistoventureoutoftheself,tocorrect
Traditionallyeconomicswasdubbedthe"dismalscience"inresponsetothenotionthatscarcityisitsfoundation,andit
Wedidnotdiscoverthathisapprehensionconcerningourhypothesiswas______untilwellafterward,followingaseriesofrigorou
Becausemodernartisneithercompletelyacceptednorrejectedbycritics,theirultimateevaluationsofitremain______.
(Thispassagewaswrittenpriorto1950)Wenowknowthatwhatconstitutespracticallyallofmatterisemptyspa
ThispassageisadaptedfromTheAmericanRepublic:Constitution,Tendencies,andDestinybyO.A.Brownson,1866.Thean
随机试题
分解的思维过程主要是()
肾生成的生理活性物质有
女,28岁,上前牙龋坏因中龋曾于2个月前做过直接修复,昨晚发生自发性疼痛,冷热刺激加重疼痛。检查:丨1近中邻面见树脂样充填体,叩(±),冷试引起疼痛,刺激去除后痛持续一段时间。病史记录:2个月前丨1做齿龋充填为避免上述情况发生,第一次治疗时应
选择性诱导型环加氧酶抑制药为
设ζ~B(10,0,3),则D(ζ)=()。
可以使用红色墨水的情形有()。(5.5)
下列施工企业资产中,属于固定资产的是()。
2016年初某公司“盈余公积”余额为120万元,当年实现利润总额900万元。所得税费用300万元,按10%提取盈余公积,经股东大会批准用盈余公积50万元转增资本,2016年12月31日,该公司资产负债表中盈余公积年末余额为()万元。
“没有理性,眼睛是最坏的见证人。”对这句话分析正确的是()。
随着国民经济的发展,家庭收入不断增加,人们开始探讨投资理财的话题,有些人,尤其是一些年轻人,认为只有百万富翁才需要投资,也有人认为通货膨胀将使得传统意义上的储蓄最终成为竹篮打水的行为。其实,投资理财是每一个寻求正常生活方式的成年人所必须面对的课题。从这段文
最新回复
(
0
)