shortage of freshwater.
pollution and changes in their living environment.
fertilizer run-off.
closed chemical works.
第1题:
We should prevent pollution () happily.
A. living
B. for living
C. to live
D. to living
第2题:
If the coolant temperature of a closed cooling water system for a diesel enginegradually increases, the trouble usually is( ).
A.a broken shaft on the freshwater pump
B.an excessive accumulation of scale in the heat exchanger
C.an incorrect thermostatic element operating range
D.lube oil in the cooling water
第3题:
According to the conversation, in the chemical fertilizer market, the demand the supply.
第4题:
第5题:
The systems of universities are very vulnerable because they are decentralized and accessible to many people.
第6题:
A、extra
B、according
C、cost
D、enforce
第7题:
In a diesel engine closed freshwater cooling system, the amount of coolant flowing through the heat exchanger is controlled by the __.
A.suction pressure regulator
B.thermostatic bypass valve
C.sea water temperature
D.water level in the expansion tank
第8题:
Text 3
When prehistoric man arrived in new parts of the world, something strange happened to the large animals. They suddenly became extinct. Smaller species survived. The large, slow-growing animals were easy game, and were quickly hunted to extinction. Now something similar could be happening in the oceans.
That the seas are being overfished has been known for years. What researchers such as Ransom Myers and Boris Worm have shown is just how fast things are changing. They have looked at half a century of data from fisheries around the world. Their methods do not attempt to estimate the actual biomass (the amount of living biological matter) of fish species in particular parts of the ocean, but rather changes in that biomass over time. According to their latest paper published in Nature, the biomass of large predators (animals that kill and eat other animals) in a new fishery is reduced on average by 80% within 15 years of the start of exploitation. In some long-fished areas, it has halved again since then.
Dr. Worm acknowledges that the figures are conservative. One reason for this is that fishing technology has improved. Today’s vessels can find their prey using satellites and sonar, which were not available 50 years ago. That means a higher proportion of what is in the sea is being caught, so the real difference between present and past is likely to be worse than the one recorded by changes in catch sizes. In the early days, too, longlines would have been more saturated with fish. Some individuals would therefore not have been caught, since no baited hooks would have been available to trap them, leading to an underestimate of fish stocks in the past. Furthermore, in the early days of longline fishing, a lot of fish were lost to sharks after they had been hooked. That is no longer a problem, because there are fewer sharks around now.
Dr. Myers and Dr. Worm argue that their work gives a correct baseline, which future management efforts must take into account. They believe the data support an idea current among marine biologists, that of the “shifting baseline.” The notion is that people have failed to detect the massive changes which have happened in the ocean because they have been looking back only a relatively short time into the past. That matters because theory suggests that the maximum sustainable yield that can be cropped from a fishery comes when the biomass of a target species is about 50% of its original levels. Most fisheries are well below that, which is a bad way to do business.
31. The extinction of large prehistoric animals is noted to suggest that ________.
[A] large animal were vulnerable to the changing environment
[B] small species survived as large animals disappeared
[C] large sea animals may face the same threat today
[D] slow-growing fish outlive fast-growing ones
第9题:
第10题:
The problem is()by pollution.