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文章大意:这是一篇记叙文,文章主要讲述一位名叫Van Helmot的欧洲科学家通过实验得出结论:植物是通过喝水生长的。而现在科学证明植物是通过叶子将太阳的能量转化为营养物而生长。
1 . 阅读下面材料,在空白处填入适当的内容(1个单词)或括号内单词的正确形式。

Food from the air

Everyone has seen plants growing, but have you ever thought     1     they get their food? In the seventeenth century, a European scientist     2     (call) Van Helmot asked this question. Like most people, he thought that plants must get their food from soil. However, Van Helmot decided       3     (test) the theory with experiments.

First, he dried some soil, put it into a pot and weighed it. Next, he weighed a small tree, planted it in the pot and added rain water. Then, he watered it     4     (regular) with rain water.

After five years, he removed the tree from the pot and weighed it again. He found that the tree had gained     5     huge amount of weight. When he weighed the soil, however, it was almost exactly the same as it had been five years    6    . So Van Helmot drew the    7    (conclude) that the tree grew by drinking water. Though it turned out to be wrong, he showed the importance of the use of scientific evidence to support ideas.

We now know that plants and trees make their own food. Their leaves, when exposed     8     the air and sun, are like factories    9     can change the energy from the sun into chemical energy. During this process (过程), oxygen and sugar     10     (produce). The oxygen is released back into the air, and the sugar is used by the plant as food.

2024-03-02更新 | 21次组卷 | 1卷引用:新疆乌鲁木齐市第八中学2018-2019学年高二上学期期中考试英语试题
2023高三·全国·专题练习
阅读理解-七选五(约260词) | 适中(0.65) |
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文章大意:本文是一篇说明文。文章介绍了什么是室内植物、室内植物带来的好处及你能种植哪些室内植物。

2 . Indoor plants might look as if they just sit around not doing much, but in many ways they are the unsung heroes of the home.     1    , but studies have shown that they can promote people’s wellbeing by improving their mood (心情), reducing stress and helping their memory. What’s more, indoor plants are easy to look after and are not very expensive.

What are indoor plants?

Indoor plants, also known as houseplants or pot plants, are plants that like to grow indoors. Many of these species (物种) are not ideally suited to growing outside in the UK, especially in the winter.     2    .

Why are indoor plants good for you?

Will Spoelstra, who works at the Royal Botanic Gardens, says, “    3    . I find during the winter months, plants around the house can really lift your mood.” Several studies have backed this up and found that indoor plants can improve creativity, focus and memory. There is also research showing that pot plants can clean the air around them by removing harmful gases, such as carbon dioxide. They also remove some harmful chemicals from paints or cooking.     4    .

Which plants can you grow?

Aloe vera, peace lilies and spider plants are some of the species that are easy to grow indoors. You can buy plants from supermarkets, garden centres or online. Younger plants are often cheaper than fully grown ones, and you get to care for them as they mature — which is part of the joy of owning plants. “    5    ,” Spoelstra says. “It can bring a new interest and focus into people’s lives and help to make the link between home and nature.”

A.All plants are different
B.Not only do they look beautiful
C.There are many benefits to growing plants indoors
D.Instead, they grow better inside, where it is warmer
E.Plants like peace lilies and devil’s ivy are among the best
F.Changing the pot of your plant from time to time will also help
G.Learning about the requirements of each plant can be very rewarding
阅读理解-阅读单选(约370词) | 较易(0.85) |
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文章大意:这是一篇说明文。主要介绍了研究人员目前正在设计发光的花朵和装饰性植物,它们可以为客厅投下绿色的光。通过它的发光来观察植物的健康状况可以是一种即时衡量其健康状况的方法。

3 . Do you know the amazing fact that earth is lighted up by bioluminescence(生物发光)? However, for many of us, seeing the natural phenomenon is a rare treat:Catching the glow(光)of a firefly or witnessing a dolphin swimming through electric blue waters is a thrill.

Researchers are currently engineering glowing flowers and decorative plants that can cast a green light onto our living rooms. Observing plant’s health via its glow can be a way to instantly measure its health,and the side effect is anybody who wants a healthy glowing plant in their living room can have one.

A study published on Monday in Nature Biotechnology shows that this goal is well on its way to being a reality. The study authors announce they’ve created a method that causes plants to glow much brighter, and for a longer period of time, than previous efforts. Plants adapted by this method should be available for purchase within a few years.

The research was conducted through a teamwork between three scientific institutions and Plant, a biotech startup in Moscow. When this team examined a poisonous mushroom, they discovered that caffeic acid(咖啡酸) is responsible for its bioluminescence. In this new study, the team employed that information and inserted(嵌入) enzymes (酶) —which are specific to the mushroom —into the DNA of tobacco (烟草) plants. In turn, the enzymes were able to interact with the caffeic acid in the tobacco plants, and cause them to glow both in the dark and in the daylight.

This method, the scientists claimed, made the plants 10 times brighter than previous efforts and the continuous light production didn’t harm the health of the plants. Interestingly, the light decreased as the leaves aged—but it also increased when the leaves were damaged. In turn, the team suggested this method could also help other researchers monitor plant responses to various pressures and changes in the environment. If a plant is short of water or a hungry sheep is harming a plant, bioluminescence could warn of this damage before it’s too late.

1. How can people rapidly analyze a decorative flower’s health condition?
A.By checking its glow.B.By making it greener.
C.By testing the chemicals in it.D.By putting it in the living room.
2. What can we infer about the adapted glowing plants from the text?
A.They may replace lamps.B.They will be present on the market.
C.They can light up a whole living room.D.They glow less bright than previous efforts.
3. What did the team do with the mushroom in the new study?
A.They put its enzymes into the tobacco plants.B.They made it give out brighter light.
C.They grew it on the tobacco plants farm.D.They inserted caffeic acid into it.
4. What is the last paragraph mainly about?
A.Potential risk from glowing plants.
B.Strengths of integrating specific enzymes with caffeic acid in plants.
C.Bad impacts of continuous light production on the glowing plants.
D.Increasing light when glowing plants receive damage.
2023-01-12更新 | 51次组卷 | 1卷引用:新疆乌鲁木齐市第八中学2022-2023学年高二上学期期末考试英语试题
阅读理解-阅读单选(约320词) | 适中(0.65) |
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文章大意:这是一篇说明文。本文主要讲述了在英国的一个村子,人们利用野花来作为让驾驶员减速的奖励。

4 . Wildflower meadows are beautiful; so beautiful in fact that a village in Britain has found they act as natural speed traps from motorists slowing down to look at them.

The village of Long Newnton in Gloucestershire has a problem with fast-moving traffic between nearby towns. Almost all drivers moving through areas they frequent will break posted speed limits, and neither a 30 mile per hour limit, nor warning signs made any difference.

Officials first planted flowers along the roadside during the pandemic to help improve biodiversity. But they noticed that as well as attracting more wildlife, motorists also slowed down when they passed the flowers. The village, between Tetbury and Malmesbury, has traffic regularly travelling between them, and the small parish council(教区行政机构) receives limited funds from the government for traffic control measures.

Putting two and two together, the village is now relying on its flowers to do the work that the road signs could not, paying for the blooms with crowdfunding(众筹) in the village.

Why exactly people slow down isn’t entirely clear. “Evidence has shown that if you introduce things like wildflowers, drivers will slow down because they feel like they’re coming into somewhere that’s looked after,” said Jenny Forde, cabinet member for health and wellbeing at Cotswold District Council. A crowdfunding campaign has raised almost £8,000 for traffic-calming measures, which will be used to fund a three-year care program for the wildflowers.

A sign that flashes and records data when people are breaking the 30 mph(48 kmph) speed limit was also fixed by the council. According to the data, 90% of motorists drive below the speed limit. It goes to show that something the homeschooling revolution in America is getting right applies elsewhere too, and that rewards for good behavior will always outperform(胜过) punishment for bad behavior.

1. What problem are villagers in Long Newnton facing?
A.Drivers often overspeed through the village.
B.Warning signs are unserviceable inside the village.
C.Traffic accidents often happen between the towns.
D.Large numbers of people are pouring to visit the village.
2. For what did officials plant flowers along the roadside initially?
A.Acting as traffic signals.B.Attracting more tourists.
C.Increasing plant diversity.D.Advising drivers to slow down.
3. What can be inferred from the text?
A.The longest journey begins with the first step.
B.Rewards outweigh punishment in some way.
C.Nothing is impossible to a willing heart.
D.A good beginning is half of success.
4. Which of the following is probably the best title?
A.Pay for Flowers with CrowdfundingB.Natural Traps Found in Long Newnton
C.More Measures Taken to Regulate TrafficD.Handle Speeding with Wildflowers’ Help
2022-12-20更新 | 83次组卷 | 2卷引用:新疆乌鲁木齐市2022-2023学年高三上学期12月联考英语试题
智能选题,一键自动生成优质试卷~
阅读理解-阅读单选(约320词) | 较难(0.4) |
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文章大意:本文是一篇说明文。文章通过研究、检测英国的两块废弃农田被重新野生化的过程,得出结论,重新造林速度比预期要快,并且该过程有了风力和一些为数不多的物种的帮助后,能够加速大自然的更新。

5 . With no special equipment, no fences and no watering, two abandoned agricultural fields in the UK have been rewilded (重新野化), in large part due to the efforts of jays, which actually “engineered” these new woodlands. Researchers now hope that rewilding projects can take a more natural and hands-off approach and that jays can shed some of their bad reputations.

The two fields, which researchers have called the New Wilderness and the Old Wilderness, had been abandoned in 1996 and 1961 respectively. The former was a bare field, while the latter was grassland—both lay next to ancient woodlands. Researchers had suspected that the fields would gradually return to wilderness, but it was impressive to see just how quickly this happened, and how much of it was owed to birds.

Using aerial data, the researchers monitored the two sites. After just 24 years, the New Wilderness had grown into a young, healthy wood with 132 live trees per hectare, over half of which (57%) were oaks. Meanwhile, the Old Wilderness resembled a mature woodland after 39 years, with 390 trees per hectare.

“This native woodland restoration was approaching the structure (but not the species composition) of long-established woodlands within six decades,” the researchers explained in the study.

Part of this reforestation was done by the wind, and researchers suspect that previous ground disturbance may have aided the woodland establishment—which is good news, as it would suggest that agricultural areas may be reforested faster than anticipated. However, animals—Eurasian jays, thrushes, wood mice, and squirrels—also played an important role in helping the forests take shape. This handful of species provided much of the natural regeneration needed for the forest to develop. Jays, in particular, seem to have done a lot of heavy lifting.

1. What does the underlined word “shed” in Paragraph 1 refer to?
A.Be opposed to.
B.Be ashamed of.
C.Get used to.
D.Get rid of.
2. Which aspect of the changes in the two fields impressed the researchers?
A.The scale of the woodlands.
B.The diversity of the fields.
C.The rate of the changes.
D.The frequency of the wilderness.
3. What does the author want to tell us by providing some data in Paragragh 3?
A.The woodland restoration was approaching the structure of long-established ones.
B.Much of the wilderness of the fields was owed to birds.
C.Previous ground disturbance aided the woodland establishment.
D.How quickly the fields returned to wilderness over time.
4. What does the last paragraph mainly talk about?
A.The essential role of humans in the reforestation.
B.The factors that contribute to the reforestation.
C.The importance of woodland establishment.
D.The threats faced by a handful of wild animals.
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文章大意:这是一篇说明文。文章主要介绍了地衣,包括其各种各样的生长环境和用途。

6 . Lichens (地衣)

Lichens look like splashes of paint left behind by a careless painter. Unlike many plants, they do not require soil to grow. They grow on trunk of trees in steaming tropical rain forests, on farmers’ fenceposts, on the bricks of big-city buildings, and on old gravestones. Lichens can tolerate extremes of climate. They grow on rocks in hot springs, on wind-swept mountaintops, and on stones in the driest deserts. In the Arctic, lichens are the principal source of food for reindeer. Whole mountainsides in Antarctica appear green and orange because of the presence of lichens; they are one of the few plants that can survive there. They are among the oldest of known plants. Recently, scientists discovered lichen fossils on a rock in a mine in southwest China that date back 600 million years.

When conditions become harsh, lichens become dormant (休眠). If there is not enough moisture, they simply dry up, but a short rain or even a heavy dew gives them new life. When growing on rock surfaces, lichens produce acids that dissolve (溶解) the minerals, contributing to the process of weathering by which rocks are slowly turned to soil. This property enables lichens to be pioneers. They appear on barren rock rubbed clean by glaciers, fires, lava flows, or floods, beginning the process of soil formation that allows mosses (苔藓) and other plants to later take root. But, despite their hardiness, lichens are extremely sensitive to airborne particles(颗粒). That’s why they serve as an early warning system for air pollution.

It is the acids lichens produce that give them their distinctive colors. Lichens are often spoken of in the same breath as mosses, and some lichens are even called mosses, but true mosses are all distinctively green, whereas lichens appear in many vivid colors. At one time, acids from lichens were used to make dyes, such as the purple dye, the blue dye, and the red dye, and they are sometimes still used that way today. Some lichens, such as oakmoss, contain oils that produce fragrant odors used in scented soaps, cosmetics and perfumes. Some lichens are also known to have antibiotic properties to kill bacteria.

So definite are the form, color, and characteristics of these organisms that for hundreds of years lichens were constantly under scientists’ microscope.

1. What characteristic of lichens is mainly talked about in paragraph 1?
A.They grow only on rock surfaces.
B.They live primarily in cold places.
C.They have adapted to a wide variety of environments.
D.They live in remote locations far from human communities.
2. The author refer to lichens as pioneers in paragraph 2 because they __________.
A.have their primitive structure
B.grow in areas before other plants do
C.are found in remote parts of the world
D.develop so early in the history of the planet
3. According to paragraph 3, humans use lichens in the following ways EXCEPT __________.
A.as a means of coloring clothing
B.as a type of medicine
C.as a source of food
D.as an ingredient in perfume
4. Which of the following cases would be probably dealt with in the next paragraph?
A.Lichens are important in Canada because of their abundance in the north.
B.Extracts of lichens were sold as herbal medicines to facilitate hair growth.
C.Glacier Park’s vast array of lichens indicate relatively good air quality.
D.A German botanist first found lichens are composed of two life forms.
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文章大意:本文是一篇说明文。研究发现,当多叶植物受到攻击时,它们不会坐以待毙,会发出挥发性有机化合物,以此来保护自己或者与周围的植物通过化学物质进行交流。

7 . When a leafy plant is under attack, it doesn’t sit quietly. Back in 1983, two scientists, Jack Schultz and Ian Baldwin, reported that young maple trees getting bitten by insects send out a particular smell that neighboring plants can get. These chemicals come from the injured parts of the plant and seem to be an alarm. What the plants pump through the air is a mixture of chemicals known as volatile organic compounds, VOCs for short.

Scientists have found that all kinds of plants give out VOCs when being attacked. It’s a plant’s way of crying out. But is anyone listening? Apparently. Because we can watch the neighbours react.

Some plants pump out smelly chemicals to keep insects away. But others do double duty. They pump out perfumes designed to attract different insects who are natural enemies to the attackers. Once they arrive, the tables are turned. The attacker who was lunching now becomes lunch.

In study after study, it appears that these chemical conversations help the neighbors .The damage is usually more serious on the first plant, but the neighbors, relatively speaking, stay safer because they heard the alarm and knew what to do.

Does this mean that plants talk to each other? Scientists don’t know. Maybe the first plant just made a cry of pain or was sending a message to its own branches, and so, in effect, was talking to itself. Perhaps the neighbors just happened to “overhear” the cry. So information was exchanged, but it wasn’t a true, intentional back and forth. Charles Darwin, over 150 years ago, imagined a world far busier, noisier and more intimate (亲密的) than the world we can see and hear. Our senses are weak. There’s a whole lot going on.

1. What does a plant do when it is under attack?
A.It makes noises.B.It gets help from other plants.
C.It stands quietlyD.It sends out certain chemicals.
2. What does the author mean by “the tables are turned” in paragraph 3?
A.The attackers get attacked.
B.The insects gather under the table.
C.The plants get ready to fight back.
D.The perfumes attract natural enemies.
3. Scientists find from their studies that plants can ________.
A.predict natural disasters
B.protect themselves against insects
C.talk to one another intentionally
D.help their neighbors when necessary
4. What can we infer from the last paragraph?
A.The world is changing faster than ever.
B.People have stronger senses than before
C.The world is more complex than it seems
D.People in Darwin’s time were imaginative.
2017-08-08更新 | 4398次组卷 | 32卷引用:新疆乌鲁木齐市第七十中学2022-2023学年高三上学期11月期中英语试题
10-11高二上·黑龙江大庆·期末
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8 . Animals can move from place to place, but plants cannot. When an animal is under attack, it can run away or fight back. Plants certainly cannot run away, and they lack teeth and claws. But plants can defend themselves by using both physical and chemical means.

Some plants have their own ways to keep animals away. For example, the leaves of the holly plant have sharp spines (刺) that discourage grass-eating animals. Holly leaves on lower branches have more spines than leaves on upper branches. This is because the lower leaves are easier for most animals to reach.

Some plants, such as the oak tree, have thick and hard leaves that are difficult for animals to eat. Some grasses may contain a sandy material; eating such grasses wears down the animal's teeth.

Many plants also have chemical defenses. Some plants produce chemicals that taste bitter or cause an unpleasant reaction. Some plants may fight against an attack by increasing the production of these chemicals. When a caterpillar (毛虫) bites a tobacco leaf, the leaf produces a chemical messenger. This messenger sends to the roots the information to produce more nicotine. The higher levels of nicotine discourage the caterpillar.

Many plants depend on both physical and chemical defenses. A certain plant in China, for instance, has prickly (多刺的) leaves, and each prickle contains poisonous venom (毒液). A single experience with this kind of plant will teach an animal to stay away from it in the future.

1. The holly plant has more spines on the lower leaves because most animals________.
A.are not tall enoughB.like the lower leaves only
C.are not clever enoughD.can get the lower leaves easily
2. To defend themselves, oak trees use________.
A.chemical meansB.physical means
C.bitter chemicalsD.sandy materials
3. How does tobacco protect itself against an attack from a caterpillar?
A.Its leaves fight against the attack by physical means.
B.Its roots send a messenger to discourage the caterpillar.
C.Its roots increase the production of nicotine when it is attacked.
D.Its leaves produce poisonous sand to drive the caterpillar away.
4. What would be the best title for this passage?
A.Plants and AnimalsB.How Plants Defend Themselves
C.Attacks and DefensesD.How Animals Eat Plant Leaves
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