1. How many people died in a landslide in 2003?
A.About two hundred. | B.Over one thousand. | C.About two thousand. |
A.Growing grass. | B.Cutting down trees. | C.Growing population. |
A.Growing more forests. |
B.Chopping down the old forests. |
C.Getting busy in protecting our country. |
1. What does Jacob ask Amy to do?
A.Enjoy the flowers. | B.Provide help. | C.Grow flowers. |
A.Every day. | B.Every two days. | C.Every three days. |
A.They lack water. | B.They lack sunshine. | C.Their leaves turn yellow. |
A.Water flowers in time. | B.Learn about growing flowers. | C.Grow flowers with Amy. |
3 . In 1986, when he was only a prince. King Charles told a television interviewer that it was important to talk to plants. He was widely laughed at. But his wisdom seems to have been ahead of its time, for there is now plenty of evidence that plants can detect (察觉) sound, react to it, and even perhaps produce it.
Scientists have been experimenting with playing sounds to plants since at least the 1960s, during which time they have been exposed to everything from Beethoven to Michael Jackson. Over the years, evidence that this sort of thing can have an effect has been growing. One paper, published in 2018, announced that an Asian plant grew much larger leaves when exposed to 56 days of Buddhist chants — but not if it was exposed to Western pop music, or silence. Another, published last year, found that plants exposed to the noise of traffic from a busy motorway suffered slow growth, and produced a range of stress compounds (成分).
Another research reports that certain frequencies (频率), played in some environments like greenhouses, can affect seed growth and even improve crop production. And plants can make noises, too. Earlier this year a group of researchers at Tel Aviv University published an article in Cell Press, reporting that several plants gave out different noises in response to different stresses — although not at the sorts of frequencies that humans can hear. Humans can only hear frequencies of up to 16 kilohertz. Scientists discovered sounds given out by plants were up to 250 kilohertz.
If all that sounds strange, perhaps it should not. After all, sound carries useful information.
From an evolutionary point of view, there is no reason to expect that information to be applied only by animals.
1. What was most people’s attitude to Charles’ opinion?A.Unclear. | B.Positive. | C.Cautious. | D.Negative. |
A.Different sounds have different effects on plants. |
B.Buddhist chants don’t make a difference to plants. |
C.Western pop music does good to plants’ growth. |
D.The noise of traffic produces stress compounds. |
A.The sounds are strange. | B.The plants grow in greenhouses. |
C.The plants are under great stress. | D.The sounds are at high frequencies. |
A.It’s the important to talk to plants. |
B.Sounds make a difference to plants. |
C.Plants can discover and even make sound. |
D.Humans can’t hear sounds produced by plants. |
4 . The World Full of Eye-catching Things
The following flowers and plants might not be so eye-pleasing, but are certainly eye-catching, since they all look like some objects.
Lady’s Slipper
The lady’s slipper orchid is considered to be the rarest type of wild orchid. Now Lancashire in England is the only place where this plant can be found.The flower was so unique that people picked almost all of them. A single cutting of this plant is sold for US $5,000. Fortunately, strict protection policies have been established to protect it since 1917 when this endangered plant was once declared extinct in England.
Hot Lips
When you see a plant like this in reality, don’t get confused! No. They are not a woman’s lips! You can find these plants in countries with tropical rain forests, such as Colombia, Costa Rica and Panama. Due to the cutting down of trees, these unique and rare plants have become endangered. This plant bears a bright red flower which is similar to the lips of a woman with red lipstick.
Black Bat Flower
The black bat flower is an unusual flower that grows in the wild and tropical forests of Yunnan Province in China. It is famous for its bat-shaped black flowers. This flowering plant is often confused with a flying bat. The flower may also appear in white and brown shades. It needs specific environmental conditions to grow. This is the reason why it is an endangered species.
All the plants mentioned above are becoming nearly extinct. Hopefully, there are other unique and rare flowers left undiscovered. This proves the world is full of surprising things!
1. Where can the Lady’s Slipper be discovered currently?A.In Panama. | B.In Colombia. |
C.In Lancashire in England. | D.In Yunnan Province in China. |
A.Forest destruction. | B.Human picking. |
C.Lack of awareness. | D.Specific locations. |
A.Its red flowers. | B.Its bat-shaped flowers. |
C.Its slipper-shaped flowers. | D.Its white and brown flowers. |
5 . The world loves a cup of tea. It only takes a few grams to make a cup of tea and millions of tons of tea are consumed every year. Tea can be good for you because it contains some things that help lower cholesterol and reduce the risk of cardiovascular disease. Tea also contains caffeine(咖啡因), which improves not only mental alertness but can also increase anxiety and cause other problems.
What would be agreeable is a tea plant that provides all the taste and goodness but with little or none of caffeine. Chen Liang and Jin Jiqiang in the Tea Research Institute, Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences think they have found just such a plant, growing wild in a remote area in southern China’s Fujian Province. Known locally as hongyacha, the discovered plant grows only between 700 meters and 1,000 meters above sea level around a handful of Chinese villages. As they report in the Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry, not only is the tea plant naturally caffeine-free but it also contains a number of unique medicinal compounds that, the locals believe, offer considerable health benefits.
The researchers are now exploring methods to protect hongyacha in its natural habitat while further studies are carried out. It can take time—and sometimes it does not work—for new plant varieties to be bred for commercial use. A pair of naturally caffeine-free coffee plants were discovered in 2003, but little progress has been reported. Tea lovers will be watching hongyacha with interest. And others will wonder what else is out there.
1. What’s the disadvantage of drinking tea according to paragraph 1?A.It can make people hard to sleep. | B.It can make people feel anxious. |
C.It can get people addicted. | D.It can take people much time. |
A.It is nothing but just medicine. | B.It can only survive in greenhouses. |
C.It is a good pick for caffeine lovers. | D.It has a good taste and little caffeine. |
A.Its future location. | B.Its natural habitats. |
C.Its future market. | D.Its production process. |
A.A health magazine. | B.An advertising brochure. |
C.A travel guidebook. | D.A newspaper. |
1.播种及发芽阶段(seed,sprout,8月份种植,发芽期10—15天);
2.生长及发育阶段(stem,blossom,幼苗期30—50天);
3.成熟及结果阶段(produce,fruit,开花、结果期60—100天)。
注意:
1.词数80左右;
2.请在相应位置作答。
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7 . On the streets of Manhattan and Washington, D. C., in neighborhoods in Seoul and parks in Paris, ginkgo (银杏) trees are losing their leaves in reaction to the first gust of cold winter air. This leaf drop, gradual at first, and then sudden, carpets streets with golden, fan-shaped leaves. Scientists are documenting evidence of the event happening later and later, a possible indication of climate change. But the story of ginkgos is not the familiar one of human carelessness with nature.
Thanks to fossils found in North Dakota, scientists found a ginkgo has genetically similar ancestors dating back 170 million years to the Jurassic Period. “It almost went extinct. Then humans rescued it and spread it around the world. It’s such a great evolutionary (进化) and cultural story,” says Peter Crane, a ginkgo expert.
One theory for the decline of the ginkgo species began 130 million years ago, when flowering plants began spreading. They grew faster and attracted more pollinators (传粉者) than ginkgos. “It’s possible that ginkgos were elbowed out of the way,” says Crane. Already competing to survive, ginkgos began to disappear during a time of global cooling that began around 66 million years ago. By the time the last ice age ended 11,000 years ago, the remaining survivors were found in China.
Ginkgo trees are smelly. “My guess is that they were eaten by animals that liked smelly things. They then passed through their body and grew.” Crane says. Those same seeds may have helped ginkgo find favor with humans 1,000 years ago. Once cleaned of their outer layer, ginkgo seeds are safe to eat. It’s then, when the trees had long since disappeared elsewhere, that people in China may have begun planting them and eating their seeds. Then gradually ginkgos spread across the world. Now it’s seemingly naturally resistant to insects and high levels of air pollution.
Crane isn’t worried about its future, though: The popularity of the species will help it survive. “Though its status in the wild may be difficult to access, it’s a plant that’s unlikely to ever go extinct,” he says.
1. What may have caused the further delay of ginkgo’s leaf drop?A.The colder weather in winter. |
B.The protection from city councils. |
C.The global warming phenomenon. |
D.The careless interaction with humans. |
A.The reasons why ginkgos almost died out. |
B.The advantages of ginkgos over other plants. |
C.The theories of experts for multiplying ginkgos. |
D.The competition between various flowering plants. |
A.Their eatable seeds. | B.Their unpleasant smell. |
C.The natural evolution. | D.The careful planting. |
A.Worried. | B.Optimistic. | C.Uncertain. | D.Hopeless. |
Like China’s Kunming Institute of Botany, the Millennium Seed Bank(MSB)shines brightly for plant preservation. Located at the Wakehurst wild botanic garden in West Sussex, England, the Millennium Seed Bank (MSB), the world’s
Kongeegen is a large oak tree located (位于) in the north of Denmark. Kongeegen’s real age is unknown. The tree went through a scientific study in 1965, through which Kongeegen was confirmed to be between 1,500 and 2,000 years of age. This would make it the oldest living oak in the northern part of Europe.
Granit Oak
The Granit Oak measures 2.38 meters in diameter (直径) and 23.4 meters in height. The head of the tree measures about 1,017 square meters, which covers nearly 11,000 square feet. Back in 1967, the Bulgarian government announced this oak was a protected tree and it has been under protection ever since.
Stelmuze Oak
Not all of the tree’s branches are still alive, but it continues to be considered a living tree. This makes it the oldest living tree in all of Lithuania. Stelmuze Oak was made a natural monument (纪念碑) in 1960. Ever since then, it has been on the Lithuanian list of protected monuments, and it is well looked after.
Major Oak
Local legends (传说) say that this is the tree where Robin Hood’s shelter was located. According to the tales, Robin and his merry men slept in this very tree. Back in 2003 in Dorset, England, 260 acorn saplings (橡子树苗) from the Major Oak were used to start an oak plantation.
Kongeegen | Granit Oak | Stelmuze Oak | Major Oak | |
Estimated age | 1, 500-2, 000yeas | 1,700 years | 1, 500-2, 000 years | 800-1,000 years |
Status | Alive | Dead | Alive | Alive |
Location | Denmark | Bulgaria | Lithuania | England |
Oak species(物种) | Quercus robur | Quercus robur | Quercus robur | Quercus robur |
A.In 1960. | B.In 1965. | C.In 1967. | D.In 2003. |
A.Kongeegen. | B.Granit Oak | C.Stelmuze Oak. | D.Major Oak. |
A.They are of the same species. | B.There are beautiful stories about them. |
C.Some of their branches aren’t alive now. | D.They are under good protection. |
10 . Keeping a bit of the outdoors inside is nothing new, but houseplant collections have become a popular social media trend — which means that more people than ever are discovering the comfort and beauty that caring for plants brings.
“One study showed that patients at a hospital who had plants in their room reported less pain, lower blood pressure, less fatigue and less anxiety than patients without plants in their rooms,” says Jenny Seham, a New York-based psychologist. She explains: “Cortisol, the stress hormone, has been shown to lower with plant interaction, reducing fatigue, irritability (易怒) and blood pressure.”
Research has also shown that having plants and gardening increase productivity and levels of serotonin, the neurotransmitter responsible for lifting our mood.
Before you fill your space with greenery, consider how you’ll interact with your plants.
If you have a small space or aren’t sure how much time you’re willing to invest in “plant parenting.” Start slow. “
A.For instance, is there enough space for plants in areas where you spend a lot of time? |
B.Half the fun of gardening is that you never know exactly what’s going to come up. |
C.It’s a feel-good hobby that’s supported by science. |
D.While indoor gardening can boost your feelings of wellbeing, help reduce stress and promote relaxation, it’s not, of course, a substitute for a trained mental health professional. |
E.The theory is that plant care helps us focus on the present moment and provides a feeling of accomplishment. |
F.Just one plant can make a difference. |