更多“问答题How to protect the wild animals?”相关问题
  • 第1题:

    23. How many dangers will animals meet in the deep sea?

    A.One

    B.Two

    C.Three

    D.Four


    正确答案:C
    23.C【解析】由第五段可知面临3个危险。

  • 第2题:

    What might be the best title for the text?

    A.How to Save Rainforests

    B.How to Protect Nature

    C.Rainforests and the Environment

    D.Rainforests and Medical Development


    正确答案:C

  • 第3题:

    How many State-Protected animals are there in Huanglong?

    A. 9

    B. 21

    C. 30

    D. 12


    正确答案:C

  • 第4题:

    More and more people come to realize how important the ecosystem is and ( ) the activities to protect the environment.

    A.take part

    B.participate in

    C.involve

    D.participate


    参考答案:B

  • 第5题:

    What’s the best title of this passage?__________ .

    A. Kangaroos and koalas B. Beautiful Australia C.How to protect kangaroos and koalas


    正确答案:A

  • 第6题:

    36. We ___________ keep the new traffic law and learn how to protect ourselves.

    A.may.

    B.should

    C.can

    D.need


    正确答案:B
    36.B【解析】句意:我们应该遵守新的交通法规并学会保护自己。所填词意思为“应该”,表示一种义务和责任,用should。

  • 第7题:

    共用题干
    第三篇

    Longer Lives for Wild Elephants

    Most people think of zoos as safe places for animals,where struggles such as having difficulty finding
    food and avoiding predators(猛兽)don't exist. Without such problems,animals in zoos should live to a ripe
    (成熟的)old age.
    But that may not be true for the largest land animals on Earth.Scientists have known that elephants in
    zoos often suffer from poor health.Sometimes,they even become unable to have babies.
    To learn more about how captivity(圈养)affects elephants, a team of international scientists compared
    the life spans of female elephants born in zoos with female elephants living outdoors in their native lands.
    Zoos keep detailed records of all the animals in their care,documenting factors such as birth dates,illnes-
    ses,weight and death.These records made it possible for the researchers to analyze 40 years of data on 800
    African and Asian elephants in zoos across Europe.The scientists compared the life spans of the zoo-born fe-
    male elephants with the life spans of thousands of wild female elephants in Africa and Asian elephants that
    work in logging camps(伐木场), over approximately the same time period.
    The team found that female African elephants born in zoos lived an average of 16.9 years. Their wild
    counterparts who died of natural causes lived an average of 56 years一more than three times as long. Female
    Asian elephants followed a similar pattern. In zoos,they lived 18.9 years,while those in the logging camps
    lived 41.7 years.
    Scientists don't know yet why wild elephants seem to get on so much better than their zoo-raised coun-
    terparts.Georgia Mason,a biologist at the University of Guelph in Canada who led the study,thinks stress
    and obesity(肥胖症)may be to blame. Zoo elephants don't get the same kind of exercise they would in the
    wild,and most are very fat. Social lives of elephants are also much different in zoos than in the wild,where
    they live in large herds and family groups.
    The study raises some questions about acquiring more elephants to keep in zoos.While some threatened
    and endangered species living in zoos reproduce(生殖)successfully and maintain healthy populations,that
    doesn't appear to be the case with elephants.

    Which of the following about the scientists'study is NOT true?
    A:They compared zoo-born elephants with wild elephants.
    B:They analyzed the records of 800 elephants kept in zoos.
    C:The zoo-born elephants they studied were kept in European zoos.
    D:They kept detailed records of all the elephants in their care.

    答案:D
    解析:
    由文章第二段第二句话可知答案。
    由文章第三段可知,是动物园记录他们所照顾的大象的详细信息,而不是科学家们。
    由第四段两组数据对比可知,在动物园出生的雌象比野生的寿命短很多,即死得更早。
    由第五段内容可知,圈养的大象之所以短命是因为它们不是成群大家庭生活的。
    最后一段暗示大象和其他适合圈养的动物不一样、它需要野外生活,因此圈养大象可 能是不明智的。第5部分:补全短文

  • 第8题:

    共用题干
    第三篇

    Longer Lives for Wild Elephants

    Most people think of zoos as safe places for animals,where struggles such as having difficulty finding
    food and avoiding predators(猛兽)don't exist. Without such problems,animals in zoos should live to a ripe
    (成熟的)old age.
    But that may not be true for the largest land animals on Earth.Scientists have known that elephants in
    zoos often suffer from poor health.Sometimes,they even become unable to have babies.
    To learn more about how captivity(圈养)affects elephants, a team of international scientists compared
    the life spans of female elephants born in zoos with female elephants living outdoors in their native lands.
    Zoos keep detailed records of all the animals in their care,documenting factors such as birth dates,illnes-
    ses,weight and death.These records made it possible for the researchers to analyze 40 years of data on 800
    African and Asian elephants in zoos across Europe.The scientists compared the life spans of the zoo-born fe-
    male elephants with the life spans of thousands of wild female elephants in Africa and Asian elephants that
    work in logging camps(伐木场), over approximately the same time period.
    The team found that female African elephants born in zoos lived an average of 16.9 years. Their wild
    counterparts who died of natural causes lived an average of 56 years一more than three times as long. Female
    Asian elephants followed a similar pattern. In zoos,they lived 18.9 years,while those in the logging camps
    lived 41.7 years.
    Scientists don't know yet why wild elephants seem to get on so much better than their zoo-raised coun-
    terparts.Georgia Mason,a biologist at the University of Guelph in Canada who led the study,thinks stress
    and obesity(肥胖症)may be to blame. Zoo elephants don't get the same kind of exercise they would in the
    wild,and most are very fat. Social lives of elephants are also much different in zoos than in the wild,where
    they live in large herds and family groups.
    The study raises some questions about acquiring more elephants to keep in zoos.While some threatened
    and endangered species living in zoos reproduce(生殖)successfully and maintain healthy populations,that
    doesn't appear to be the case with elephants.

    One of the possible reasons for the zoo-raised elephants'problems is that______________.
    A:they do not get proper food
    B:they do too much exercise
    C:they live in large herds
    D:they do not live in family groups

    答案:D
    解析:
    由文章第二段第二句话可知答案。
    由文章第三段可知,是动物园记录他们所照顾的大象的详细信息,而不是科学家们。
    由第四段两组数据对比可知,在动物园出生的雌象比野生的寿命短很多,即死得更早。
    由第五段内容可知,圈养的大象之所以短命是因为它们不是成群大家庭生活的。
    最后一段暗示大象和其他适合圈养的动物不一样、它需要野外生活,因此圈养大象可 能是不明智的。第5部分:补全短文

  • 第9题:

    共用题干
    第一篇

    How Animals Keep Warm

    Man has invented ways to keep warm,but how do animals defend themselves?They
    cannot reason in the sense that man can,but nature has taken care of the animal kingdom
    by providing animals with special instincts(本能).One of these instincts is known as
    hibernation(冬眠).
    " Sleeping like a dormouse(棒睡鼠)"is not only a common saying but is a reality.
    When winter comes,the dormouse and other hibernating animals have reached a well-
    nourished state.They eat very well in warmer days laying down fat in the tissues of their
    bodies and during hibernation this keeps them alive.Safe in their nests,or burrows(地
    洞),they sleep soundly until the warmth of spring arrives.
    Bats,tortoises,snakes,frogs,even insects like butterflies,hibernate more or less
    completely. Some, like the squirrels(松鼠),sleep during coldest weather but are roused
    (弄醒)by a warm spell(暖流).During hibernation, the temperature of an animal's body
    drops drastically.Breathing and heart-beats almost cease.
    Another instinctive method of avoiding intense cold is to escape by means of migration.
    Wild swans,seagulls,swallows and cuckoos are a few of the very many kinds of birds
    which fly thousands of miles,twice a year,to avoid cold.Many animals,especially those
    of the Arctic regions,have summer and winter quarters.The Arctic deer of North America,
    as well as the reindeer(驯鹿)of Europe,move southward towards the forests when winter
    approaches.They return to the northern area when the warmth of spring begins to be
    sensed.
    There are animals which do not attempt to leave at the first sign of winter cold.Their
    instinctive means of defense is to dig out a deep burrow,made it soft and warm by padding
    (填塞)out with straw,leaves,moss and fur. In it they have a"secret place"containing
    food which they hope will last the winter through!Animals which fall into this class include
    the Arctic fox,the rabbit and the little field-mouse.

    How does the Arctic fox survive in winter?
    A:It leaves its burrow and migrates to a warmer land.
    B:It sleeps soundly inside its burrow in winter.
    C:It lives on rabbits or field mice.
    D:It stays in its burrow and lives on the food stored there.

    答案:D
    解析:

  • 第10题:

    判断题
    b)People only want to know how animals live.
    A

    B


    正确答案:
    解析:
    细节理解题。由第一段最后一句“…how they live and grow are interesting”可知,人们不仅仅是想要了解动物是怎样生活的,还有他们是怎样长大的。

  • 第11题:

    问答题
    How to protect the wild animals?

    正确答案: I believe the most important thing to do is to enact laws that ban hunting of wild animals to maintain the ecosystem.
    解析:
    考生可从立法角度回答,如禁止捕猎野生动物。

  • 第12题:

    单选题
    For years an acrimonious debate over how to protect heroin users impeded efforts in the U.S. to control the spread of AIDS.
    A

    convoluted    

    B

    belied  

    C

    stoked  

    D

    encumbered


    正确答案: C
    解析: 句意:几年来对如何保护海洛因吸食者的激烈辩论阻碍了美国为控制艾滋病传播而付出的努力。impede阻止。encumber阻碍。convolute旋绕。belie掩饰,伪装。stoke添燃料。

  • 第13题:

    Passage Two

    The lion may be the most famous of all the predators of Africa, but one of the most fascinating is the wild dog. Wild dogs are fairly small, averaging seventy pounds, with round, fanlike ears that look too big for their heads. They have shaggy brown coats with scattered patches of white. One of these animals by itself looks harmless or even comical. But when they band together, in packs of up to forty, the wild dogs become dangerous predators that tirelessly run down and kill animals that are many times their own size.

    Wild dogs have to be good hunters in order to feed their large families; a single female can have as many as sixteen pups at a time. But usually only one female in a pack breeds at a time, and all the pack members help to care for the young. At first, the pups feed on their mother's milk. Then the other dogs begin to bring back meat from the kill, carrying it in their stomachs and throwing it up when the pups come running to them to beg for food. Finally, the young dogs begin to go along on hunts. At this time one of the most striking differences between wild dogs and lions can be seen. When a pride of lions makes a kill, the adult males always eat their fill first. But the wild dogs let the pups feed first, even when they are still too young to really help in making the kill.

    36. A good title for this passage would be ______.

    A. Africa's Wild Dogs

    B. Killers of the Plains

    C. Predators of Africa

    D. The Greedy Lion


    正确答案:A

    文章用两个段落讲了野狗的相貌及习性。所以题目应为“野狗”。


  • 第14题:

    The boys loved the zoo.They ( )wild animals before.

    A.had never seen

    B.never see

    C.never saw


    参考答案:A

  • 第15题:

    Students are holding a ( ) discussion on how to protect the global ecological system.

    A.warm

    B.hot

    C.heat

    D.heated


    答案:D

  • 第16题:

    How to protect ourselves should be __________(教) at school.


    正确答案:
    taught

  • 第17题:

    To protect wild animals is our duty.(改为同义句)

    __________ our duty__________ __________ wild animals.


    正确答案:
     32. It's; to protect

  • 第18题:

    共用题干
    第三篇

    Longer Lives for Wild Elephants

    Most people think of zoos as safe places for animals,where struggles such as having difficulty finding
    food and avoiding predators(猛兽)don't exist. Without such problems,animals in zoos should live to a ripe
    (成熟的)old age.
    But that may not be true for the largest land animals on Earth.Scientists have known that elephants in
    zoos often suffer from poor health.Sometimes,they even become unable to have babies.
    To learn more about how captivity(圈养)affects elephants, a team of international scientists compared
    the life spans of female elephants born in zoos with female elephants living outdoors in their native lands.
    Zoos keep detailed records of all the animals in their care,documenting factors such as birth dates,illnes-
    ses,weight and death.These records made it possible for the researchers to analyze 40 years of data on 800
    African and Asian elephants in zoos across Europe.The scientists compared the life spans of the zoo-born fe-
    male elephants with the life spans of thousands of wild female elephants in Africa and Asian elephants that
    work in logging camps(伐木场), over approximately the same time period.
    The team found that female African elephants born in zoos lived an average of 16.9 years. Their wild
    counterparts who died of natural causes lived an average of 56 years一more than three times as long. Female
    Asian elephants followed a similar pattern. In zoos,they lived 18.9 years,while those in the logging camps
    lived 41.7 years.
    Scientists don't know yet why wild elephants seem to get on so much better than their zoo-raised coun-
    terparts.Georgia Mason,a biologist at the University of Guelph in Canada who led the study,thinks stress
    and obesity(肥胖症)may be to blame. Zoo elephants don't get the same kind of exercise they would in the
    wild,and most are very fat. Social lives of elephants are also much different in zoos than in the wild,where
    they live in large herds and family groups.
    The study raises some questions about acquiring more elephants to keep in zoos.While some threatened
    and endangered species living in zoos reproduce(生殖)successfully and maintain healthy populations,that
    doesn't appear to be the case with elephants.

    Unlike other animals in zoos,zoo-raised elephants
    A:live a long life
    B:give birth to many babies
    C:develop poor health
    D:have difficulty getting food

    答案:C
    解析:
    由文章第二段第二句话可知答案。
    由文章第三段可知,是动物园记录他们所照顾的大象的详细信息,而不是科学家们。
    由第四段两组数据对比可知,在动物园出生的雌象比野生的寿命短很多,即死得更早。
    由第五段内容可知,圈养的大象之所以短命是因为它们不是成群大家庭生活的。
    最后一段暗示大象和其他适合圈养的动物不一样、它需要野外生活,因此圈养大象可 能是不明智的。第5部分:补全短文

  • 第19题:

    共用题干
    第三篇

    Longer Lives for Wild Elephants

    Most people think of zoos as safe places for animals,where struggles such as having difficulty finding
    food and avoiding predators(猛兽)don't exist. Without such problems,animals in zoos should live to a ripe
    (成熟的)old age.
    But that may not be true for the largest land animals on Earth.Scientists have known that elephants in
    zoos often suffer from poor health.Sometimes,they even become unable to have babies.
    To learn more about how captivity(圈养)affects elephants, a team of international scientists compared
    the life spans of female elephants born in zoos with female elephants living outdoors in their native lands.
    Zoos keep detailed records of all the animals in their care,documenting factors such as birth dates,illnes-
    ses,weight and death.These records made it possible for the researchers to analyze 40 years of data on 800
    African and Asian elephants in zoos across Europe.The scientists compared the life spans of the zoo-born fe-
    male elephants with the life spans of thousands of wild female elephants in Africa and Asian elephants that
    work in logging camps(伐木场), over approximately the same time period.
    The team found that female African elephants born in zoos lived an average of 16.9 years. Their wild
    counterparts who died of natural causes lived an average of 56 years一more than three times as long. Female
    Asian elephants followed a similar pattern. In zoos,they lived 18.9 years,while those in the logging camps
    lived 41.7 years.
    Scientists don't know yet why wild elephants seem to get on so much better than their zoo-raised coun-
    terparts.Georgia Mason,a biologist at the University of Guelph in Canada who led the study,thinks stress
    and obesity(肥胖症)may be to blame. Zoo elephants don't get the same kind of exercise they would in the
    wild,and most are very fat. Social lives of elephants are also much different in zoos than in the wild,where
    they live in large herds and family groups.
    The study raises some questions about acquiring more elephants to keep in zoos.While some threatened
    and endangered species living in zoos reproduce(生殖)successfully and maintain healthy populations,that
    doesn't appear to be the case with elephants.

    It was found that,compared with female wild elephants,female zoo-born elephants_______________.
    A:lived longer
    B:grew up faster
    C:died much earlier
    D:enjoyed the same life spans

    答案:C
    解析:
    由文章第二段第二句话可知答案。
    由文章第三段可知,是动物园记录他们所照顾的大象的详细信息,而不是科学家们。
    由第四段两组数据对比可知,在动物园出生的雌象比野生的寿命短很多,即死得更早。
    由第五段内容可知,圈养的大象之所以短命是因为它们不是成群大家庭生活的。
    最后一段暗示大象和其他适合圈养的动物不一样、它需要野外生活,因此圈养大象可 能是不明智的。第5部分:补全短文

  • 第20题:

    试讲题目1.题目:Wild animals
    2.内容:
    Sadly, giant pandas face serious problems in the wild. For example, it is very difficult for pandas to have babies, and many baby pandas die when they are very young. Also, giant pandas live mainly on a special kind of bamboo. However, the bamboo forests are becoming smaller and smaller. As a result, pandas may not have a place to live or food to eat.
    Giant pandas are now in danger. We should take action right away. Here are some ideas.
    1. help pandas have more babies;
    2. build more panda reserves;
    3. make laws to protect pandas.
    3.基本要求:
    (1)朗读全文;
    (2)设计引导学生进行预测的教学活动;
    (3)配合教学内容适当板书;
    (4)全英授课。
    答辩题目1. How should we communicate with students?
    2. Please talk about your own personality. Are you outgoing or introverted?


    答案:
    解析:
    二、考题解析
    【教案】
    Wild animals
    Teaching aims:
    Knowledge aims:
    Students can understand the content of the listening material.
    Students can be familiar with the present situation of giant pandas.
    Ability aim:
    Students will develop their listening abilities of catching key words.
    Emotional aim:
    Students can foster the awareness of protecting wild and endangered animals.
    Key and difficult points:
    Key point:
    How to understand the listening material.
    Difficult point:
    How to foster the awareness of protecting wild animals.
    Teaching procedures:
    Step 1: Warming-up
    1. Greetings.
    2. Let students enjoy a song named Do Re Mi and ask them what is followed by doe. The song is like this:
    Doe, a deer, a female deer.
    Ray, a drop of golden sun.
    Me, a name I call myself.
    Far, a long, long way to run.
    Sew, a needle pulling thread.
    La, a note to follow Sew.
    Tea, a drink with jam and bread.
    That will bring us back to Do (oh-oh-oh).
    Ask students to answer the question. Then tell them that elk is a kind of endangered animal and lead in the topic.
    Step 2: Pre-listening
    Show an interesting video clip of a cute giant panda named Qingyi, who is a social media star. And ask students a question, “What do you know about giant pandas?” Then ask students to predict the main idea of the listening material according to the video.
    Step 3: While-listening
    1. Extensive listening
    Read the passage for students and ask them to find the main idea of the listening material.
    Then invite one student to write the answer on the blackboard.
    2. Intensive listening
    Play the tape and ask students to answer two questions:
    Q1: What problem do giant pandas face?
    Q2: How should we protect giant pandas, according to the passage?
    Then lead students to fill in the chart on the blackboard.
    Step 4: Post-listening
    Ask students to design a slogan for protecting giant pandas in groups of four and encourage students to be creative. 5 minutes are given for discussion. Then invite some groups to share and explain.
    Step 5: Summary and Homework
    Summary: invite a student to be a little teacher and summarize today’s lesson. Ask students to protect wild and endangered animals.
    Homework: ask students to design a poster of protecting wild animals.
    Blackboard design:

    Teaching reflection

  • 第21题:

    共用题干
    第一篇

    How Animals Keep Warm

    Man has invented ways to keep warm,but how do animals defend themselves?They
    cannot reason in the sense that man can,but nature has taken care of the animal kingdom
    by providing animals with special instincts(本能).One of these instincts is known as
    hibernation(冬眠).
    " Sleeping like a dormouse(棒睡鼠)"is not only a common saying but is a reality.
    When winter comes,the dormouse and other hibernating animals have reached a well-
    nourished state.They eat very well in warmer days laying down fat in the tissues of their
    bodies and during hibernation this keeps them alive.Safe in their nests,or burrows(地
    洞),they sleep soundly until the warmth of spring arrives.
    Bats,tortoises,snakes,frogs,even insects like butterflies,hibernate more or less
    completely. Some, like the squirrels(松鼠),sleep during coldest weather but are roused
    (弄醒)by a warm spell(暖流).During hibernation, the temperature of an animal's body
    drops drastically.Breathing and heart-beats almost cease.
    Another instinctive method of avoiding intense cold is to escape by means of migration.
    Wild swans,seagulls,swallows and cuckoos are a few of the very many kinds of birds
    which fly thousands of miles,twice a year,to avoid cold.Many animals,especially those
    of the Arctic regions,have summer and winter quarters.The Arctic deer of North America,
    as well as the reindeer(驯鹿)of Europe,move southward towards the forests when winter
    approaches.They return to the northern area when the warmth of spring begins to be
    sensed.
    There are animals which do not attempt to leave at the first sign of winter cold.Their
    instinctive means of defense is to dig out a deep burrow,made it soft and warm by padding
    (填塞)out with straw,leaves,moss and fur. In it they have a"secret place"containing
    food which they hope will last the winter through!Animals which fall into this class include
    the Arctic fox,the rabbit and the little field-mouse.

    During hibernation,animals breathe
    A:normally.
    B:at a slower rate.
    C:at a faster rate.
    D:irregularly.

    答案:B
    解析:

  • 第22题:

    单选题
    A new law may be passed by the British Parliament to _____.
    A

    prohibit farmers from hunting foxes

    B

    forbid hunting foxes with dogs

    C

    stop hunting wild animals in the countryside

    D

    prevent large-scale fox hunting


    正确答案: C
    解析:
    细节推断题。本文末句提到,议会工党议员Mike Foster提出了一个使猎狐不合法的提案,如果这个法案得以通过,就像狐狸这样野生动物在英国将会被法律禁猎令得以保护。故B为答案。

  • 第23题:

    单选题
    Some people argue that it would do more harm than good for plants and animals to develop through artificial selection. Which statement best supports this argument?
    A

    Roses no longer smell like roses.

    B

    Purebred dogs are disappearing.

    C

    Humans are harmful agents of plant and animal evolution.

    D

    Many domesticated plants and animals can no longer survive in the wild.


    正确答案: C
    解析:
    题干中指出一些人认为人工选择植物和动物对它们发展造成的危害要大于益处,问文中那个陈述可以支撑这一论点。文章第二段指出人们通过人工选择来使植物或动物进行繁殖,而很多栽培植物和驯化动物在野外已无法生存,因此符合题意。其他选项在文中均未提及。

  • 第24题:

    单选题
    The speaker of the passage is of the opinion that ______.
    A

    protecting the farmland is more important than protecting wild animal

    B

    protecting endangered species is more important than protecting the interests of the farmers

    C

    protecting the farmland and the wild animals are equally important

    D

    one can rely more on bees than mice to frighten beasts off the farm


    正确答案: B
    解析:
    录音开头讲到在非洲很多地方,大象的拜访使农民苦不堪言,农民不得已采取极端措施,而说话者提到“In this case, therefore, prevention is better than cure for both sides”,可见说话者认为保护农田和野生动物同等重要。
    【录音原文】
      Elephants, proverbially, are afraid of mice. Well, it’s a nice story, but don’t rely on it to frighten the beasts from your smallholding. Poachers aside, the most dangerous thing an elephant is likely to meet is a disgruntled farmer with a rifle. And farmers have good reason to be disgruntled. In many parts of Africa, farms are routinely trashed by visiting elephants. In this case, therefore, prevention is better than cure for both sides. And some recently published research may point the way, using tiny creatures that elephants really are afraid of: bees.
      Although elephants are thick-skinned, they have sensitive patches behind their ears, under their trunks and around their eyes. Sometimes, according to bee-keepers, an entire herd can be stampeded by a swarm of bees. Researchers from Wild Animal Protection Institutes based in Kenya have tested the idea that elephants’ visits to farms might be discouraged by strategically placed bee hives. It seems they are—and that the hives do not necessarily even have to be occupied.