当前位置: 高中英语 / 阅读理解
  • 1. (2021·西安模拟) 阅读理解

    A few plants in the cabbage and mustard (芥菜) family pay a dramatic price to fight off hungry caterpillars (毛毛虫): they kill off patches of their own leaves where butterflies have laid eggs. Without a living anchor, the eggs wrinkle and die. These plants' egg-killing abilities have been documented since at least the 1980s, but a new study shows they appear in just a few closely related plants in this family — and they are triggered only by certain butterfly species.

    Nina Fatouros of Wageningen University in the Netherlands and her colleagues investigated 31 plant species in the target family. First, they dabbed the plants' leaves with liquid that had been exposed to egg material from a butterfly species known to lay eggs on them. Four closely related plant species reliably killed off the treated leaf patches. Further tests confirmed that the species with the most distinct response only reacted strongly when the egg material came from one group of butterflies, Pieris, which lays eggs on these plants in the wild. This is "clear evidence" that specific butterfly species could have stimulated the evolution of the necrosis (坏死) defense, Fatouros says. The researchers also tracked eggs laid by wild butterflies to confirm the defense mechanism. The work was detailed in New Phytologist.

    "It's very unlikely that you find this by coincidence," says University of Sheffield molecular plant biologist Jurriaan Ton, who was not involved in the study. He adds that the plants' relatedness, coupled with their exaggerated reaction to these butterflies, suggests a heated evolutionary "arms race" took place between the plants and insects.

    "This is the first study to my knowledge where they really looked at the appearance of this trait within a particular plant family," says ecologist Julia Koricheva, who was also not involved in the work.

    Future research could explore how recently the trait evolved, Fatouros says. She notes that arms races rarely end—and evidence suggests the butterflies may be fighting back. Some prefer to lay their eggs in tightly grouped clusters(丛), making them less likely to be influenced by the plants' strategy.

    1. (1) What is special about Nina Fatouros' study?
      A . It found the plants' egg-killing abilities for the first time. B . It pointed out the price plants paid to defend themselves. C . It discovered a new species of egg-killing plants. D . It narrowed down the range of the plant-butterfly interaction.
    2. (2) Why was the special liquid mentioned in paragraph 2 applied to the plants' leaves?
      A . To see whether they would sacrifice their leaves. B . To stimulate their defense mechanism. C . To find out which species reacted most strongly to the liquid. D . To track eggs laid by wild butterflies.
    3. (3) What was Jurriaan Ton's attitude towards the new study?
      A . Indifferent. B . Approving. C . Disapproving. D . Skeptical.
    4. (4) What is the best title for the text?
      A . Survival strategies of plants B . Evolution of plants against hungry caterpillars C . Killer leaves emerge from plant-butterfly arms race D . The relatedness of plants and butterflies

微信扫码预览、分享更方便