当前位置: 高中英语 / 阅读理解
  • 1. (2023高二上·芜湖开学考) 阅读理解

    He's as big as a small golden dog and covered with scales (鳞片). He is the pangolin (穿山甲), an endangered animal.

    According to the wildlife trade monitoring organization Traffic, about one million pangolins were killed from 2000 through 2013, mainly for their scales, which are used in medicine. Pangolins are sensitive creatures and picky eaters that only eat certain species of ants, a diet that's very difficult to copy in the food chain.

    "In the last decade, there's been a huge growth trade in pangolins between continents, especially their scales," says Dan Challender, chair of the pangolin specialist group. Previously, most pangolin killing happened within Asia, he says. This shift means that Asian pangolins are becoming difficult to find but that the value of the scales makes it worth the extra cost to take pangolins from Africa to Asia secretly.

     All eight species of pangolins, four in Africa and four in Asia, are in danger of extinction due to the illegal trade. International trade in the four species of Asian pangolins has been banned since 2000. In the past few years, a ban on international commercial trade in all eight species has gone into effect. It was voted by 183 governments that are parties to the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species (CITES), which is in charge of cross-border trade in wild animals and their parts.

     Pangolins are eaten as bushmeat in western and central Africa and by some local groups in South and Southeast Asia. Their parts also are used in Ghana, Nigeria, South Africa, and elsewhere in sub-Saharan Africa as traditional medicine. Typically dried, ground into powder, and put into pills, pangolin scales are used in a range of traditional medicines to help mothers who have given birth to babies to recover. But they are now endangered. Perhaps no pangolins can be seen when our next generation grow up.

    1. (1) What do you know about pangolins from Paragraph 2
      A . Their meat is very delicious. B . Their scales are of great value. C . They are smaller than young dogs. D . They are on the top of the food chain.
    2. (2) Why are pangolins brought from Africa to Asia
      A . Pangolins are cheaper in Africa. B . No laws protect pangolins in Africa. C . People in Asia can really save pangolins. D . Pangolins have sharply decreased in numbers in Asia.
    3. (3) What does the fourth paragraph mainly tell us
      A . Pangolins have many different species. B . The bans on pangolin trade are ineffective. C . People used to take advantage of pangolins in different ways. D . Governments have tried to contribute to the protection of pangolins.
    4. (4) What's the author's attitude towards pangolins' future
      A . Positive B . Uncaring. C . Concerned. D . Confident.

微信扫码预览、分享更方便