TOEFL托福阅读理解真题精选篇最新.docx
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1、TOEFL托福阅读理解真题精选篇托福阅读真题1 Naturalists and casual observers alike have been struck by the special relationship between squirrels and acorns (the seeds of oak trees). Ecologists, though, cannot observe these energetic mammals scurrying up and down oak trees and eating and burying acorns without wonderin
2、g about their complex relationship with trees. Are squirrels dispersers and planters of oak forests or pesky seed predators? The answer is not simple. Squirrels may devour many acorns, but by storing and failing to recover up to 74 percent of them as they do when seeds are abundant, these arboreal r
3、odents can also aid regeneration and dispersal of the oaks. Their destructive powers are well documented. According to one report, squirrels destroyed tens of thousands of fallen acorns from an oak stand on the University of Indiana campus. A professor there estimated that each of the large white oa
4、ks had produced between two and eight thousand acorns, but within weeks of seed maturity, hardly an intact acorn could be found among the fallen leaves. Deer, turkey, wild pigs, and bears also feed heavily on acorns, but do not store them, and are therefore of no benefit to the trees. Flying squirre
5、ls, chipmunks, and mice are also unlikely to promote tree dispersal, as they often store seeds in tree cavities and underground burrows. Only squirrels whose behavior of caching (hiding) acorns below the leaf litter often promote successful germination of acorns, and perhaps blue jays, important lon
6、g-distance dispersers, seem to help oaks spread and reproduce. Among squirrels, though, there is a particularly puzzling behavior pattern. Squirrels pry off the caps of acorns, bite through the shells to get at the nutritious inner kernels, and then discard them half-eaten. The ground under towering
7、 oaks is often littered with thousands of half-eaten acorns, each one only bitten from the top. Why would any animal waste so much time and energy and risk exposure to such predators as red-tail hawks only to leave a large part of each acorn uneaten? While research is not conclusive at this point, o
8、ne thing that is certain is that squirrels do hide some of the uneaten portions, and these acorn halves, many of which contain the seeds, may later germinate. 1. What does the passage mainly discuss? (A) The ecology of oak trees (B) Factors that determine the feeding habits of Squirrels (C) Various
9、species of animals that promote the dispersal of tree seeds (D) The relationship between squirrels and oak trees 2. The word they in line 7 refers to (A) oak forests (B) acorns (C) squirrels (D) predators 3. According to the passage , what do squirrels do when large quantities of acorns are availabl
10、e? (A) They do not store acorns. (B) They eat more than 74 percent of available acorns. (C) They do not retrieve all the acorns that they have stored. (D) They hide acorns in tree cavities. 4. The word estimated in line 11 is closest in meaning to (A) commented (B) judged (C) observed (D) discovered
11、 5. Why does the author mention the University of Indiana campus in line 10 -11? (A) to provide evidence that intact acorns are hard to find under oak trees (B) to indicate a place where squirrels can aid seed dispersal of oaks (C) to argue in favor of additional studies concerning the destructive f
12、orce of squirrels (D) to support the claim that squirrels can do great damage to oak stands 6. It can be inferred from paragraph 3 that chipmunks do not aid in the dispersal of oak trees because (A) they store their acorns where they cannot germinate (B) they consume most of their stored acorns (C)
13、their stored acorns are located and consumed by other species (D) they cannot travel the long distance required for dispersal 7. According to the passage , which of the following do squirrels and blue jays have in common? (A) They travel long distances to obtain acorns. (B) They promote the reproduc
14、tion of oak trees. (C) They bury acorns under fallen leaves. (D) They store large quantities of acorns. 8. The phrase pry off in line 21 is closest in meaning to (A) swallow (B) remove (C) squeeze (D) locate 9. The word littered in line 22 is closest in meaning to (A) covered (B) displayed (C) ferti
15、lized (D) planted 10. According to the passage , scientists cannot explain which of the following aspects of squirrel behavior? (A) Where squirrels store their acorn caches (B) Why squirrels prefer acorns over other seeds (C) Why squirrels eat only a portion of each acorn they retrieve (D) Why squir
16、rels prefer acorns from a particular species of oak trees PASSAGE 98 DCCBD DBBAC 托福阅读真题2 Scientists have discovered that for the last 160,000 years, at least, there has been a consistent relationship between the amount of carbon dioxide in the air and the average temperature of the planet. The impor
17、tance of carbon dioxide in regulating the Earth's temperature was confirmed by scientists working in eastern Antarctica. Drilling down into a glacier, they extracted a mile-long cylinder of ice from the hole. The glacier had formed as layer upon layer of snow accumulated year after year. Thus dr
18、illing into the ice was tantamount to drilling back through time. The deepest sections of the core are composed of water that fell as snow 160,000 years ago. Scientists in Grenoble, France, fractured portions of the core and measured the composition of ancient air released from bubbles in the ice. I
19、nstruments were used to measure the ratio of certain isotopes in the frozen water to get an idea of the prevailing atmospheric temperature at the time when that particular bit of water became locked in the glacier. The result is a remarkable unbroken record of temperature and of atmospheric levels o
20、f carbon dioxide. Almost every time the chill of an ice age descended on the planet, carbon dioxide levels dropped. When the global temperature dropped 9 F (5 C), carbon dioxide levels dropped to 190 parts per million or so. Generally, as each ice age ended and the Earth basked in a warm interglacia
21、l period, carbon dioxide levels were around 280 parts per million. Through the 160,000 years of that ice record, the level of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere fluctuated between 190 and 280 parts per million, but never rose much higher-until the Industrial Revolution beginning in the eighteenth cent
22、ury and continuing today. There is indirect evidence that the link between carbon dioxide levels and global temperature change goes back much further than the glacial record. Carbon dioxide levels may have been much greater than the current concentration during the Carboniferous period, 360 to 285 m
23、illion years ago. The period was named for a profusion of plant life whose buried remains produced a large fraction of the coal deposits that are being brought to the surface and burned today. 1. Which of the following does the passage mainly discuss? (A) Chemical causes of ice ages (B) Techniques f
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