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OFFICIAL46 Select the TWO answer choices that, according to paragraph 4, are conclusions that can be drawn from the study by Tilman and Downing. To receive credit you must select TWO answer choices.

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Ecosystem Diversity and Stability
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Conservation biologists have long been concerned that species extinction could have significant consequences for the stability of entire ecosystems—groups of interacting organisms and the physical environment that they inhabit. An ecosystem could survive the loss of some species, but if enough species were lost, the ecosystem would be severely degraded. In fact, it is possible that the loss of a single important species could start a cascade of extinctions that might dramatically change an entire ecosystem. A good illustration of this occurred after sea otters were eliminated from some Pacific kelp (seaweed) bed ecosystems: the kelp beds were practically obliterated too because in the absence of sea otter predation, sea urchin populations exploded and consumed most of the kelp and other macroalgae.

It is usually claimed that species-rich ecosystems tend to be more stable than species-poor ecosystems. Three mechanisms by which higher diversity increases ecosystem stability have been proposed. First, if there are more species in an ecosystem, then its food web will be more complex, with greater redundancy among species in terms of their nutritional roles. In other words, in a rich system if a species is lost, there is a good chance that other species will take over its function as prey, predator, producer, decomposer, or whatever role it played. Second, diverse ecosystems may be less likely to be invaded by new species, notably exotics (foreign species living outside their native range), that would disrupt the ecosystem’s structure and function. Third, in a species-rich ecosystem, diseases may spread more slowly because most species will be relatively less abundant, thus increasing the average distance between individuals of the same species and hampering disease transmission among individuals.

Scientific evidence to illuminate these ideas has been slow in coming, and many shadows remain.  One of the first studies to provide data supporting a relationship between diversity and stability examined how grassland plants responded to a drought.  Researchers D. Tilman and J A. Downing used the ratio of above-ground biomass in 1988 (after two years of drought) to that in 1986 (predrought) in 207 plots in a grassland field in the Cedar Creek Natural History Area in Minnesota as an index of ecosystem response to disruption by drought. In an experiment that began in 1982, they compared these values with the number of plant species in each plot and discovered that the plots with a greater number of plant species experienced a less dramatic reduction in biomass. Plots with more than ten species had about half as much biomass in 1988 as in 1986, whereas those with fewer than five species only produced roughly one-eighth as much biomass after the two-year drought. Apparently, species-rich plots were likely to contain some drought-resistant plant species that grew better in drought years, compensating for the poor growth of less-tolerant species.

To put this result in more general terms, a species-rich ecosystem may be more stable because it is more likely to have species with a wide array of responses to variable conditions such as droughts. Furthermore, a species-rich ecosystem is more likely to have species with similar ecological functions, so that if a species is lost from an ecosystem, another species, probably a competitor, is likely to flourish and occupy its functional role. Both of these, variability in responses and functional redundancy, could be thought of as insurance against disturbances.

The Minnesota grassland research has been widely accepted as strong evidence for the diversity- stability theory; however, its findings have been questioned, and similar studies on other ecosystems have not always found a positive relationship between diversity and stability. Clearly, this is a complex issue that requires further field research with a broad spectrum of ecosystems and species: grassland plants and computer models will only take us so far. In the end, despite insightful attempts to detect some general patterns, we may find it very difficult to reduce this topic to a simple, universal truth.

10.Select the TWO answer choices that, according to paragraph 4, are conclusions that can be drawn from the study by Tilman and Downing. To receive credit you must select TWO answer choices.

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【题目翻译】根据第4段,选择两个答案选项,它们是可以从Tilman和Downing的研究中得出的结论。 A:一个多样化的生态系统将会有对各种条件作出不同反应的物种。 B:物种丰富的生态系统中的物种更有可能具有竞争者。 C:一个生态系统在极端条件下更容易发展出多样而稳定的物种。 D:具有类似生态功能的物种将发挥失去物种的功能 【判定题型】:题目问的是文章中的具体细节信息,故根据题目问法可以判断本题为事实信息题。 【关键词定位】直接定位到Passage 4,意思是“从更一般的意义上来说,一个物种丰富的生态系统可能更稳定,因为它更可能含有能对某种气候条件(如干旱)的做出各种反应的物种。此外,物种丰富的生态系统更可能包含有着类似生态系统的功能,因此,如果生态系统中的一个物种损失,另一个物种,可能是竞争对手,就有希望蓬勃发展,并取代它的作用。对恶劣条件的不同的反应,以及系统内的功能重合性,这两个特征都是对抗恶劣气候的保障。”。 【逻辑分析】直接根据第4段译文判断选项正确与否。 【选项分析】 A:根据原文a species-rich ecosystem may be more stable because it is more likely to have species with a wide array of responses to variable conditions such as droughts. 可知,A选项正确。 B:只有失去了一个物种的生态系统,才会更具竞争者。故错误。 C:发展出的物种不一定稳定,文章中没有提到。故错误。 D:根据原文Furthermore,a species-rich ecosystem is more likely to have species with similar ecological functions,so that if a species is lost from an ecosystem, another species, probably a competitor, is likely to flourish and occupy its functional role.可知,D选项正确。

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