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S3261102

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S3. 大象的交流(动物类)
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ELEPHANT COMMUNICATION

A A postdoctoral fellow at Stanford University, O'Connell-Rodwell has come to Namibia's premiere

wildlife sanctuary to explore the mysterious and complex world of elephant communication. She

and her colleagues are part of a scientific revolution that began nearly two decades ago with the

stunning revelation that elephants communicate over long distances using low-frequency sounds,

also called infrasounds, that are too deep to be heard by most humans.

B As might be expected, the African elephant's ability to sense seismic sound may begin in the ears.

The hammer bone, or malleus, of the elephant's inner ear is proportionally very large for a

mammal, but typical for animals that use vibrational signals. It may therefore be a sign that

elephants can communicate with seismic sounds. Also, the elephant and its relative the manatee

are unique among mammals in having reverted to a reptilian-like cochlear structure in the inner

ear. The cochlea of reptiles facilitates a keen sensitivity to vibrations and may do the same in

elephants.
C But other aspects of elephant anatomy also support that ability. First, their enormous bodies,

which allow them to generate low-frequency sounds almost as powerful as those of a jet takeoff,

provide ideal frames for receiving ground vibrations and conducting them to the inner ear. Second,

the elephant's toe bones rest on a fatty pad that might help focus vibrations from the ground into

the bone. Finally, the elephant's enormous brain lies in the cranial cavity behind the eyes in line

with the auditory canal. The front of the skull is riddled with sinus cavities that may function as

resonating chambers for vibrations from the ground.

D How the elephants sense these vibrations is still unknown, but O'Connell-Rodwell who just

earned a graduate degree in entomology at the University of Hawaii at Manoa, suspects the

pachyderms are "listening" with their trunks and feet. The trunk may be the most versatile

appendage in nature. Its uses include drinking, bathing, smelling, feeding and scratching. Both

trunk and feet contain two kinds of pressure-sensitive nerve endings - one that detects infrasonic

vibrations and another that responds to vibrations with slightly higher frequencies. For

O'Connell-Rodwell, the future of seismic research is boundless and unpredictable: "Our work is

really at the interface of geophysics, neurophysiology and ecology," she says. "We're asking

questions that no one has really dealt with before."

E Scientists have long known that seismic communication is common in small animals, including

spiders, scorpions, insects and a number of vertebrate species such as white-lipped frogs, blind

mole rats, kangaroo rats and golden moles. They also have found evidence of seismic sensitivity in

elephant seals - 2-ton marine mammals that are not related to elephants. But O'Connell-Rodwell

was the first to suggest that a large land animal also is sending and receiving seismic messages.

O'Connell-Rodwell noticed something about the freezing behavior of Etosha's six-ton bulls that

reminded her of the tiny insects back in her lab. "I did my masters thesis on seismic

communication in planthoppers," she says. "I'd put a male planthopper on a stem and play back a

female call, and the male would do the same thing the elephants were doing: He would freeze, then

press down on his legs, go forward a little bit, then freeze again. It was just so fascinating to me,
and it's what got me to think, maybe there's something else going on other than acoustic

communication."

F Scientists have determined that an elephant's ability to communicate over long distances is

essential for its survival, particularly in a place like Etosha, where more than 2,400 savanna

elephants range over an area larger than New Jersey. The difficulty of finding a mate in this vast

wilderness is compounded by elephant reproductive biology. Females breed only when in estrus - a

period of sexual arousal that occurs every two years and lasts just a few days. "Females in estrus

make these very low, long calls that bulls home in on, because it's such a rare event,"

O'Connell-Rodwell says. These powerful estrus calls carry more than two miles in the air and may

be accompanied by long-distance seismic signals, she adds. Breeding herds also use low-frequency

vocalizations to warn of predators. Adult bulls and cows have no enemies, except for humans, but

young elephants are susceptible to attacks by lions and hyenas. When a predator appears, older

members of the herd emit intense warning calls that prompt the rest of the herd to clump together

for protection, then flee. In 1994, O'Connell-Rodwell recorded the dramatic cries of a breeding herd

threatened by lions at Mushara. "The elephants got really scared, and the matriarch made these

very powerful warning calls, and then the herd took off screaming and trumpeting," she recalls.

"Since then, every time we've played that particular call at the water hole, we get the same

response - the elephants take off."

G Reacting to a warning call played in the air is one thing, but could the elephants detect calls

transmitted only through the ground? To find out, the research team in 2002 devised an

experiment using electronic equipment that allowed them to send signals through the ground at

Mushara. The results of our 2002 study showed us that elephants do indeed detect warning calls

played through the ground," O'Connell-Rodwell observes. "We expected them to clump up into tight

groups and leave the area, and that's in fact what they did. But since we only played back one type

of call, we couldn't really say whether they were interpreting it correctly. Maybe they thought it was

a vehicle or something strange instead of a predator warning."


H An experiment last year was designed to solve that problem by using three different recordings -

the 1994 warning call from Mushara, an anti-predator call recorded by scientist Joyce Poole in

Kenya and an artificial warble tone. Although still analyzing data from this experiment,

O'Connell-Rodwell is able to make a few preliminary observations: "The data I've seen so far

suggest that the elephants were responding like I had expected. When the 94 warning call was

played back, they tended to clump together and leave the water hole sooner. But what's really

interesting is that the unfamiliar anti-predator call from Kenya also caused them to clump up, get

nervous and aggressively rumble - but they didn't necessarily leave. I didn't think it was going to be

that clear cut."

Question 28-31

Label the diagram below.

Choose NO MORE THAN THREE WORDS from the passage for each answer.

Write your answers in boxes 28-31 on your answer sheet.

28..................... bones in inner ear


big sized brain skull with
many 31...................... an extremely large 29......................

toe and fatty 30.................


Question32-38

Complete the following summary of the paragraphs of Reading Passage, using NO MORE THAN

THREE WORDS OR A NUMBER from the Reading Passage for each answer.

Write your answer in boxes 32-38 on your answer sheet.

How the elephants sense these sound vibrations is still unknown, but O'Connell-Rodwell, a fresh

graduate in entomology at the University of Hawaii, proposes that the elephants are "listening" with

their 32........................, by two kinds of nerve endings - that responds to vibrations with both

33........................ frequency and slightly higher frequencies. O'Connell-Rodwell work is at the combination

of geophysics, neurophysiology and 34........................ "and it also was the first to indicate that a large land

animal also is sending and receiving 35........................, O'Connell-Rodwell noticed the freezing behavior

by putting a male planthopper communicative approach other than 36........................ ."

Scientists have determined that an elephant's ability to communicate over long distances is essential,

especially, when elephant herds are finding a 37........................, elephants can detect warning calls played

through the 38........................ .


Question 39-40

Choose the correct letter, A, B, C or D.

Write your answer in boxes 39-40 on your answer sheet.

39 According the passage, it is determined that an elephant need to communicate over long distances

for its survival

A when a threatening predator appears.

B when young elephants meet humans.

C when older members of the herd want to flee from the group.

D when a male elephant is in estrus.

40 What is the author's attitude toward the experiment by using three different recordings in the

paragraph

A The outcome is definitely out of original expectation.

B The data cannot be very clearly obtained.

C The result can be somewhat undecided or inaccurate.

D The result can be unfamiliar to the public.


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S3261102 & Related Question Answers

28 hammer 29 body 30 pad 31 cavities/sinus

cavities

32 trunks and feet 33 infrasonic 34 ecology 35 seismic

messages

36 acoustic 37 mate 38 ground 39 A

communication

40 C

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