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Question 10 of 10

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Directions: An introductory sentence for a brief summary of the passage is provided below. Complete the summary by selecting the THREE answer choices that express the most important ideas in the passage. Some sentences do not belong in the summary because they express ideas that are not presented in the passage or are minor ideas in the passage. This question is worth 2 points.

Answer Chiose:

A. Gause’s conclusions were immediately challenged because his experiments mostly involved single-celled organisms rather than multiple-celled organisms such as trees, birds, and fishes.

B. Hutchinson proposed that most of the competing species are able to coexist in natural settings because they will not be interfered by human activities.

C. Species are most likely to displace competitors when conditions are constant over time, but environmental change occurs often in nature, and change makes competitive exclusion less likely.

D. Many examples in nature seem to contradict Gause’s competitive exclusion principle, but Hutchinson proposed that species’ ability to divide their fundamental niche explains these contradictions.

E. When each of two or more species can compete most effectively in a different part of their shared environment, niche differentiation occurs and competing species are able to coexist.

F. Some plant species compete best when growing in bright light, whereas others compete best when growing in shade, but they are adapted to sharing resources in the same portions of the soil.

In the 1930s, G. F. Gause concluded that two species which directly compete for resources cannot coexist.

我的答案:DEC 正确答案:CDE

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    【答案】CDE

    【题型】文章内容小结题

    【解析】根据标题和黑体句,文章主要描述的是物种竞争以及在竞争环境下是否能够共存。第一段重点描述了Gause的实验,以及提出了竞争排除原则。第二段开始对这个原则进行质疑。第三段Hutchinson提出了新的理论“生态位分化”来回答上段的质疑。第四段举了关于鸟和植物的例子来证明上一段的理论。第五段说Gause的实验也可以支撑Hutchinson的理论。最后一段进行总结。

    选项A错误,说的是Gause的理论被反驳是因为他只用了单细胞生物而不是多细胞生物,原文未提及,且第一段的最后“The results of his experiments with Paramecium species, along with similar experiments he performed on other organisms...”也说到了用其他生物做实验。

    选项B错误,说的是Hutchinson的理论认为竞争者在野外可以共存,是因为没有人类活动的影响,原文未提及。

    选项C正确,对应了原文第一段,第五段的内容,以及最后一段的总结。

    选项D正确,对应了原文第二段的质疑,以及第三段的生态位分化理论。

    选项E正确,对应原文第三段和第四段的内容,并且前面第四题第六题都有涉及相关信息。

    选项F错误,前半句对应了原文第四段关于植物的内容,但后面的“adapted to sharing resources in the same portions of the soil.”与原文相反。

    综上答案为CDE。

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译文
Species Competition

Interspecific competition occurs when two or more species seek the same limited resource. In the 1930s, Russian biologist G. F. Gause devised a set of elegant laboratory experiments that provide the basis for our formal understanding of competition. Gause grew two different species of the single-celled Paramecium —P.aurelia and P. caudatum — separately and together. Populations of both species always increased more rapidly when they were grown alone. When grown together, populations of both species grew more slowly. Eventually, P. aurelia totally displaced P. caudatum . The results of his experiments with Paramecium species, along with similar experiments he performed on other organisms, led Gause to form this postulate: two species that directly compete for essential resources cannot coexist; one species will eventually displace the other. This postulate has come to be known as the competitive exclusion principle.

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An acre of tropical forest may include over 100 species of trees, all of which depend on the same soil, water, and nutrients. Freshwater lakes may have dozens of species of fish, all of which feed on the planktonic algae and animals suspended in the water. Indeed, two or more species of Paramecium may be found in the same lake. These and many other examples from ecological communities in nature seem to contradict Gause's principle. If two competing species cannot coexist in the laboratory, how are they able to coexist in natural settings? This question has been the basis for hundreds of ecological studies.

Ecologist G. Evelyn Hutchinson provided one of the most important explanations for the coexistence of competing organisms. He proposed that each species has a fundamental niche , the complete range of environmental conditions, such as requirements for temperature, food, and water, over which the species might possibly exist. Hutchinson noted, however, that few species actually grow and reproduce in all parts of this theoretical range. Rather, species usually exist only where they are able to compete effectively against other species. Hutchinson used the term realized niche to describe the range of conditions where a species actually occurs given the constraints of competition. Species whose fundamental niches overlap significantly are potential competitors. Hutchinson suggested that these potential competitors are able to coexist because they divide up the fundamental niche. Hutchinson called this division of resources niche differentiation.

Niche differentiation occurs among many different kinds of organisms. For example, five different species of warblers, small insect-eating birds, occur together in the evergreen forests of the United States. During nesting season, the primary food of all the warblers is caterpillars. Careful studies of the birds' feeding behavior reveal that each species competes most effectively in a different part of the forest's highest layer, and that is where each species can be found. The diverse grasses and herbs that grow in native prairies provide another example of niche differentiation. Above ground, these plants appear to be vying for the same space and resources. However, a careful mapping of root systems shows that different species are adapted to exploiting different portions of the soil. In addition, some species compete most effectively when growing in bright light, whereas others compete effectively when growing in the shade of taller plants.

Some of Gause's experiments support Hutchinson's niche differentiation hypothesis. Under any specific set of conditions-the same temperature, water availability, food source, etc. Gause's principle holds true. But if conditions change, competition among species may produce different winners and losers. Indeed, if waste products are periodically removed, the outcome of the competition between P. aurelia and P. caudatum is reversed and P. caudatum wins. Thus, in a complex environment where waste materials are collected in some places and not in others, these two species could coexist.

Time is required for one species to competitively displace another, and the competitive exclusion principle presumes that environmental conditions remain constant during that time. In nature, however, environments change from season to season and from year to year, so conditions that are favorable to a particular species may not persist and environments that are constantly changing may allow competing species to coexist.