Английский язык. Учебно-методическое пособие к практическим занятиям для биологов бакалавриата и магистратуры
Шрифт:
5. Answer the questions:
1) What is one of the most important problems for mankind now?
2) What is ecology? Give your definition.
3) What are the disadvantages of industrial development?
4) How does water, air, soil become polluted?
5) Why is the problem of water pollution becoming a global problem?
6) Why do the environmental problems require the cooperation of alt nations?
7) What makes it possible to eliminate air, water and soti pollution?
8) Why have you chosen the profession of an ecologist?
UNIT II
New words and expressions:
conservation –
desiccation – высушивание
wildlife – живая природа
riverine – речной, прибрежный
pothole – пещера
bounty – щедрость
jeopardy – опасность
alteration – чередование
dam – плотина, преграждать
exacerbate – обострять
attempt – попытка, пытаться
clean-up – уборка, чистка
bird of prey – хищная птица
comprehensive – всесторонний
under way – на ходу
charge – нагрузка, заведовать
motivate – побуждать
desert – пустыня
Read the international words and give their Russin equivalents:
effect, nuclear, testing, range, population, flora, fauna, occupy, territory, peak, climate, zone, steppe, landscape, cultivating.
Until recently, Kazakhstan has been better known for the harmful effects of the Semipalatinsk nuclear testing range and the desiccation of the Aral Sea than for its wildlife. In fact, the vast country supports rich and diverse population of flora and fauna. Kazakhstan occupies an enormous territory, extending from the Volga River on the West to the Altai Mountains on the East and from the Southern Urals and Western Siberia in the North to the snowy peaks of the Tien Shan Range and the deserts of Central Asia in the South. The country's climatic zones include everything from steppes, deserts and semideserts to mountain woodlands, riverine wetlands and pothole lakes. In this varied landscape can be found 104 species of amphibiance, 52 of reptiles, 488 of birds and 187 of mammals and nearly 5000 species of higher plants.
Now, however, this natural bounty is in jeopardy. Although Kazakhstan's population and its impact on the land are comparatively low; its biodiversity is seriously threatened in a number of ways. The alteration of the land that occured in the 1960's, when Khruschev ordered the country to begin cultivating corn on a mass scale, caused widespread damage. Rivers that fed steppe lakes were dammed and agricultural cultivation of the steppes, floodplains and marshes forced changes in natural ecosystems, exacerbated by the use of chemical pesticides, many already banned in the West. In addition, Kazakh industry generally does not employ any emission-control equipment or attempt cleanup of the environmental damage it causes. As a result, many natural species are now officially considered rare or endangered.
The country's economic crisis had led to a lessening of the human impact on natural ecosystems due to a decline in agriculture and industrial production. The situation could, however, take a rapid turn for the worse since the largely unregulated transition to a market economy has encouraged extensive commercil use of many plant and animal species including the export of natural products used for medicinal purposes such as antilope horn; the sale of rare insects in demand by collectors and the capture of birds of prey.
Unfortunately, no comprehensive natural conservation program exists at the present time. The isolated projects that are under way are targeted at regions of environmental crisis, such as the Aral Sea and the area around Semipalatinsk nuclear testing ground. Governmental structures charged with developing a national conservation strategy appear slow and unmotivated. The state, occupied with solving serious economic problems, cannot pay adequate attention to nature conservation.
In Kazakhstan no mass movement for nature protection exists as it does in western countries, but a few nongovernmental groups are beginning to form and take action. The activities of nongovermental organizations which are occuring in more and more cities around the country raise hopes for improvement of the nature conservation climate in Kazakhstan.
EXERCISES:
1. Translate the following into English:
motivate – motivation – unmotivated, occupy – occupation, serious – seriously, economy – economic – economics, attention – attentive – inattentive – attentively, nature – natural, conservation – conservative – conserve, protect – protection, form – formation, act – activity – action, organize – organization, hope – hopeful – hopeless – hopefulness.
2. Find in the text the English equivalents for the following words and word-combinations:
массовое
3. Make questions of the following statements and then give short answers to each of them:
1) Kazakhstan occupies an enormous territory.
2) In this varied landscape a great number of species can be found.
3) Kazakhstan"s population is comparatively low.
4) Agricultural cultivation of the steppes forced changes in natural ecosystem.
5) Many natural species are now officially considered rare or endangered.
4. Answer the questions:
1) What species can be found in Kazakhstan?
2) What is the population of Kazakhstan?