填空题
{{U}} {{U}} 1 {{/U}} {{/U}}The major
reason is loss of habitat, which has continued despite the establishment of 14
panda reserves. Deforestation, mainly carried out by farmers clearing land to
make way for fields as they move higher into the mountains, has drastically
contracted the mammal's range. The panda has disappeared from much of central
and eastern China, and is now restricted to the eastern flank of the
Himalayas. {{U}} {{U}} 2 {{/U}} {{/U}}; almost
half of the panda's habitat has been cut down or degraded since 1975. Worse, the
surviving panda population has also become fragmented; a combination of
satellite imagery and ground surveys reveals panda "islands" in patches of
forest separated by cleared land. The population of these islands has become
isolated because the animals are loath to cross open areas. Just putting a road
through panda habitat may be enough to split a population in two.
{{U}} {{U}} 3 {{/U}} {{/U}}The smallest groups have too
few animals to be viable, and will inevitably die out. The larger populations
may be viable in the short term, but will be susceptible to genetic defects as a
result of inbreeding. {{U}} {{U}} 4 {{/U}}
{{/U}}The flowering prompts pandas to move from one area to another, thus
preventing inbreeding in otherwise sedentary populations. In panda islands,
however, bamboo flowering could prove catastrophic (灾难性的) because the pandas are
unable to emigrate. The latest conservation management plan for
the panda, prepared by China's Ministry of Forestry and the World Wide Fund for
Nature, aims primarily at maintaining panda habitats and ensuring. that
populations are linked wherever possible. This plan will change some existing
reserve boundaries, establish 14 new reserves and protect or replant corridors
of forest between panda islands. Other measures include better control of
poaching, reducing the degradation of habitats outside reserves, and
reforestation. {{U}} {{U}} 5 {{/U}}
{{/U}}Implementation will be expensive and will require participation by
individuals ranging from villagers to government officials. A.
The plan is ambitious. B. The giant panda, the creature that
has become a symbol of conservation, is facing extinction. C.
Satellite imagery has shown the seriousness of the situation.
D. In these circumstances, a more traditional threat to pandas -the cycle of
flowering and subsequent withering of the bamboo that is their staple food-can
become literally species-threatening. E. The minuscule size of
the panda populations worries conservationists. F. Panda is one
of the rarest animals in China. G. It's impossible to achieve
this goal.