《自然生物学期刊》斑马为什么有斑纹?


标签:
程阳彩票斑马斑纹文化 |
分类: 情资阅览 |
Victoria Gill, BBC News
White stripes could have been a result of natural selection
科学家们称他们已经揭开了斑马身上为何有黑白条斑纹的秘密。这篇刊登在《自然生物学期刊上》的文章说斑纹有掩护作用,因为昆虫不喜欢斑纹。
There have been many theories to explain the zebra's unmistakable stripes. Scientists have suggested that each zebra has a unique pattern that lets other animals recognise it. Or that the mass of black and white in a vast herd provides confusing camouflage that puts off predators.
But this team set out to test exactly what effect the stripes had on a zebra's most irritating and ubiquitous enemy - the blood-sucking horsefly.
As part of their experiment the team put sticky horse models - one white, one black and one zebra-striped - into a fly-infested field. When they collected the flies that had landed and stuck to each of the models, they found that the model zebra attracted by far the fewest flies.
The researchers think that zebras had a black-coated ancestor, which evolved its white stripes in an evolutionary arms race, with an insect that's become the biting, disease-carrying scourge of most horse herds.
Quiz
- 1. True or false? There have been different explanations about why zebras have stripes.
-
True.
- 2. The latest scientific reserach shows that stripes give zebras an advantage over their non-striped ancestors. What is it?
-
The striped pattern makes the zebras much less attractive to insects.
- 3. What is the main enemy of zebras mentioned in the report?
-
The horsefly.
- 4. How different do modern-day zebras look from their ancestors?
-
They have black and white stripes whereas their ancestors may have looked pure black.
Glossary 词汇表 (点击单词收听发音)
- unmistakable准确无误的
- camouflage掩体/伪装
- predators食肉动物
- irritating令人烦恼的
- ubiquitous无处不在的
- horsefly马蝇
- fly-infested充满苍蝇的
- ancestor祖先
- evolved进化
- scourge天灾/瘟疫