微信:liulangji8899
  • 托福频道
    • 托福阅读
    • 托福听力
    • 托福写作
    • 托福口语
    • 托福真题
    • TPO
  • 雅思频道
    • 雅思阅读
    • 雅思写作
    • 剑桥雅思
    • 雅思听力
    • 雅思真题
    • 雅思口语
    • 雅思电子书
  • SAT频道
    • 2016SAT真题
    • 2017SAT真题
    • 2018SAT真题
    • 2019SAT真题
    • 2020SAT真题
    • 2021SAT真题
    • 2022SAT真题
  • AP频道
    • AP化学真题
    • AP统计学真题
    • AP生物真题
    • AP英语语言真题
    • AP心理学真题
    • AP物理真题
    • AP经济学真题
  • ACT真题
导航
TOEFL IELTS SAT真题 AP真题 ACT真题
托福资讯
  • 托福阅读
  • 托福听力
  • 托福写作
  • 托福口语
  • 托福真题
  • TPO
托福阅读 托福听力 托福写作 托福口语 托福真题 TPO +
当前位置: 首页 > 托福频道 > 托福阅读

2014年托福阅读真题+题目+答案:Costs and Benefits of Social Life

2020-06-26 来源:socool100.com

2014年托福阅读真题+题目+答案:Costs and Benefits of Social Life,具体请看详情。

2014年托福阅读真题+题目+答案:Costs and Benefits of Social Life

Many think that the reason so many animals live with others of their species is that social creatures are higher up the evolutionary scale and so are better adapted and leave more offspring than do animals that live solitary lives. However, in each and every species, generation after generation, relatively social and relatively solitary types compete unconsciously with one another in ways that determine who leaves more offspring on average. In some species, the more social individuals have won out, but in a large majority, it is the solitary types that have consistently left more surviving descendants on average.

But how can living alone ever be superior to living together? Under some conditions, a cost-benefit comparison favors solitary life over a more social existence. For example, among most social species, animals have to expend time and energy competing for social status. Those that do not occupy the top positions regularly have to signal their submissive state to their superiors if they are to be permitted to remain in the group. This can take up a major share of a social subordinate's life. In fact, even in small social groups there are both subtle competition and not-so-subtle competition.

Social groups also offer opportunities for reproductive interference. Breeding males that live in close association with more attractive rivals may lose their mates to these individuals. In addition, sociality has two other potential disadvantages. The first is heightened competition for food, which occurs in animals as different as colonial fieldfares (a kind of songbird) and groups of lions, whose females are often pushed from their food by hungry males. The second is increased vulnerability to parasites and disease, which plague social species of all sorts. While it is true that some social animals have evolved special responses designed to combat parasites and disease, those responses can only reduce, but cannot totally eliminate, the damage caused by those threats, and the responses may even carry their own costs. Thus, honeybees warm their hives in response to an infestation by a fungal pathogen, which apparently helps kill the heat-sensitive fungus, but at the price of time and energy expended by the heat-producing workers.

If social living carries a heightened risk of infection, then the larger the group, the greater the risk. This prediction holds for cliff swallows, which pack their nests side by side in colonies composed of anywhere from a handful of birds to several thousand pairs. The more swallows nesting together, the greater the chance that at least one bird will be infested with swallow bugs, which can then readily spread from one nest to another.

The parasites and fungi that make life miserable for swallows and other social creatures demonstrate that if sociality is to evolve, the asorted costs of living together must be outweighed by compensatory benefits. Cliff swallows may join others to take advantage of the improved foraging that comes from following companions to good feeding sites, while other animals, such as male imperial penguins, save thermal energy by huddling shoulder to shoulder during the brutal Antarctica winter. Still others, such as lionesses, join forces to fend off enemies of their own species.

The most widespread fitness benefit for social animals, however, probably is improved protection against predators. Many studies have shown that animals in groups gain by reducing the individual risk of being captured, or by spotting danger sooner, or by attacking their enemies in groups. Males in nesting colonies of bluegill sunfish cooperate in driving egg-eating bullhead catfish away from their nests at the bottom of a freshwater lake. While bluegills have adopted social behavior to avoid predation, closely related species that nest alone have evolved means to protect themselves while nesting alone. Thus, the solitary pumpkinseed sunfish, a member of the same genus as the bluegill, has powerful biting jaws and so can repel egg-eating enemies on its own, whereas bluegills have small, delicate mouths good only for inhaling small, soft-bodied insect larvae.Pumpkinseed sunfish are in no way inferior to or less well adapted than bluegills because they are solitary; they simply gain less through social living, which makes solitary nesting the adaptive tactic for them.

关于本篇托福阅读真题完整版及题目及答案,10元有偿下载!

微信扫码支付

支付宝扫码支付

资料下载说明
  • 一般发网盘,邮箱,微信
  • 支付成功后,请加微信客服:liulangji8899
  • 微信客服一般都能及时回复
  • 文章关键词
  • 2014年托福阅读真题,Costs and Benefits of Social Life答案
  • 你可能感兴趣的文章
    • 托福阅读真题+题目+答案:Evolution in Peppered Moths
    • 托福阅读真题+题目+答案:The Development of Land Flora
    • 托福阅读真题+题目+答案:Dams and Flood Control
    • 托福阅读真题+题目+答案:Bumblebee Heat Regulation
    • 2021年6月22日托福阅读真题+题目+答案:The Early Cyclades 
    微信客服
    头条推荐
    • 2020年7月11日雅思小作文范文:The table below shows oil production in several African countries (barrels per day
    • 2020年7月11日雅思阅读真题+题目+答案:Stress of Workplace
    • 剑桥雅思真题15+答案解析PDF下载(高清无水印完整版)
    • 2013年1月5日雅思小作文题目:The charts give information about the reasons why people leave the UK and why peopl
    • 2014年托福阅读真题+题目+答案解析:The Beringia Landscape
    • 2014年托福阅读真题+答案解析+翻译:Agricultural Society in Eighteenth-Century British America

    托福资料

    托福听力真题 托福阅读真题 托福写作范文 托福口语范文 托福TPO 托福电子书

    雅思资料

    雅思阅读 雅思写作 剑桥雅思 雅思听力 雅思口语 雅思电子书

    SAT资料

    2016SAT真题 2017SAT真题 2018SAT真题 2019SAT真题 2020SAT真题 2021SAT真题 2022SAT真题

    AP资料

    AP化学真题 AP统计学真题 AP生物真题 AP英语语言真题 AP心理学真题 AP物理真题 AP经济学真题
    添加客服微信
    Email : foeveryoung18@outlook.com (I will reply you within 1-8 hours)
    皖ICP备2022007860号
    ©2020 socool00.com
    皖ICP备2022007860号
      热门资料
    • 托福真题
    • 雅思真题
    • SAT真题
    • AP真题
    添加客服微信
    • Email : foeveryoung18@outlook.com (I will reply you within 1-8 hours)
    • 皖ICP备2022007860号