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IV、Reading Comprehension 

Feeding Habits of East African Herbivores

        Buffalo, zebras, wildebeests, topi, and Thomson’s gazelles live in huge groups that together make up some 90 percent of the total weight of mammals living on the Serengeti Plain of East Africa. They are all herbivores (plant-eating animals), and they all appear to be living on the same diet of grasses, herbs, and small bushes. This appearance, however, is illusory. When biologist Richard Bell and his colleagues analyzed the stomach contents of four of the five species (they did not study buffalo), they found that each species was living on a different part of the vegetation. The different vegetational parts differ in their food qualities: lower down, there are succulent, nutritious leaves; higher up are the harder stems. There are also sparsely distributed, highly nutritious fruits, and Bell found that only the Thomson’s gazelles eat much of these. The other three species differ in the proportion of lower leaves andhigher stems that they eat: zebras eat the most stem matter, wildebeests eat the most leaves, and topi are intermediate.

        How are we to understand their different feeding preferences? The answer lies in two associated differences among the species, in their digestive systems and body sizes. According to their digestive systems, these herbivores can be divided into two categories: the nonruminants (such as the zebra, which has a digestive system like a horse) and the ruminants (such as the wildebeest, topi, and gazelle, which are like the cow). Nonruminants cannot extract much energy from the hard parts of a plant; however, this is more than made up for by the fast speed at which food passes through their guts. Thus, when there is only a short supply of poor-quality food, the wildebeest, .topi, and gazelle enjoy an advantage. They are ruminants and have a special structure (the rumen) in their stomachs, which contains microorganisms that can break down the hard parts of plants. Food passes only slowly through the ruminant’s gut because ruminating~digesting the hard parts~takes time. The ruminant continually regurgitates food from its stomach back to its mouth to chew it up further (that is what a cow is doing when “chewing cud”). Only when it has been chewed up and digested almost to a liquid can the food pass through the rumen and on through the gut. Larger particles cannot pass through until they have been chewed down to size. Therefore, when food is in short supply, a ruminant can last longer than a non-ruminant because it can derive more energy out of the same food. The difference can partially explain the eating habits of the Serengeti herbivores. The zebra chooses areas where there is more low-quality food. It migrates first to unexploited areas and chomps the abundant low-quality stems before moving on. It is a fast-in/fast-out feeder, relying on a high output of incompletely digested food. By the time the wildebeests (and other ruminants) arrive, the grazing and trampling of the zebras will have worn the vegetation down. As the ruminants then set to work, they eat down to the lower, leafier parts of the vegetation. All of this fits in with the differences in stomach contents with which we began.

        The other part of the explanation is body size. Larger animals require more food than smaller animals, but smaller animals have a higher metabolic rate. Smaller animals can therefore live where there is less food, provided that such food is of high energy content. That is why the smallest of the herbivores. Thomson’s gazelle, lives on fruit that is very nutritious but too thin on the ground to support a larger animal. By contrast, the large zebra lives on the masses of low-quality stem material.

        The differences in feeding preferences lead, in turn, to differences in migratory habits. The wildebeests follow, in their migration, the pattern of local rainfall. The other species do likewise. But when a new area is fueled by rain, the mammals migrate toward it in a set order to explore it. The larger, less fastidious feeders, the zebras, move in first; the choosier, smaller wildebeests come later; and the smallest species of
all, Thomson’s gazelle, arrives last. The later species all depend on the preparations of the earlier one, for the actions of the zebra alter the vegetation to suit the stomachs of the wildebeest, topi, and gazelle.


【題組】5. Which of the following is true of wildebeests?
(A) They eat more stem matter than zebras do.
(B) They are able to digest large food particles if the food is of a high quality.
(C) They tend to choose feeding areas in which the vegetation has been worn down.
(D) They are likely to choose low-quality food to eat in periods when the quantity of rainfall is low.


答案:登入後觀看
難度: 簡單

10
 【站僕】摩檸Morning:有沒有達人來解釋一下?
倒數 4天 ,已有 2 則答案
Chih-jung Wu 大二上 (2021/02/23):

By the time the wildebeests (and other ruminants) arrive, the grazing and trampling of the zebras will have worn the vegetation down. As the ruminants then set to work, they eat down to the lower, leafier parts of the vegetation. 


故答案選(C)They tend to choose feeding areas in which the vegetation has been worn down (by zebras).

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應屆上岸~謝謝阿摩 大二上 (2022/04/28):

其實只認識zebra和buffalo,但還是做了關係筆記XD
(A)選項可以從第一段的最後面找到,zebras eat the most stem matter,所以A是錯的
(B)這個wildebeest是屬於ruminant動物(像牛一樣),文中有提到這類的動物會一直咀嚼,直到幾乎變liquid,能夠通過the rumen,所以B選項的large food particles是錯的
關係圖小筆記:
zebra吃完wildebeest吃
wildebeest吃完Thomson's gazelles吃
就可以選(C)囉

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IV、Reading Comprehension Feeding Ha..-阿摩線上測驗