时间:2018-12-27 作者:英语课 分类:一起听英语


英语课

 人类的发展也伴随着对环境的破坏,保护好环境迫在眉睫.....


Chris: Hello and welcome to 6 Minute English from BBC Learning English, the


programme where we discuss a topical subject and introduce you to some of


the interesting vocabulary connected to that topic. I'm Chris and with me


today is Rosie.


Rosie: Hello.


Chris: Rosie, are concerned about the environment?


Rosie: Yes, I am! We need to be aware of it and make a real effort to preserve our


natural resources.


Chris: So you’ll be very interested in today’s story. It’s about a group of


environmentalists in Croatia who want to preserve – to maintain in unaltered


condition - one of the country’s major rivers: The Danube.


Rosie: Oh, I know a lot about the Danube, Chris. It’s the second longest river in


Europe, flowing through several countries – and its floodplain forests are


home to a great deal of wildlife. Floodplain is a vast flat area bordering a river


and subject to flooding.


Chris: We are going to learn the details of this story shortly. But first, here comes


our traditional quiz. Are you ready for it, Rosie?


Rosie: Yes, go for it!


Chris: You seem to be very familiar with the River Danube but how much do you


know about other important rivers around the world? So tell me which one of


these rivers is the longest? Is it:


(a) The River Ganges, in India


(b) The River Yangtze, in China or


(c) The River Nile, in Egypt


Rosie: It's c) the River Nile, in Egypt!


Chris: That’s a good guess. I'll let you know by the end of the programme.


Rosie: I’m very keen to know about what’s happening to the Danube.


6 Minute English © British Broadcasting Corporation 2012


Page 2 of 4


bbclearningenglish.com


Chris: Rosie, there are plans to regulate the river flow, which could have an impact


on the floodplains and their wildlife. Listen to a report from the BBC’s Nick


Thorpe. He explains what the Croatian agency for waterways is planning to do.


BBC correspondent Nick Thorpe:


The Kopacki Rit area, where the River Drava flows into the Danube, is one of the best


preserved areas of floodplain forests in Europe. It’s a major fish-spawning area, with ancient


willow 1 forests which flood each summer, and is home to large populations of rare whitetailed


eagles and black storks 2. The Croatian Agency for Inland Waterways plans to regulate


both the Drava and the Danube – reinforcing river banks with rocks and constructing


groynes to concentrate the water flow.


Chris: So we heard in the report that the river is a major area for fish-spawning area


– where they breed. And it’s home to large populations of birds like eagles


and storks. But what did the reporter say the agency is planning to do, Rosie.


Rosie: It’s planning to reinforce – or strengthen – the river banks with rocks. It’s also


going to construct groynes to concentrate the water flow.


Chris: A groyne. The agency argues that by building this type of wall from a


riverbank will help to improve shipping 3 and give further protection against


flooding.


Rosie: And how could this affect the animals that live on the floodplains, Chris?


Chris: Tibor Mikuska leads one of the environmental groups that are campaigning


against the construction work. And he will explain why he thinks the proposed


plans are a problem.


Environmental campaigner Tibor Mikuska:


Regulation projects try to fix the river to the concrete corridor, and that’s causing, as a


consequence, riverbed deepening, and as a consequence we have a drop in the water level,


both river and ground water level, so the area adjacent to the river will dry up slowly but


steadily 4.


Chris: We heard there that the water regulation projects will cause a drop in the


water level, what will cause the area near the river to dry up.


Rosie: If there is no water at all on the floodplains, if it dries up, it could affect the


ecosystem 5 – that’s a word which describes the animal and plant life that lives


in a particular environment.


Chris: So the question is: What is Croatia doing to protect its wildlife? Let's listen to


the final part of BBC’s Nick Thorpe report to find out.


BBC correspondent Nick Thorpe:


Parallel to the scheme, Croatia, Hungary and three other countries in the region have


already signed an agreement to create a biosphere 6 reserve, linking already protected areas


into a single unit. Croatia is due to join the European Union next year. EU experts are


studying the regulation plans and are expected to announce their conclusions soon. 


6 Minute English © British Broadcasting Corporation 2012


Page 3 of 4


bbclearningenglish.com


Rosie: Ah, they’ve signed an agreement with other countries in the region to create a


biosphere reserve. This is a huge area in which the environment is protected.


It is internationally recognized and chosen by the national government.


Chris: They are established with the help of the United Nations Educational,


Scientific, and Cultural Organization (UNESCO).


Rosie: So there is hope that the wildlife that lives on the Danube’s floodplains.


Chris: Sure. And let’s hope all the other major rivers in the world are cared for too.


Especially the ones on our quiz, Rosie.


Rosie: So go on, give us the answer!


Chris: Which one of these rivers is the longest? Is it:


(a) The River Ganges, in India


(b) The River Yangtze, in China or


(c) The River Nile, in Egypt


Rosie: I said c) the River Nile, in Egypt. I'm pretty sure I'm right!


Chris: Well, you are correct indeed! It is The River Nile, in Egypt, with almost 6,700


km. So well done, you got it right! But we are running out of time so let’s


concentrate on some of the words we heard today – especially useful for


people who follow the news and want to know about the environment. The


words are...


Rosie: to preserve


a floodplain


a fish-spawning area


to reinforce


a groyne


to dry up


an ecosystem


a biosphere reserve


Chris: That's all we have time for today but do join us again for more 6 Minute


English and for more help with any aspects of your English language studies


go to our website BBCLearningEnglish.com. Bye for now!


Rosie: Bye!



1 willow
n.柳树
  • The river was sparsely lined with willow trees.河边疏疏落落有几棵柳树。
  • The willow's shadow falls on the lake.垂柳的影子倒映在湖面上。
2 storks
n.鹳( stork的名词复数 )
  • Meg and Jo fed their mother like dutiful young storks. 麦格和裘像一对忠实的小鹳似地喂她们的母亲。 来自辞典例句
  • They believe that storks bring new babies to the parents' home. 他们相信白鹤会给父母带来婴儿。 来自互联网
3 shipping
n.船运(发货,运输,乘船)
  • We struck a bargain with an American shipping firm.我们和一家美国船运公司谈成了一笔生意。
  • There's a shipping charge of £5 added to the price.价格之外另加五英镑运输费。
4 steadily
adv.稳定地;不变地;持续地
  • The scope of man's use of natural resources will steadily grow.人类利用自然资源的广度将日益扩大。
  • Our educational reform was steadily led onto the correct path.我们的教学改革慢慢上轨道了。
5 ecosystem
n.生态系统
  • This destroyed the ecosystem of the island.这样破坏了岛上的生态系统。
  • We all have an interest in maintaining the integrity of the ecosystem.维持生态系统的完整是我们共同的利益。
6 biosphere
n.生命层,生物圈
  • The entire biosphere was becoming more transparent.整个生物圈越来越透明。
  • The impact of modern technology on the biosphere is evident worldwide.现代技术对生物圈的影响在全世界是明显的。
学英语单词
a bit of muslin
abnormal hearing
adipocytes
aerodynamic maneuver
alkylantimony halide
aloe chinensis bak.
Ambohibary
analog-digital-analog conversion system
atonest
autograt
be up to one's old tricks
Brooklynite
brunei b.
bull gear reducer
calcium 5'-ribonuucleotide
caveated
cerous hydropyrophosphate
chelseas
Chetopir
Chirita monantha
combining
constant formula diet
copesmate
corporation library
counter-balance piece
davuls
debris storage capacity
decolonialized
descanted
ductography
Duggendorf
encylical
Fanta Shet'
feathering paddle-wheel
finance statistics
fusible interlining
glutinane
go down to
golpe
goodstein
gotterleben
gyffe
have one's fingers in the till
heredo-familial corneal dystrophy
iced-tea spoons
implementation requirement
in view of
inclosure(enclosure)
inner ring axis
internal dielectric membrane
inuredness
inwardmost
kiet
lacewear
large pill
learning activity package
Marquess of Queensberry rules
maximum grinding hole diameter
megalomycin
minelaying
morticer
multi-gradient magnetic separator
multispectral remote sensing system
omit function
overtoils
oxandrin
peace camp
pectinellus
pentagrid converter
Pierofanina
pilot's automatic telephone weather answering service
powder-like fur
pro-europeans
pure clay
pyrophosphatases
qusternary syphilis
r-l-c oscillator
ratchet-toothed escape wheel
raw gasoline
recognized component
revised price
Rubia mandersii
run-on sentences
scheerer
seminal cyst
shell tap
soft emplacement
sowing plot
spongio-
spontaneous request
tank block
tavarus
technofetishist
to smash
tobicillin
total derived functor
triple deck screen
two lined octave
vaccinoids
whitetailed
wrightstown
zawadski