You should spend about 20 minutes on Questions
1-13, which are based on Reading Passage 1 below. Our Vanishing Night Most city have become virtually empty of stars by
Verlyn Klinkenborg If humans were truly at home
under the light of the moon and stars, it would make no difference to us whether
we were out and about at night or during the day, the midnight world as visible
to us as it is to the vast number of nocturnal species on this planet. Instead,
we are diurnal creatures, meaning our eyes are adapted to living in the surfs
light. This is a basic evolutionary fact, even though most of us don’t think of
ourselves as diurnal beings any more than as primates or mammals or Earthlings.
Yet it’s the only way to explain what we’ve done to the night: we’ve engineered
it to meet our needs by filling it with light. This kind of
engineering is no different from damming a river. Its benefits come with
consequences - called light pollution - whose effects scientists are only now
beginning to study. Light pollution is largely the result of bad lighting
design, which allows artificial light to shine outward and upward into the sky,
where it is not wanted, instead of focusing it downward, where it is. Wherever
human light spills into the natural world, some aspect of life - migration,
reproduction, feeding - is affected. For most of human history,
the phrase ’light pollution" would have made no sense. Imagine walking toward
London on a moonlit night around 1800, when it was one of Earth’s most populous
cities. Nearly a million people lived there, making do, as they always had, with
candles and lanterns. There would be no gaslights in the streets or squares for
another seven years. Now most of humanity lives under
reflected, refracted light from overlit cities and suburbs, from light-flooded
roads and factories. Nearly all of night-time Europe is a bright patch of light,
as is most of the United States and much of Japan. In the South Atlantic the
glow from a single fishing fleet - squid fishermen luring their prey with metal
halide lamps - can be seen from space, burning brighter on occasions than Buenos
Aires. In most cities the sky looks as though it has been
emptied of stars and taking their place is a constant orange glow. We’ve become
so used to this that the glory of an unlit night - dark enough for the planet
Venus to throw shadows on Earth - is wholly beyond our experience, beyond memory
almost. And yet above the city’s pale ceiling lies the rest of the universe,
utterly undiminished by the light we waste. We’ve lit up the
night as if it were an unoccupied country, when nothing could be further from
the truth. Among mammals alone, the number of nocturnal species is astonishing.
Light is a powerful biological force, and on many species it acts as a magnet.
The effect is so powerful that scientists speak of songbirds and seabirds being
’captured’ by searchlights on land or by the light from gas flares on marine oil
platforms, circling and circling in the thousands until they drop. Migrating at
night, birds are apt to collide with brightly lit buildings; immature birds
suffer in much higher numbers than adults. Insects, of course,
cluster around streetlights, and feeding on those insects is a crucial means of
survival for many bat species. In some Swiss valleys the European lesser
horseshoe bat began to vanish after streetlights were installed, perhaps because
those valleys were suddenly filled with light-feeding pipistrelle bats. Other
nocturnal mammals, like desert rodents and badgers, are more cautious about
searching for food under the permanent full moon of light pollution because
they’ve become easier targets for the predators who are hunting them.
Some birds - blackbirds and nightingales, among others - sing at
unnatural hours in the presence of artificial light. Scientists have determined
that long artificial days - and artificially short nights - induce early
breeding in a wide range of birds. And because a longer day allows for longer
feeding, it can also affect migration schedules. The problem, of course, is that
migration, like most other aspects of bird behavior, is a precisely timed
biological behavior. Leaving prematurely may mean reaching a destination too
soon for nesting conditions to be right. Nesting sea turtles,
which seek out dark beaches, find fewer and fewer of them to bury their eggs on.
When the baby sea turtles emerge from the eggs, they gravitate toward the
brighter, more reflective sea horizon but find themselves confused by artificial
lighting behind the beach. In Florida alone, hatchling losses number in the
hundreds of thousands every year. Frogs and toads living on the side of major
highways suffer nocturnal light levels that are as much as a million times
brighter than normal, disturbing nearly every aspect of their behavior,
including their night-time breeding choruses. It was once
thought that light pollution only affected astronomers, who need to see the
night sky in all its glorious clarity. And, in fact, some of the earliest civic
efforts to control light pollution were made half a century ago to protect the
view from Lowell Observatory in Flagstaff, Arizona. In 2001 Flagstaff was
declared the first International Dark Sky City. By now the effort to control
light pollution has spread around the globe. More and more cities and even
entire countries have committed themselves to reducing unwanted glare.
Do the following statements agree with the information given in Reading
Passage 1 In boxes 1-7 on your answer sheet,
write TRUE if
the statement agrees with the information FALSE if the statement contradicts
the information NOT GIVEN if
there is no information on thisThe fishermen of the South Atlantic are unaware of the light pollution they are causing.