Effects of environmental change on birds — Cambridge IELTS 12 Academic 2017 TEST 3 — IELTS Test

Cambridge IELTS 12 Academic 2017 TEST 3

Effects of environmental change on birds

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(0:00) Section 4. You will hear a lecturer on an environmental studies course discussing (0:08) how birds are affected by environmental change. First, you have some time to look (0:16) at questions 31 to 40. Now listen carefully and answer questions 31 to 40.

(1:17) Okay, so we've been looking at how man-made changes in our environment can affect wildlife. (1:25) Now I'll discuss a particular example. Let's take a look at mercury.

Mercury is one of the (1:34) 120 or so elements that make up all matter, and it has the symbol Hg. It's a shiny silvery substance. (1:46) You may have seen it in old-fashioned thermometers, but it's not used much (1:52) for domestic purposes now because it's highly toxic.

But the problem is that the amount of (2:00) mercury in the environment is increasing. The main reason for this is the power plants used (2:07) to produce electricity. The main source of energy that most of them use is still coal, (2:14) and when it's burned, it releases mercury into the atmosphere.

(2:19) Some of this gets deposited into lakes and rivers, and if it's ingested by a fish, (2:26) it's not excreted. It stays in the fish's body, and it enters the food chain. (2:34) So, it's been known for some time that birds which eat fish may be affected, but what wasn't (2:43) known until quite recently is that those that eat insects can also be affected.

(2:50) So, a woman called Claire Varian Ramos is doing some research on how this is affecting birds, (3:00) and rather than looking at how many birds are actually killed by mercury poisoning, (3:06) she's looking for more subtle sub-effects. And these may be to do with the behaviour of the (3:14) birds, or with the effect of mercury on the way their brain works, so whether it leads to problems (3:21) with memory, for example. And she's particularly focussing on the effects of mercury on birds' song.

(3:31) Now, the process of song learning happens at a particular stage in the bird's development, (3:38) and what you may not know is that a young bird seems to acquire this skill by listening to the (3:45) songs produced by its father, rather than by any other bird. And Varian Ramos has already found (3:53) in her research that if young male birds are exposed to mercury, if they eat food contaminated (4:01) with mercury, then the songs they produce aren't as complex as those produced by other birds. (4:09) So, quite low-level exposure to mercury is likely to have an impact on male birds in a natural (4:17) situation because it can mean that they're less attractive to female birds, and so it can affect (4:25) their chances of reproduction.

Now, the way she's carrying out this research is worth thinking about. (4:38) She's using a mixture of studies, using birds kept in laboratories and studies carried out (4:46) outdoors in the wild. The lab-based studies have the advantage that you don't get all the variables (4:54) you would in a natural setting, so the experimenter has a much higher level of control, (5:01) and that means they can be more confident about their results in some ways.

(5:07) And, of course, they don't have to worry about going out and finding the birds in order to (5:13) observe them. So, what are the implications here for humans? Well, because many birds are migratory, (5:23) they may be transporting mercury far from contaminated sites. For example, it's been found (5:30) that ducks who'd been feeding at a contaminated site were later shot by hunters over a thousand (5:38) kilometres away and presumably eaten.

But these birds likely had mercury levels high enough (5:46) to warrant concern for human consumption. In addition, going back to song learning by birds, (5:54) we saw that this may be affected by mercury contamination. Well, we also know that in humans, (6:02) mercury causes developmental delays in the acquisition of language, and in fact this process (6:10) is very similar in the brain regions it involves, and even the genes that are involved.

(6:18) But mercury contamination has other important implications for humans as well. It's now known (6:25) that an unborn child can be affected if the food eaten by its mother contains high levels (6:32) of mercury, and these effects can be quite substantial. In the end, it comes down to (6:40) whether more value is placed on human economic well-being or environmental well-being.

(6:47) It's true there are new regulations for mercury emissions from power plants, (6:53) but these will need billions of dollars to implement and increase costs for everyone. (7:00) Some argue that's too much to pay to protect wildlife, but as we've seen, the issues go (7:07) beyond that, and I think it's an issue we need to consider very carefully. (7:17) That is the end of section four.

You now have half a minute to check your answers.

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