聽(tīng)寫(xiě)填空,只寫(xiě)填空內(nèi)容,不抄全文,5個(gè)左右的句子,不用寫(xiě)標(biāo)號(hào),注意標(biāo)點(diǎn),口語(yǔ)中因結(jié)巴等問(wèn)題造成的重復(fù)單詞只寫(xiě)一遍~

This is Deborah Byrd, with a story about kidnapped and enslaved ants who might be rebelling against their ant captors. The captors are forcing the slave ants to work as nannies. [---1---] EarthSky's Lindsay Patterson spoke to study author biologist Susanne Foitzik of Munich.

Foitzik said these slave-making ants aren't very good at doing their own housework. [---2---] But the slaves might grow up to become baby killing ant nannies.

---How do they kill the young?
--- [---3---]

---This is unusual or common practice?
--- [---4---]

---And does the rebellion win the salves their freedom?
---No, because they wouldn't know how to get back home. [---5---]

Thanks, Lindsay. We're ES, a clear voice for science. We're at Es. Org.

【視聽(tīng)版科學(xué)小組榮譽(yù)出品】
But now a scientist believes the slaves are killing their captors' young instead of caring for them. So they raid the homes of smaller ants, carry off the pupae, and raise them in their own colony, inside an acorn. Either they throw the pupae outside the acorn or they tear it apart and leave it to die. It's not unusual for different ant species to enslave each other, but before they had studied these colonies and noticed the rebelling ants, scientists thought slaves had no way of defending themselves from this. But what the rebellion does do is make it less likely that their relatives' homes would be raided, and that's why this behavior evolved.