聽寫填空,只寫填空內(nèi)容,不抄全文,5-10句,不用寫標(biāo)號,注意標(biāo)點,口語中因結(jié)巴等問題造成的重復(fù)單詞只寫一遍~

Camille Parmesan: Well, That's a surprising thing that we haven't really had that much warming yet. We've only had about 1 degree Fahrenheit. [---1,2---]

You're listening to biologist Camille Parmesan of the University of Texas. Her early studies of butterflies were among the first to record shifts in a species' habitat due to climate change. [---3---]

Camille Parmesan: [---4,5---] So when leaves emerge, when caterpillars emerge, when birds start to migrate.

The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change has predicted the planet will warm up anywhere from 4 to 11 degrees Fahrenheit in this century.

Camille Parmesan: [---6,7---]

We're E&S, a clear voice for science.

【視聽版科學(xué)小組榮譽出品】
But we're already seeing impacts in every single system that's been studied around the world. So every continent, every ocean, every kind group of animal and plant. Now, she said, many species are on the move. About 40% of species are already changing where they live by moving themselves up towards the poles, and up mountains. And about 60% of the species are changing the timing of when they do things in spring. Really, we don't want to get anything above another two degrees warming, and if it gets up to six degrees warming, basically we've just changed Earth's climate so much we're going back several million years when the biodiversity was just a completely different group of plants and animals. So if we really do go up to six degrees warming, what we're expecting to see is a complete new shift in what kind of life exists on Earth.