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News 3
Lions have disappeared from much of Africa, but for the past few years
scientists have wondered if the big cats were hanging on in remote parts of
Sudan and Ethiopia. Continuous fighting in the region has made surveys
difficult. But scientists released a report Monday documenting, with hard
evidence, the discovery of "lost lions."
A team with Oxford University’s Wildlife Conservation Research Unit,
supported by a charity organization, spent two nights in November camping in the
National Park in northwest Ethiopia, on the Ethiopia-Sudan border. The
researchers set out six camera traps capturing images of lions, and they
identified lion tracks.
The scientists concluded that lions are also likely to live in the
neighbouring National Park across the border in Sudan. The International Union
for Conservation of Nature had previously considered the area a "possible range"
for the species, and local people had reported seeing lions in the area, but no
one presented convincing evidence.
Q5: What has made it difficult to survey lions in remote parts of Sudan and
Ethiopia?
Q6: What was the main purpose of the research?
Q7: What did the researchers find in the National Park? 【考后估分】 新东方四六级估分系统,逼真还原12月试题,精准估分提早了解过没过线!具体估分规则,敬请关注新东方网四六级真题解析专题!