问题 材料题

请结合下列材料,概括出“绿色污染”的特点。(60字以内)

  “绿色污染”已成为当代世界性难题。以产生“绿色污染”的代表性植物紫茎泽兰为例,它对环境的适应性极强,在干旱贫瘠的石缝里也能生长,能进行无性繁殖和有性繁殖。紫茎泽兰所到之处,原有植物均被“排挤出局”,不仅引起粮食减产、牧草消退,对人体健康亦有影响。四川凉山州1996年一年就因此减产6万多头羊,畜牧业损失2100多万元。灾害发生后,人们寻找各种除草办法:如从西藏引入吃泽兰的食蝇,栽种速生桉树抑制毒草生长,以人工植物替代,建立隔离带防止扩散等。然而几年过去了,除草成果几乎看不到。

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答案

 产生绿色污染的植物对环境的适应性强,繁殖能力强,绿色污染严重影响人们的生产、生活,发生后难以控制和治理。(意对即可)

问答题
问答题

There’s a human liver sitting in a lab dish in Madison, Wis. Also a heart, a brain and every bone in the human body even though the contents of the dish are a few cells too small to be seen without a microscope. But these are stem cells, the most immature human cells ever discovered, taken from embryos before they had decided upon their career path in the body. (46) If scientists could only figure out how to give them just the right kick in just the right direction, each could become a liver, a heart, a brain or a bone. (47) When a team from the University of Wisconsin announced their discovery, doctors around the world looked forward to a new era of medicine one without organ-donor shortages or the tissues-rejection problems that bedevil transplant patients today.

Doctors also saw obstacles, though. One of them was a U. S. Congress skittish about research on stem cells taken from unwanted human embryos and aborted fetuses. Indeed, 70 lawmakers asked in a firmly worded letter that the Federal Government ban all such work.

Yet the era of "grow your own" organs is already upon us, as researchers have sidestepped the stem cell controversy by making clever use of ordinary cells. Today a machinist in Massachusetts is using his own cells to grow a new thumb after he lost part of his chest wall in an accident. A teenager born without half of his chest wall is growing a new cage of bone and cartilage within his chest cavity. Scientists announced that bladders, grown from bladder cells in a lab, have been implanted in dogs and are working. Meanwhile, patches of skin, the first "tissue-engineered" organ to be approved by the U. S. Food and Drug Administration, are healing sores and skin ulcers on hundreds of patients across the U. S.

How have scientists managed to do all this without those protean stem cells Part of the answer is smart engineering. (48) Using materials such as polymers with pores no wider than a toothbrush bristle, researchers have learned to sculpt scaffolds in shapes into which cells can settle. The other part of the answer is just plain cell biology. (49) Scientists have discovered that they don’t have to teach old cells new tricks; given the right framework and the right nutrients, cells will organize themselves into real tissues as the scaffolds dissolve. "I’m a great believer in the cells. They’re not just lying there, looking stupidly at each other," says Francois Auger, an infectious disease specialist and builder of artificial blood vessels at Laval University in Quebec City. "They will do the work for you if you treat them right."

Replacement hearts—or even replacement heart parts—are at least a decade off, estimates Kiki Hellman, who monitors tissue-engineering efforts for the FDA. "Any problem that requires lots of cell types ’talking’ to one another is really hard," she notes. Bone and cartilage efforts are much closer to fruition, and could be ready for human trials within two years. (50) And what of those magical stem cells that can grow into any organ you happen to need—if the law and biologists’ knowledge permit "Using them," says Sefton, "is really the Holy Grail.

(50) And what of those magical stem cells that can grow into any organ you happen to need—if the law and biologists’ knowledge permit