英语 英语 日语 日语 韩语 韩语 法语 法语 德语 德语 西班牙语 西班牙语 意大利语 意大利语 阿拉伯语 阿拉伯语 葡萄牙语 葡萄牙语 越南语 越南语 俄语 俄语 芬兰语 芬兰语 泰语 泰语 泰语 丹麦语 泰语 对外汉语

For the first time, the U.S. allocates big money for Animal Road Crossings

时间:2022-08-22 09:23来源:互联网 提供网友:nan   字体: [ ]
特别声明:本栏目内容均从网络收集或者网友提供,供仅参考试用,我们无法保证内容完整和正确。如果资料损害了您的权益,请与站长联系,我们将及时删除并致以歉意。
    (单词翻译:双击或拖选)

For the first time, the U.S. allocates big money for Animal Road Crossings

Transcript

Millions of animals die on roads, and the new infrastructure law includes money for wildlife crossings to keep them safe. We visit the site where the first major urban crossing will soon be built.

STEVE INSKEEP, HOST:

An estimated 1 million animals are killed on U.S. roads every year. Mostly, that's because of vehicle collisions. But roads can also kill in more subtle ways. NPR's Nathan Rott explains.

NATHAN ROTT, BYLINE: Mountain lion researchers Seth Riley and Audra Huffmeyer started noticing something troubling last year in the cats they were observing in Southern California's Santa Monica Mountains.

AUDRA HUFFMEYER: Over the course of one year, our combined efforts identified nine individuals with reproductive abnormalities or physical abnormalities.

ROTT: Mountain lions were seen with kinked tails; others with something called cryptorchidism.

HUFFMEYER: It is when one or both of your testes fail to drop during puberty.

ROTT: Huffmeyer, a researcher at the University of California, Los Angeles, decided to go deeper, looking at five deceased males. All of them had reduced fertility. For Riley, a biologist with the National Park Service, it was like an oh-no moment.

SETH RILEY: We've known that there was low genetic diversity. I mean, we knew even before we started the studies that that was sort of a possibility, right? But we were kind of hoping not to get to the point where we were starting to see these physical manifestations. And it definitely ramps up the urgency of doing something about it.

ROTT: The problems Huffmeyer and Riley observed were related to inbreeding. Mountain lions in this small coastal range were and had been mating with close relatives, not because they wanted to, but because they had no other choice. They had been hemmed in and cut off, trapped by subdivisions, shopping malls and roads like Highway 101.

BETH PRATT: The 101 freeway has become this impenetrable barrier for wildlife.

ROTT: Beth Pratt is with the National Wildlife Federation. A mountain lion is tattooed on her left arm. We're standing just north of the 10-lane freeway in an open patch of ground while a red-tailed hawk circles overhead.

PRATT: This is really deceptive because you're looking at a lot of open space right here, yet the Kardashians live right over there in Calabasas. And, you know, you have 10 million people surrounding us. And then this really busy freeway - 300- to 400,000 cars a day.

ROTT: A report by the United Nations' Convention on Biological Diversity found that human development, not climate change or consumption, is the biggest driver of extinction in the world. Our sprawl is driving species out of their habitats or, in the case of the Southern California mountain lions, constricting them in place.

PRATT: You know, we don't think of how animals need to move.

ROTT: Pratt has spent the last decade working on a solution. And in just over a month, it's going to happen. Construction workers and engineers will break ground on a 200-foot long wildlife crossing, a bridge for wildlife, complete with sound barriers and vegetation.

PRATT: We're putting in the first urban crossing in the world of this scale.

ROTT: The goal is to reconnect a fragmented landscape in one of the most urbanized areas on the planet.

PRATT: You're going to see this ecological transformation and that part of it is going to be over one of the busiest freeways in the world - that, to me, is just such a hopeful statement for what's possible.

ROTT: And there's new hope that many more projects are to come. In the recently passed infrastructure bill, Congress allocated $350 million for wildlife crossings. Renee Callahan, executive director of ARC Solutions - ARC standing for Animal Road Crossings - says it's the first time ever the federal government has allocated big money to the issue.

RENEE CALLAHAN: We know that wildlife vehicle collisions cost Americans close to $10 billion - and that's, you know, billion with a B - every single year.

ROTT: So, she says, it's an investment well worth making. Research from Montana State University has found that wildlife crossings, if used with other infrastructure, like roadside fencing, can reduce animal vehicle collisions by 97%.

CALLAHAN: To my knowledge, there's not a whole lot of infrastructure investments out there that you can make that are going to be that effective in terms of fixing the issue that they're targeted at.

ROTT: Callahan's hope is that eventually, crossings for wildlife will be baked into all infrastructure plans going forward.

Nathan Rott, NPR News, Los Angeles.

(SOUNDBITE OF OKAMI (O)'S "UNDERGROWTH")

本文本内容来源于互联网抓取和网友提交,仅供参考,部分栏目没有内容,如果您有更合适的内容,欢迎点击提交分享给大家。
------分隔线----------------------------
TAG标签:   NPR  英语听力  美国新闻
顶一下
(0)
0%
踩一下
(0)
0%
最新评论 查看所有评论
发表评论 查看所有评论
请自觉遵守互联网相关的政策法规,严禁发布色情、暴力、反动的言论。
评价:
表情:
验证码:
听力搜索
推荐频道
论坛新贴