Light from a living plant or animal is called bioluminescence, or cold light, to distinguish it from incandescence or heat-generating light. Life forms could not produce incandescent light without being burned. Their light is produced in chemicals combining in such a way that little or no measurable heat is produced, and the life forms generating it are unharmed. Although bioluminescence is a relatively complicated process, it can be reduced to simple terms. Living light occurs when luciferin and oxygen combine in the presence of luciferase. In a few cases, fireflies the most common, an additional compound called ATP is required.
The earliest recorded experiments with bioluminescence in the late 1800s are attributed to Raphael Dubois, who extracted a luminous fluid from a clam, observing that it continued to glow in the test tube for several minutes. He named the substance luciferin, which means “the bearer of life”. In further research, Dubois discovered that several chemicals were required for bioluminescence to occur. In his notes, it was recorded that a second important substance, which he called luciferase, was always present. In later study of small, luminous sea creatures, Newton Harley concluded that luciferin was composed of carbon, hydrosen, and oxygen, which are the building blocks of all living cells. He also proved that there are a variety of luciferin and luciferase, specific to the plants and animals that produce them.
Much remains unknown, but many scientists who are studying bioluminescence now believe that the origin of the phenomenon may be traced to a time when there was no oxygen in the Earth’s atmosphere. When oxygen was gradually introduced to the atmosphere, it was actually poisonous to life forms, plants and animals produced light to use up the oxygen in a gradual but necessary adaptation. It is speculated that millions of years ago, all life may have produced light to survive. As the millennia passed, life forms on Earth became tolerant of, and finally dependent on oxygen, and the adaptation that produced bioluminescence was no longer necessary, but some primitive plants and animals continued to use the light for new functions such as mating or attracting prey.
Bioluminescence is described as all of the following EXCEPT ________.
Hãy suy nghĩ và trả lời câu hỏi trước khi xem đáp án
Lời giải:
Báo saiĐáp án D
Dịch nghĩa: Sự phát quang sinh học được miêu tả như tất cả những điều sau NGOẠI TRỪ ________.
A. một quá trình hóa học phức tạp
B. một sự thích ứng của những loài động thực vật tiền sử với môi trường
C. một dạng ánh sáng lạnh
D. một chất có độc
Giải thích: Ta thấy các đáp án còn lại đều được nói đến như những đặc tính của sự phát quang sinh học:
A. “Although bioluminescence is a relatively complicated process, it can be reduced to simple terms” - “Mặc dù sự phát quang sinh học là một quá trình tương đối phức tạp, nó có thể được giảm xuống đến những khái niệm đơn giản.”
B. “It is speculated that millions of years ago, all life may have produced light to survive” - “Người ta đoán rằng hàng triệu năm về trước, toàn bộ sự sống có thể đã phải tạo ra ánh sáng để sinh tồn.”
C. Câu đầu bài viết: “Light from a living plant or animal is called bioluminescence, or cold light...” - “Ánh sáng từ một loài động vật hay thực vật còn sống được gọi là sự phát quang sinh học, hay ánh sáng lạnh...”