Sensations English
  • Lesson
  • Activities and Tools
Listening

Welchen Satz hörst du?

Vervollständige die Sätze. Höre zu und schreibe die fehlenden Wörter auf. Es gibt bis zu fünf Fragen.

  • Fehlende Satzteile heraushören und verstehen können
  • Fehlende Satzteile aus dem Sinnzusammenhang heraus vorhersagen können
  • Satzteile nach Gehör korrekt schreiben können
  • Sätze korrekt aussprechen können
Was lerne ich? +
Wähle deine Sprachniveau aus:
A2 Grundlegende Sprachkenntnisse B1 Erweiterte Sprachkenntnisse B1+ Gute Sprachkenntnisse B2 Fortgeschrittene Sprachkenntnisse C1 Fließende Sprachverwendung Stufen
Fetching... Play Game at C1
Start Again
Scroll to view more options
You are correct!

Congrats - you are smashing this

Incorrect. The answer is:

Not quite right, try the next question.

close
transcript
Saving the stinking corpse lily - 23rd October 2023
Gigantic, blood red and putrid, the stinking corpse lily of Southeast Asia looks – and smells – fierce, but according to a new study, this unique, misunderstood flora is at risk of extinction due to deforestation and misguided conservation efforts.
The genus Rafflesia are a group of parasitic flowers which emit the odour of rotting flesh to attract pollinators. Carrion flies land on corpse flowers’ rubbery petals in search of food but instead their legs become sticky with pollen.
Growing on vines in the rainforests of Indonesia, Borneo, Malaysia and the Philippines, these iconic plants are revered by many indigenous peoples as ethnobotanical medicine used especially as energy and fertility tonics. Despite their popularity in these cultures, Rafflesia generally remains a mystery to western scientists.
Besides being misunderstood, the flowers are recalcitrant to cultivation and severely endangered due to deforestation. Their habitats in Southeast Asia are the fastest disappearing forests in the world.
Published in the journal Plants, People, Planet, the first global study assessing Rafflesia highlighted, "taxa (populations of species) are still being eradicated before they are even known to science."
Despite 60 percent of Rafflesia species being at severe risk of extinction, two-thirds of their habitats remain unprotected. The study’s author, Dr Chris Thorogood stated "We urgently need a joined-up cross-regional approach to save some of the world’s most remarkable flowers."
Thorogood suggests increased research into Rafflesia taxonomy to better understand how conservationists could cultivate corpse flowers especially through ex situ propagation, growing outside of their natural habitat. In addition, Thorogood advocates the involvement of local people in the protection of the red giant.
The study notes "Indigenous peoples — who represent only five percent of the globe's human population — are the stewards of 80 percent of the Earth's biodiversity" and as many Rafflesia grow in inaccessible areas, these communities play a crucial role in mapping habitats.
Thorogood’s team believes in one more solution: ecotourism. How much would you pay to smell the world’s stinkiest flower?
Scroll to view more options
ACTIVITY COMPLETE

You scored

Brilliant, you’re really proficient! You’ll find the C1 level really helpful to maintain your high standard of English.

Repeat activity

More games

Next
Previous
JETZT UNVERBINDLICH SICHTEN

Sie erhalten Zugriff auf 3 Videos und/oder Artikel pro Tag sowie auf alle Übungen und Lerntools.

Registrieren Sie sich hier mit Ihrer E-Mail-Adresse.
Mit der Registrierung stimmen Sie unseren Nutzungsbedingungen und der Datenschutzerklärung zu.
Sie haben bereits ein Konto? Anmelden

Sign up with email

Enter the following information to create your account.
All sign up options

Log in Or create an account

log in via email
or

Forgot password?

all sign up options

reset password or login

Crop Image

Add to homescreen