阅读理解 Just like humans, birds too rely on sound to communicate.However, they do not have a "language" inthe true sense of the word and instead produce a variety of sounds to convey different emotions. Often, birds recognize their mates (or young) by sound rather than sight.Hungry young birds use begging calls to let their mothers know it is feeding time.Alarm calls, flight calls and warning calls are other sounds made frequently by s. A new study shows that songbirds rehearse (排演) their songs even in their sleep.The activity in thebrain of the birds when asleep is similar to the brain activity when the birds were awake and singing.Theteam used tiny recording devices to measure the activity of individual brain cells in four songbirds both when they were singing and when they were asleep. Apparently the bird stores a song after hearing it, and then rehearses it later in its sleep.Scientists nowbelieve the birds "dream of songs and tunes" to help them the fine art of singing and that sleep plays a key role in the learning process! Many songbirds learn to sing listening to birds of the same species.However, if separated fromthe s, the young birds develop sounds which are hard to understand instead of normal song patterns.Researchers carried out an experiment in which a male bullfinch (灰雀) was raised by a female canary(金丝雀). The bullfinch soon learned the canary's song and when it was later mated to a female bullfinch, Mr.Bullfinch taught his children the canary's songs. Last year, a British survey of London's songbirds showed that the city's birds are losing their tunes.Birds could hardly hear one another, over the traffic noise;as a result, instead of copying the sweetnotes of the s, young birds were copying the sounds they heard most often, namely car horns andbeeping cellphones!1. According to the passage, birds recognize their mates by ________.A. using their own wordsB. listening to their soundsC. looking at their appearancesD. singing the same songs 2. What kind of calls might a young bird make most often according to the passage?A. Flight calls. B. Alarm calls.C. Begging calls. D. Warning calls.3. The story of Mr.Bullfinch suggests that ________.A. young birds learn to sing from whom they live together withB. birds only learn how to sing from the same speciesC. it's not easy for birds to teach young birds songsD. a canary's song is more beautiful than a bullfinch's4. From the last paragraph we know that ________.A. traffic noise makes young birds become deafB. birds in the city can sing as sweetly as those in the wildC. birds in the city recognize their mates mainly by sightD. noise pollution causes much trouble for birds in the city5. What can we infer from the passage?A. The eyesight of songbirds is very poor in most cases.B. There's no brain activity when a bird is sleeping.C. Birds have something in common with humans in terms of communication.D. Different songbirds usually develop the same song patterns.