[外语类试卷]雅思(阅读)历年真题试卷汇编8及答案与解析.doc
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1、雅思(阅读)历年真题试卷汇编 8及答案与解析 0 You should spend about 20 minutes on Questions 1-13 which are based on Reading Passage 1 below. Going Bananas The worlds favourite fruit could disappear forever in 10 yearstime. The banana is among the worlds oldest crops. Agricultural scientists believe that the first edibl
2、e banana was discovered around ten thousand years ago. It has been at an evolutionary standstill ever since it was first propagated in the jungles of South-East Asia at the end of the last ice age. Normally the wild banana, a giant jungle herb called Musa acuminata, contains a mass of hard seeds tha
3、t make the fruit virtually inedible. But now and then, hunter-gatherers must have discovered rare mutant plants that produced seedless, edible fruits. Geneticists now know that the vast majority of these soft-fruited plants resulted from genetic accidents that gave their cells three copies of each c
4、hromosome instead of the usual two. This imbalance prevents seeds and pollen from developing normally, rendering the mutant plants sterile. And that is why some scientists believe the worlds most popular fruit could be doomed. It lacks the genetic diversity to fight off pests and diseases that are i
5、nvading the banana plantations of Central America and the smallholdings of Africa and Asia alike. In some ways, the banana today resembles the potato before blight brought famine to Ireland a century and a half ago. But it holds a lesson for other crops, too, says Emile Frison, top banana at the Int
6、ernational Network for the Improvement of Banana and Plantain in Montpellier, France. The state of the banana, Frison warns, can teach a broader lesson: the increasing standardisation of food crops round the world is threatening their ability to adapt and survive. The first Stone Age plant breeders
7、cultivated these sterile freaks by replanting cuttings from their stems. And the descendants of those original cuttings are the bananas we still eat today. Each is a virtual clone, almost devoid of genetic diversity. And that uniformity makes it ripe for disease like no other crop on Earth. Traditio
8、nal varieties of sexually reproducing crops have always had a much broader genetic base, and the genes will recombine in new arrangements in each generation. This gives them much greater flexibility in evolving responses to disease and far more genetic resources to draw on in the face of an attack.
9、But that advantage is fading fast, as growers increasingly plant the same few, high-yielding varieties. Plant breeders work feverishly to maintain resistance in these standardised crops. Should these efforts falter, yields of even the most productive crop could swiftly crash. “When some pest or dise
10、ase comes along, severe epidemics can occur, “ says Geoff Hawtin, director of the Rome-based International Plant Genetic Resources Institute. The banana is an excellent case in point. Until the 1950s, one variety, the Gros Michel, dominated the worlds commercial banana business. Found by French bota
11、nists in Asia in the 1820s, the Gros Michel was by all accounts a fine banana, richer and sweeter than todays standard banana and without the latters bitter aftertaste when green. But it was vulnerable to a soil fungus that produced a wilt known as Panama disease. “Once the fungus gets into the soil
12、 it remains there for many years. There is nothing farmers can do. Even chemical spraying wont get rid of it,“ says Rodomiro Ortiz, director of the International Institute for Tropical Agriculture in Ibadan, Nigeria. So plantation owners played a running game, abandoning infested fields and moving t
13、o “clean“ land until they ran out of clean land in the 1950s and had to abandon the Gros Michel. Its successor, and still the reigning commercial king, is the Cavendish banana, a 19th-century British discovery from southern China. The Cavendish is resistant to Panama disease and, as a result, it lit
14、erally saved the international banana industry. During the 1960s, it replaced the Gros Michel on supermarket shelves. If you buy a banana today, it is almost certainly a Cavendish. But even so, it is a minority in the worlds banana crop. Half a billion people in Asia and Africa depend on bananas. Ba
15、nanas provide the largest source of calories and are eaten daily. Its name is synonymous with food. But the day of reckoning may be coming for the Cavendish and its indigenous kin. Another fungal disease, black Sigatoka, has become a global epidemic since its first appearance in Fiji in 1963. Left t
16、o itself, black Sigatoka which causes brown wounds on leaves and premature fruit ripening cuts fruit yields by 50 to 70 per cent and reduces the productive lifetime of banana plants from 30 years to as little as 2 or 3. Commercial growers keep Sigatoka at bay by a massive chemical assault. Forty spr
17、ayings of fungicide a year is typical. But even so, diseases such as black Sigatoka are getting more and more difficult to control. “As soon as you bring in a new fungicide, they develop resistance,“ says Frison. “One thing we can be sure of is that the Sigatoka wont lose in this battle.“ Poor farme
18、rs, who cannot afford chemicals, have it even worse. They can do little more than watch their plants die. “Most of the banana fields in Amazonia have already been destroyed by the disease,“ says Luadir Gasparotto, Brazils leading banana pathologist with the government research agency EMBRAPA. Produc
19、tion is likely to fall by 70 per cent as the disease spreads, he predicts. The only option will be to find a new variety. But how? Almost all edible varieties are susceptible to the diseases, so growers cannot simply change to a different banana. With most crops, such a threat would unleash an army
20、of breeders, scouring the world for resistant relatives whose traits they can breed into commercial varieties. Not so with the banana. Because all edible varieties are sterile, bringing in new genetic traits to help cope with pests and diseases is nearly impossible. Nearly, but not totally. Very rar
21、ely, a sterile banana will experience a genetic accident that allows an almost normal seed to develop, giving breeders a tiny window for improvement. Breeders at the Honduran Foundation of Agricultural Research have tried to exploit this to create disease-resistant varieties. Further backcrossing wi
22、th wild bananas yielded a new seedless banana resistant to both black Sigatoka and Panama disease. Neither Western supermarket consumers nor peasant growers like the new hybrid. Some accuse it of tasting more like an apple than a banana. Not surprisingly, the majority of plant breeders have until no
23、w turned their backs on the banana and got to work on easier plants. And commercial banana companies are now washing their hands of the whole breeding effort, preferring to fund a search for new fungicides instead. “We supported a breeding programme for 40 years, but it wasnt able to develop an alte
24、rnative to Cavendish. It was very expensive and we got nothing back,“ says Ronald Romero, head of research at Chiquita, one of the Big Three companies that dominate the international banana trade. Last year, a global consortium of scientists led by Frison announced plans to sequence the banana genom
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