首页
外语
计算机
考研
公务员
职业资格
财经
工程
司法
医学
专升本
自考
实用职业技能
登录
外语
You should spend about 20 minutes on Questions 15-27, which are based on Reading Passage 2 below. NAT
You should spend about 20 minutes on Questions 15-27, which are based on Reading Passage 2 below. NAT
admin
2014-12-30
23
问题
You should spend about 20 minutes on Questions 15-27, which are based on Reading Passage 2 below.
NATURAL CHOICE
Coffee and chocolate
What’s the connection between your morning coffee, wintering North American birds and the cool shade of a tree? Actually, quite a lot, says Simon Birch.
When scientists from London’s Natural History Museum descended on the coffee farms of the tiny Central American republic of El Salvador, they were astonished to find such diversity of insect and plant species. During 18 months’ work on 12 farms, they found a third more species of parasitic wasp than are known to exist in the whole country of Costa Rica. They described four new species and are aware of a fifth. On 24 farms they found nearly 300 species of tree — when they had expected to find about 100.
El Salvador has lost much of its natural forest, with coffee farms covering nearly 10% of the country. Most of them use the ’shade-grown’ method of production, which utilises a semi-natural forest ecosystem. Alex Munro, the museum’s botanist on the expedition, says, ’Our findings amazed our insect specialist. There’s a very sophisticated food web present. The wasps, for instance, may depend on specific species of tree.’
It’s the same the world over. Species diversity is much higher where coffee is grown in shade conditions. In addition, coffee(and chocolate)is usually grown in tropical rainforest regions that are biodiversity hotspots. ’These habitats support up to 70% of the planet’s plant and animal species, and so the production methods of cocoa and coffee can have a hugely significant impact,’ explains Dr. Paul Donald of the Royal Society for the Protection of Birds.
So what does ’shade-grown’ mean, and why is it good for wildlife? Most of the world’s coffee is produced by poor farmers in the developing world. Traditionally they have grown coffee(and cocoa)under the shade of selectively thinned tracts of rain forest in a genuinely sustainable form of farming. Leaf fall from the canopy provides a supply of nutrients and acts as a mulch that suppresses weeds. The insects that live in the canopy pollinate the cocoa and coffee and prey on pests. The trees also provide farmers with fruit and wood for fuel.
’Bird diversity in shade-grown coffee plantations rivals that found in natural forests in the same region,’ says Robert Rice from the Smithsonian Migratory Bird Center. In Ghana, West Africa, — one of the world’s biggest producers of cocoa — 90% of the cocoa is grown under shade, and these forest plantations are a vital habitat for wintering European migrant birds. In the same way, the coffee forests of Central and South America are a refuge for wintering North American migrants.
More recently, a combination of the collapse in the world market for coffee and cocoa and a drive to increase yields by producer countries has led to huge swathes of shade-grown coffee and cocoa being cleared to make way for a highly intensive, monoculture pattern of production known as ’full sun’. But this system not only reduces the diversity of flora and fauna, it also requires huge amounts of pesticides and fertilisers. In Cote d’lvoire, which produces more than half the world’s cocoa, more than a third of the crop is now grown in full-sun conditions.
The loggers have been busy in the Americas too, where nearly 70% of all Colombian coffee is now produced using full-sun production. One study carried out in Colombia and Mexico found that, compared with shade coffee, full-sun plantations have 95%)fewer species of birds.
In El Salvador, Alex Munro says shade-coffee farms have a cultural as well as ecological significance and people are not happy to see them go. But the financial pressures are great, and few of these coffee farms make much money. ’One farm we studied, a cooperative of 100 families, made just $10,000 a year — $100 per family — and that’s not taking labour costs into account.’
The loss of shade-coffee forests has so alarmed a number of North American wildlife organisations that they’re now harnessing consumer power to help save these threatened habitats. They are promoting a ’certification’ system that can indicate to consumers that the beans have been grown on shade plantations. Bird-friendly coffee, for instance, is marketed by the Smithsonian Migratory Bird Centre. The idea is that the small extra cost is passed directly on to the coffee farmers as a financial incentive to maintain their shade-coffee farms.
Not all conservationists agree with such measures, however. Some say certification could be leading to the loss — not preservation — of natural forests. John Rappole of the Smithsonian Conservation and Research Centre, for example, argues that shade-grown marketing provides ’an incentive to convert existing areas of primary forest that are too remote or steep to be converted profitably to other forms of cultivation into shade-coffee plantations’.
Other conservationists, such as Stacey Philpott and colleagues, argue the case for shade coffee. But there are different types of shade growing. Those used by subsistence farmers are virtually identical to natural forest(and have a corresponding diversity), while systems that use coffee plants as the understorey and cacao or citrus trees as the overstorey may be no more diverse than full-sun farms. Certification procedures need to distinguish between the two, and Ms. Philpott argues that as long as the process is rigorous and offers financial gains to the producers, shade growing does benefit the environment.
Questions 15-19
Do the following statements agree with the information given in Reading Passage 2?
In boxes 15-19 on your answer sheet, write
TRUE if the statement agrees with the information
FALSE if the statement contradicts the information
NOT GIVEN if there is no information on this
Farmers in El Salvador who have tried both methods prefer shade-grown plantations.
选项
A、TRUE
B、FALSE
C、NOT GIVEN
答案
C
解析
Paragraph 4 mentions farmers and shade plantations, but there is no reference to farmers trying both.
转载请注明原文地址:https://jikaoti.com/ti/RGEYFFFM
本试题收录于:
雅思阅读题库雅思(IELTS)分类
0
雅思阅读
雅思(IELTS)
相关试题推荐
IfintegersMandNarepositiveandhavethesamedigits,butinreverseorder,whichofthefollowingCANNOTbethedifference
Whichofthefollowingintegercanbeexpressedastheproductoffourdifferentintegersbetween-5and4,inclusive?
Witkinsrightlyarguesthatpopulationmaybedeemedavalidsustainabledevelopmentindicator—thatsustainabilitycanonly
Mistierbecametheagency’s______,andhecontinuedassuchnotbecauseofhislargenumberofsharesinthecompanybutbecause
Peopleworshipcapital,adoreitsaura,______beforePorschesandTokyolandvalues.
African-Americanfilmmakersshouldbeinanenviableposition,forsincetheearly1990stherehasbeenasteadywaveof
Thepresenteconomyremainsdependentonamassiveinwardflowofnaturalresourcesthatincludesvastamountsofnon-ren
Researchershavemadesignificanttechnologicalprogresstowardincreasingtheamountofplasticthatplantscangrowand
Wedidnotdiscoverthathisapprehensionconcerningourhypothesiswas______untilwellafterward,followingaseriesofrigorou
ThispassageisadaptedfromTheAmericanRepublic:Constitution,Tendencies,andDestinybyO.A.Brownson,1866.Thean
随机试题
A、Watermightbecomecleanandpure.B、Peoplewillliveinabetterenvironment.C、Therewillbenopolicetoprotectpeople.D、
下列哪项不是上消化道出血最常见的病因
慢性肾小球肾炎必有的表现是
患者,女,30岁。自觉腹痛绵绵,时作时止,喜温喜按,伴形寒肢冷,神疲乏力,气短懒言,面色无华,大便溏薄,舌质淡,苔薄白,脉沉细。该患者进行辨证论治时,其治法为
集料压碎值越大,集料抵抗压碎能力()。
方形补偿器安装时需预拉伸,对于输送介质温度为250~4000℃时,拉伸量为计算伸长量的()。
自然保护区的核心区,不允许进入从事科学研究活动。()
2017年4月20日19时41分,天舟二号货运飞船在文昌航天发射中心由长征七号遥二运载火箭发射。()
若xf″(x)+3x[f′(x)]2=1-ex且f′(0)=0,f″(x)在x=0连续,则下列正确的是
A、About4,000yearsago.B、About3,000yearsago.C、About2,000yearsago.D、About1,000yearsago.A录音只提到一个年代,即“2,000B.C.”,听到这
最新回复
(
0
)