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Traditional Farming System in Africa
A. By tradition land in Luapula is not owned by individuals, but as in many other parts of Africa is allocated by the headman or head
woman of a village to people of either sex, according to need. Since land is generally prepared by hand, one ulupwa cannot take on a
very large area; in this sense, the land has not been a limiting resource over large parts of the province. The situation has already
changed near the main townships, and there has long been a scarcity of land for cultivation in the Valley. In these areas registered
ownership patterns are becoming prevalent.
B. Most of the traditional cropping in Luapula, as in the Bemba area to the east, is based on citemene, a system whereby crops are
grown on the ashes of tree branches. As a rule, entire trees are not felled but are pollarded so that they can regenerate. Branches are
cut over an area of varying size early in the dry season and stacked to dry over a rough circle about a fifth to a tenth of the pollarded
area, The wood is fired before the rains and in the first year planted with the African cereal finger millet (Eleusine coracane).
C. During the second season, and possibly for a few seasons more the area is planted to variously mixed combinations of annuals such
as maize, pumpkins (Telfiria occidentalis) and other cucurbits, sweet potatoes, groundnuts, Phaseolus beans and various leafy
vegetables, grown with a certain amount of rotation. The diverse sequence ends with vegetable cassava, which is often planted into the
developing last-but-one crop as a relay.
D. Richards (1969) observed that the practice of citemene entails a definite division of labour between men and women. A man stakes
out a plot in an unobtrusive manner since it is considered provocative towards one’s neighbours to mark boundaries in an explicit way.
The dangerous work of felling branches is the men’s province and involves much pride. Branches are stacked by the women and fired by
the men. Formerly women and men cooperated in the planting work, but the harvesting was always done by the women. At the
beginning of the cycle little weeding is necessary, since the firing of the branches effectively destroys weeds. As the cycle progresses
weeds increase and nutrients eventually become depleted to a point where further effort with annual crops is judged to be not
worthwhile: at this point the cassava is planted, since it can produce a crop on nearly exhausted soil. Thereafter the plot is abandoned,
and a new area pollarded for the next citemene cycle.E. When the forest is not available — this is increasingly the case nowadays — various ridging systems (ibala) are built on small areas, to
be planted with combinations of maize, beans, groundnuts and sweet potatoes, usually relayed with cassava. These plots are usually
tended by women, and provide subsistence. Where their roots have year-round access to water tables mango, guava and oil-palm trees
often grow around houses, forming a traditional agroforestry system. In season some of the fruit is sold by the roadside or in local
markets.
E. The margins of dambos are sometimes planted to local varieties of rice during the rainy season, and areas adjacent to vegetables
inrigated with water from the dambo during the dry season. The extent of cultivation is very limited, no doubt because the growing of
crops under dambo conditions calls for a great deal of skill. Near towns, some of the vegetable produce is sold in local markets.
G. Fishing has long provided a much-needed protein supplement to the diet of Luapulans, as well as being the one substantial source
of cash. Much fish has dried for sale to areas away from the main waterways. The Mweru and Bangweulu Lake Basins are the main
areas of year-round fishing, but the Luapula River is also exploited during the latter part of the dry season. Several previously
abundant and desirable species, such as the Luapula salmon or mpumbu (Labeo altivelis) and pale (Sarotherodon machochir) have all
but disappeared from Lake Mweru, apparently due to mismanagement.
H. Fishing has always been a far more remunerative activity in Luapula that crop husbandry. A fisherman may earn more in a week than
a bean or maize grower in a whole season. I sometimes heard claims that the relatively high earnings to be obtained from fishing
induced an ‘easy come, easy go’ outlook among Luapulan men. On the other hand, someone who secures good but erratic earnings may
feel that their investment in economically productive activity is not worthwhile because Luapulans fail to cooperate well in such
activities. Besides, a fisherman with spare cash will find little in the way of working equipment to spend his money on. Better spend
one’s money in the bars and have a good time!
I. Only small numbers of cattle or oxen are kept in the province owing to the prevalence of the tsetse fly. For the few herds, the
dambos provide subsistence grazing during the dry season. The absence of animal draft power greatly limits peoples’ ability to plough
and cultivate land: a married couple can rarely manage to prepare by hand-hoeing. Most people keep freely roaming chickens and goats.
These act as a reserve for bartering, but may also be occasionally slaughtered for ceremonies or for entertaining important visitors.
These animals are not a regular part of most peoples’ diet.J. Citemene has been an ingenious system for providing people with seasonal production of high-quality cereals and vegetables in
regions of acid, heavily leached soils. Nutritionally, the most serious deficiency was that of protein. This could at times be alleviated
when fish was available, provided that cultivators lived near the Valley and could find the means of bartering for dried fish. The
citemene/fishing system was well adapted to the ecology of the miombo regions and sustainable for long periods, but only as long as
the human population densities stayed at low levels. Although population densities are still much lower than in several countries of
South-East Asia, neither the fisheries nor the forests and woodlands of Luapula are capable, with unmodified traditional practices, of
supporting the people in a sustainable manner.
Overall, people must learn to intensity and diversify their productive systems while yet ensuring that these systems will remain
productive in the future when even more people will need food. Increasing overall production of food, though a vast challenge in itself,
will not be enough, however: At the same time, storage and distribution systems must allow everyone accesses to at least a moderate
share of the total.
Questions 1-4
Complete the sentences below.
‘Write NO MORE THAN TWO WORDS for each answer.
1. In Luapula land allocation is in accordance with.
2. The citemene system provides the land with .
3. During the second season, the last planted crop is
4. Under suitable conditions, fruit trees are planted near.
. where crops are planted.
‘ions 5-8
Que:
Classify the following items with the correct description.
A fish
B oxen
C goatsBe used in some unusual occasions, such as celebrations.
Cannot thrive for being affected by the pests.
Be the largest part of creating profit.
Be sold beyond the local area.
Pare
Questions 9-12
Do the following statements agree with the information given
Reading Passage 1?
nation
TRUE if the statement agrees with the infc
FALSE if the statement contradicts the information
NOT GIVEN _ if there is no information on this
9. People rarely use animals to cultivate the land.
10. When it is a busy time, children usually took part in the labor force.
11. The local residents eat goats on a regular time.
12, Though citemene has been a sophisticated system, it could not provide enough protein.
Question 15
Choose the correct letter, A, B, C or D.
What is the writer's opinion about the traditional ways of practices?
A They can supply the nutrition that people need.
B_ They are not capable of providing adequate support to the population.
C They are productive systems that need no more improving.
D_ They will be easily modified in the fatureCan we call it “ART”
Life-Casting and Art
A. When these life-castings were made in the 19th century, no one thought of them as art. But, if critics today can hail Tracey Emin’s
unmade bed and the lights going off and on in a gallery as masterpieces of some kind, then shouldn't these more skillful and
profoundly strange works have a greater claim on our attention?
B. Art changes over time; what is art changes, too. Objects intended for devotional, ritualistic or recreational use are re-categorised, by
latecomers from another civilisation who no longer respond to these original purposes. Where would New Yorker cartoon be without
Lascaux gags in which one bison-painter makes anachronistically “artistic” remarks to another” What also happens is that techniques
and crafts judged non-artistic at the time are reassessed?
C. In the 19th century, life-casting was to sculpture what photography was to painting; and both were viewed as cheating short-cuts by
the senior arts. Their virtues — of speed and unwavering realism — also implied their limitations; they left little or no room for the
imagination. For many, life-casting was an insult to the sculptor’s creative gesture; in a famous lawsuit of 1834, a moulder whose mask
of the dying Napoleon had been reproduced and sold without his permission, was judged to have no rights in the image — in other
words, he was specifically held not to be an artist. Rodin said of life-casting: “It happens fast, but it doesn’t make art.” Others feared
that the whole canon of aesthetics might be blown off course if too much nature was allowed in, it would lead art away from its proper
pursuit of the ideal.
D. Gauguin, at the end of the century, worried about future developments in photography: if ever the process went into colour, what
painter would labour away at a likeness with a brush made from squirrel-tail? But painting has proved robust. Photography changed it,
of course, just as the novel had to reassess narrative after the arrival of the cinema. But the gap between the senior and junior arts was
always narrower than the die-hards implied: painters have always used technical back-up — studio assistants to do the boring bits,
cameras Lucida and Obscura; while apparently lesser crafts involve great skill, thought, preparation, choice, and — depending on howwe define it — imagination. Life-casting was complex, technical work, as Benjamin Robert Haydon discovered when he poured 250 litres
of plaster over his black model Wilson and nearly killed him.
E. Time changes our view in another way, too. Each new art movement implies a reassessment of what has gone before; what is done
now alters what was done before. In some cases, this is merely self-serving, with the new is using the old to justify itself: Look how all
of that points to this; aren’t we clever to be the culmination of all that has gone before? But usually it is a matter of re-alerting the
sensibility, reminding us not to take things for granted; every so often we need the aesthetic equivalent of a cataract operation. So
there are many items in this show — innocent bit-players back in the last half of the 19th century — which would sit happily nowadays in
a commercial or public gallery. Many curators would probably put in for the stunning cast of the hand of a giant from Barnum’s circus.
F. The initial impact is on the eye, in the contradiction (which Mueck constantly exploits) between unexpected size and extreme
verisimilitude. Next, the human element kicks in: you note that the nails are dirt-encrusted — unless this is the caster’s decorative
addition — and the paddy fingertips extend far beyond them. (Was the giant an anxious gnawer, or does giantism mean that the flesh
simply outgrows the nails?) Then you take in the element of choice, arrangement, art if you like — the neat, pleated, buttoned sleeve
end that gives the item balance and variation of texture. This is just a moulded hand, yet the part stands utterly for the whole: and, as
an item on public display, it reminds us, slyly, poignantly, of the full-size original who in his time was just as much a victim of gawping.
We are not a long way from Degas’s La Petite Danseuse (which, after all, one critic said should be in the Dupuytren pathology
museum); though we are nearer to contemporary art that lazily gets called cutting-edge.
G. Barthes proclaimed the death of the author, the liberation of the text from authorial intention, and the consequent empowerment
of the reader; he announced this, needless to say, in a text written with a particular intention in order to communicate something very
specific to a reader, An own goal of Keith Weller proportions. But what doesn't work for literature works much better for art. Pictures
do float free of their creators’ intentions; over time, the “reader” does become more powerful. Few of us can look at a medieval
altarpiece as its painter “intended”, we believe too little and aesthetically know too much, so we recreate, we find new fields of
pleasure in the work. Equally, the lack of artistic intention of Paul Richer and other forgotten craftsmen who brushed oil on to flesh,
who moulded, cast, decorated and primped a century and more ago is now irrelevant.H. What counts is the surviving object and our living response to it. The tests are simple: does it interest the eye, excite the brain,
move the mind to reflection, and involve the heart; further, is an apparent level of skill involved? Much currently fashionable art
bothers only the eye and briefly the brain, but it fails to engage the mind or the heart. It may, to use the old dichotomy, be beautiful,
but it is rarely true to any significant depth. One of the constant pleasures of art is its ability to come at us from an unexpected angle
and stop us short in wonder. That is what many of the objects in this show do. The Ataxic Venus doesn't make Ron Mueck’s Dead Dad
any less intense and moving an image; but she does offer herself as a companion, precursor, and, yes, rival.
Questions 14-18
The Reading Passage has seven paragraphs A-H.
Which paragraph contains the following information?
Write the correct letter, AH.
14, Technicians do boring work
15. A trial on a famous figure’s mask in the 19th century
16. The intention from the author is claimed matters in Art
17. How to assess an art
18. Detailed depiction of an earlier work
Questions 19-24
Do the following statements agree with the information given in Reading Passage 2?
YES if the statement is true
NO if the statement is false
NOT GIVEN if the information is not given in the passage
19. The intention of using artistic objects will change as time pass.
20. In the 19th century, people appreciate the fast speed and realism of living casting.21, Rodin indicated that slow pace would improve the artistic quality of the casting.
22. The importance of painting dropped as the development of photographs.
ng
24, Emerge of new art makes people recognise the meaning of art again.
23, Lifecasting requires less skill a
d cost than pai
Questions 25-26
Choose the correct letter, A, B, C or D.
25. Why the hand of a giant from Barnum’s circus attract people’s attent
A details and the human element
B size and realism
C texture and color
a
ima; tion and intuition
26. What requirement does it depend on when judging if a
object is “art”?
A audience status
B fresh or old condition
C lasting period
D_ public resp.
n the first plaHoney bees in trouble
Can native pollinators fill the gap?
A. Recently, ominous headlines have described a mysterious ailment, colony collapse disorder (CCD), that is wiping out the honeybees that pollinate
many crops. Without honeybees, the story goes, fields will be sterile, economies will collapse, and food will be scarce.
B. But what few accounts acknowledge is that what's at risk is not itself a natural state of affairs. For one thing, in the United States, where CCD was
first reported and has had its greatest impacts, honeybees are not a native species. Pollination in modern agriculture isn’t alchemy, it’s industry. The total
number of hives involved in the US. pollination industry has been somewhere between 2.5 million and $ million in recent years. Meanwhile, American
farmers began using large quantities of organophosphate insecticides, planted large-scale crop monocultures, and adopted “clean farming” practices that
scrubbed native vegetation from field margins and roadsides. These practices killed many native bees outright — they're as vulnerable to insecticides as an
agricultural pest ~ and made the agricultural landscape inhospitable to those that remained. Concern about these practices and their effects on
pollinators isn't new ~ in her 1962 ecological alarm cry Silent Spring, Rachel Carson warned of a ‘Fruitless Fall’ that could result from the disappearance
of insect pollinators.
C. If that Fruitless Fall” has not-yet-occurred, it may be largely thanks to the honeybee, which farmers turned to as the ability of wild pollinators to
service crops declined. The honeybee has been semi-domesticated since the time of the ancient Egyptians, but it wasn't just familiarity that determined
this choice: the bees’ biology is in many ways suited to the kind of agricultural system that was emerging. For example, honeybee hives can be closed up
and moved out of the way when pesticides are applied to a field. The bees are generalist pollinators, so they can be used to pollinate many different crops.
And although they are not the most efficient pollinator of every crop, honeybees have strength in numbers, with 20,000 to 100,000 bees living in a single
hive. “Without a doubt, if there was one bee you wanted for agriculture, it would be the honeybee,” says Jim Cane, of the US. Department of
Agriculture. The honeybee, in other words, has become a crucial cog in the moder system of industrial agriculture. That system delivers more food, and
more kinds of it, to more places, more cheaply than ever before. But that system is also vulnerable, because making a farm field into the photosynthetic
equivalent of a factory floor, and pollination into a series of continent-long assembly lines, also leaches out some of the resilience characteristics of
natural ecosystems.
D. Breno Freitas, an agronomist, pointed out that in nature such a high degree of specialization usually is a very dangerous game: it works well while all
the rest is in equilibrium, but runs quickly to extinction at the least disbalance. In effect, by developing an agricultural system that is heavily reliant on a
single pollinator species, we humans have become riskily overspecialized. And when the human-honeybee relationship is disrupted, as it has been by
colony collapse disorder, the vulnerability of that agricultural system begins to become clear.E. In fact, a few wild bees are already being successfully managed for crop pollination. “The problem is trying to provide native bees inadequate numbers
on a reliable basis in a fairly short number of years in order to service the crop,” Jim Cane says. “You're talking millions of flowers per acre in a two-to
three-week time frame, or less, for a lot of crops.” On the other hand, native bees can be much more efficient pollinators of certain crops than honeybees,
so you don't need as many to do the job. For example, about 750 blue orchard bees (Osmia lignaria) can pollinate a hectare of apples or almonds, a task
that would require roughly 50,000 to 150,000 honeybees. There are bee tinkerers engaged in similar work in many corners of the world. In Brazil, Breno
Freitas has found that Centris tarsata, the native pollinator of wild cashew, can survive in commercial cashew orchards if growers provide a source of
floral oils, such as by interplanting their cashew trees with a Caribbean cherry.
E_ In certain places, native bees may already be doing more than they're getting credit for. Ecologist Rachael Winfree recently led a team that looked at
pollination of four summer crops (tomato, watermelon, peppers, and muskmelon) at 29 farms in the region of New Jersey and Pennsylvania. Winfree’s
team identified 54 species of wild bees that visited these crops, and found that wild bees were the most important pollinators in the system: even though
managed honeybees were present on many of the farms, wild bees were responsible for 62 percent of flower visits in the study. In another study focusing
specifically on watermelon, Winfree and her colleagues calculated that native bees alone could provide sufficient pollination at 90 percent of the 28
farms studied. By contrast, honeybees alone could provide sufficient pollination at only 78 percent of farms.
“The region I work in is not typical of the way most food is produced,” Winfree admits. In the Delaware Valley, most farms and farm fields are
relatively small, each farmer typically grows a variety of crops, and farms are interspersed with suburbs and other types of land use which means there
are opportunities for homeowners to get involved in bee conservation, too. The landscape is a bee-friendly patchwork that provides a variety of nesting
habitat and floral resources distributed among different kinds of crops, weedy field margins, fallow fields, suburban neighborhoods, and semi-natural
habitat like old woodlots, all at a relatively small scale. In other words, “pollinator-friendly” farming practices would not only aid pollination of
agricultural crops, but also serve as a key element in the overall conservation strategy for wild pollinators, and often aid other wild species as well.
HL Of course, not all farmers will be able to implement all of these practices. And researchers are suggesting a shift to a kind of polyglot agricultural
system. For some small-scale farms, native bees may indeed be all that’s needed. For larger operations, a suite of managed bee — with honeybees filling
the generalist role and other, native bees pollinating specific crops — could be augmented by free pollination services from resurgent wild pollinators. In
other words, they're saying, we still have an opportunity to replace a risky monoculture with something diverse, resilient, and robust.Questions 27-30
Do the following statements agree with the claims of the writer in Reading Passage 3?
YES if the statement agrees with the claims of the writer
NO f the statement contradicts the cl:
NOT GIVEN _ if it is impossible to say what the writer thi
27. In the United States, farmers use honeybees on a large scale over the past few years.
28. Cleaning farming practices would be harmful to farmers’ health.
. The blue orchard bee is the most efficient pollinator among native bees for every crop.
30. It is beneficial to other local creatures to protect native bees.
Questions 31-35
Choose the correct letter, A, B, C or D.
31. The example of the “Fruitless Fall” underlines the write
A. needs for using pesticides.
B_ impacts of losing insect pollinators.
C vulnerabilities of native bees.
D_ benefits in building more pollination industries.
point about
82. Why can honeybees adapt to the modern agricultural system?
A. the honeybees can pollinate more crops efficiently
B_ The bees are semi-domesticated since ancient times.
C Honeybee hives can be protected away from pesticides.
D The ability of wild pollinators using to serve crops declines.
33. The writer mentions factories and assembly lines to illustrate
A. one drawback of the industrialised agricultural system.
B_a low cost in modern agriculture.
C the role of honeybees in pollination
D_ what a high yield of industrial agriculture.34. In the 6th paragraph, Winfree’s exp
A_ honeybee can pollinate various crops.
B_ there are many types of wild bees as the pollinators.
C the wild bees can increase the yield to a higher percentage
D_ wild bees work more efficiently as a pollinator than honey bees in certain cases
iment proves that
35. What does the writer want to suggest in the last paragraph?
A. the importance of honey bees in pollination
B adoption of different bees in various sizes of the agricultural system
C the comparison between the intensive and the rarefied agricultural system
D_ the reason why farmers can rely on native pollinators
Questions 36-40
Complete each sentence with the correct ending, A-E.
Write the correct letter, A-E
86. The headline of colony collapse disorder states that
37. Viewpoints of Freitas manifest that
38. Examples of blue orchard bees have shown that
39. Centris tarsata is mentioned to exemplify that
40. One finding of the research in Delaware Valley is that
A. native pollinators can survive when a specific plant is supplied.
it would
B ause severe consequences both to commerce and agriculture.
C honey bees can not be bred.
D_ some agricultural landscapes are favorable in supporting wild bees.
Ea large scale of honey bees are needed to pollinate.
F an agricultural system is fragile when relying on a single pollinator