Ieltsfever com Academic Reading Practice Test 37



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Academic
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Practice Test
37
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Going bananas 
The banana is among the world’s oldest crops. Agricultural scientists believe that the 
first edible banana was discovered around 10,000 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 card Musa 
acuminata, contains a mass of hard seeds that make the fruit virtually inedible. But now-
and-then, hunter-gatherers must have discovered rare mutant plants that produced 
seamless, 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 
chromosome instead of the usual two. This imbalance prevents seeds and pollens from 
developing normally, rendering the mutant plants sterile. And that is why some 
scientists believe the worst – the most popular fruit could be doomed. It lacks the 
genetic diversity to fight off pests and diseases that are invading the banana plantations 
of Central America and 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 International Network for the Improvement of Banana and 
Plaintain in Montpellier, France. The state of the banana, Frison warns, can teach a 
broader lesson: the increasing standardization of food crops around the world is 
threatening their ability to adapt and survive. 
The first Stone Age plant breeders 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. Traditional 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 the evolving response to disease – and far more genetic resources to draw 
on in the face of an attack. 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 standardized crops. Should these efforts falter, yields of even the 
most productive crop could swiftly crash. “When some pests or disease comes along 
severe epidemics can occur,” says Geoff Hawtin, director of the Rome-based 
International Plant Genetic Resources Institute. 

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