Test 3
Test 3
You should spend about 20 minutes on Questions 1-13, which are based on Reading
Passage 1 on pages 2 and 3
Pepper, the spice, comes from the berries of a plant that is a woody climbing vine. In the
botanical world, pepper belongs to a genus of plants called Piper. This genus was
created in 1753 by Carl Linnaeus, the Swedish botanist whose system for classifying
plants is still in use today. He placed seventeen species in the piper genus and probably
used the ancient Greek name for black pepper, Peperi, as the basis for the group.
Pepper isn't a fast-maturing plant. It takes several years for the branching woody vines to
mature, and during their growth the vines can reach up to thirty feet. The pepper berries-
which grow in clusters and dangle from the vines-are picked by hand when they are
ready for harvesting, which usually begins two or three years after the vine is first
planted. Black pepper is picked when the berries are still green, while white pepper is
picked later, when the berries have turned from green to red. Preparing the berries for
sale involves a lengthy process of drying, cleaning and sorting. Once the berries have
been dried, they are then referred to as peppercorns, and these are what are used in
food preparation around the world.
The pepper plant loves the warm, humid, rainy tropics, in a narrow band around the
equator. Pepper also requires well-drained soils, and its preferred habitat is forests.
Unshaded plants which are exposed too long to the sun will not yield many berries. The
colourful mixes of whole peppercorns seen in many markets today contain green and
black peppercorns. Although there are pink peppercorns, the ripest berries, these are
more fragile and are therefore more costly than other kinds. This is why there are few of
them in a peppercorn mix.
No one knows when the first human bit into a peppercorn and decided it would taste
good on a piece of meat or in a vegetable stew, but in the West it was the ancient
Romans who apparently first made pepper an essential part of their meals. Food was
only part of the reason for pepper's popularity; health played an equally important role.
In the Roman Empire, pepper was employed to relieve the pain that was a common
consequence of numerous medical conditions and complaints. If you showed signs of
a fever, it was .. ...... on practice to be given a liquid that had some peppe ...... .
The Romans were not the first to embrace pepper as a medicine. Belief in the spice's
considerable usefulness is reflected in India's ancient Ayurvedic system of medicine,
which is more than three thousand years old. In Sanskrit (a language of ancient India),
black pepper is known as maricha or marica, meaning an ability to get rid of poison,
which suggests it was used in patients for this purpose. Pepper was also believed by the
Indians to have other qualities as well. For example, physicians would frequently apply
pepper-based lotions to reduce the effects of decay in teeth, which made it an extremely
popular remedy.
In the Middle Ages (5th-15th centuries) black peppers renown made it a must-have item
for the European wealthy, who loved the spice. At that time, pepper was guarded by
servants in royal households and kept in the private wardrobes of the rich. It was
considered a privilege to cook with pepper and many of the recipes from the period
called for substantial quantities of pepper, which might be considered very unappetising
today. But for most people, pepper was too expensive. In the year 1439, a pound of
pepper was roughly equal to more than two days' pay in England. Meanwhile, pepper
could be exchanged for gold, and also became a form of payment for peoples work. In
some of the larger cities, it was even possible to use pepper as rent in some kinds of
accommodation. Employees in the pepper industry were not allowed to have pockets in
their jackets or trousers so that this valuable commodity would not be stolen.
The huge demand for pepper and the money it could bring encouraged people to risk
adventure on foreign oceans and in foreign lands, and it is within this context that the story
of pepper really begins.
Questions 1-6
Do the following statements agree with the information given in Reading Passage 1
1 Carl Linnaeus method for categorising plants has been replaced by a better
one.
2 The ancient Greeks originally took the word for pepper from another language.
4 Pepper berries are riper than black pepper berries when they are picked.
below.
Choose ONE WORD ONLY from the passage for each answer.
Ancient Rome
India
• ..................................................................................................... in wealthy
households, pepper was stored in 11..............................................
• ......................... 12 written at that time required large amounts of pepper
• rent could be paid in the form of pepper in city areas
• people who worked with pepper had to wear clothes without 13 ............
to discourage theft
READING PASSAGE 2
You should spend about 20 minutes on Question 14-26, which are based on Reading
Passage 2 on pages 6 and 7
Australian parrots
and their adaptation to habitat change
A Parrots are found across the tropic and in all southern hemisphere continents except
Antarctica, but nowhere, do the display such a richness of diversity and form as in
Australia. One-sixth of the world's 345 parrot species are found there, and Australia has
long been renowned for the number and variety of its parrots.
B In the 16th century, the German cartographer Mercator made a world map that
included a place, somewhere near present-day Australia, that he named Terra
Psittacorum - the Land of Parrots - and the first European settles in Australia often
referred to the country as Parrot Land. In 1865, the celebrated British naturalist and
wildlife artist John Gould said: "No group of birds gives Australia so tropical and benign
an air as the numerous species of this great family by which it is tenanted.
C Parrots are descendants of an ancient line. Due to their great diversity, and since most
species inhabit Africa, Australia and South America, it seems almost certain that parrots
originated millions of years ago on the ancient southern continent of Gondwana, before it
broke up into the separate southern hemisphere continents we know today. Much of
Gondwana comprised vast rainforests intersected by huge slow-flowing rivers and
expansive lakes, but by eight million years ago, great changes were underway. The
centre of the continent of Australia had begun to dry out, and the rainforests that once
covered it gradually contracted to the continental margins, where, to a limited extent,
they still e'ist today.
D The creatures that remained in those shrinking rainforests had to adapt to the drier
conditions or face extinction. Reacting to these desperate circumstances, the parrot
family, typically found in jungles in other parts of the world, has populated some of
Australia's harshest environments. The parrots spread from ancestral forests through
eucalypt woodlands to colonies the central deserts of Australia, and as a consequence
they diversified into a wide range of species with adaptations that reflect the many
changes animals and plants had to make to survive in these areas.
E These evolutionary pressures helped mould keratin, the substance from which breaks
are made into a range of tools capable of gathering the new food types favored by
various species of parrot. The size of a parrot's short, blunt beak and the length of that
beak's do curved upper section are related to the type of food each species eats. Some
have comparatively long beaks that are perfect for extracting seeds from fruit; others
have broader and stronger beaks that are designed for cracking hard seeds.
F Differently shaped beaks ate not the only adaptations that have been made during the
developing relationship between parrots and their food plants. Like all of Australia's
many honey-eating birds, the rainbow-coloured lorikeets and the flowers on which they
feed have long co-evolved with features such as the shape and colour of the flowers
adapted to the bird's particular needs, and physical a example, red is the most attractive
colour to birds, and thus flowers which depend on birds for pollination are more often
red, and lorikeets' to gues have bristles which help them to collect as much pollen as
possible.
G Today, most of Australia's parrots inhabit woodland and open forest, arid their numbers
decline towards both deserts and wetter areas. The majority are nomadic to some degree,
moving around to take advantage of feeding and breeding places.
Two of the dry country parrots, the pink and grey galah and the pink, white and yellow
corella have expanded their ranges in recent years. They are among the species that
have adapted well to the changes brought about by European settlement forest telling
created grasslands where galahs and corellas thrive.
H But other parrot species did not fare so well when their environments were altered.
The clearing of large areas of rainforest is probable responsible for the disappearance of
the double-eyed fig parrot, and numbers of ground parrots declined when a great part of
their habitat was destroyed by the draining of coastal swamps. Even some parrot
species that benefited from forest clearing at first are now comforted by a shortage of
nesting sites due to further man-made changes.
I New conditions also sometimes favour an incoming species over one that originally
inhabited the area. For example, after farmers cleared large areas of forest on Kangaroo
Island off the coast of South Australia, the island was colonised by galahs. They were
soon going down holes and destroying black cockatoo eggs in order to take the hole for
their own use. Their success precipitated a partial collapse in the black cockatoo
population when the later lost the struggle for scarce nesting hollows.
14 An example of how one parrot species may survive at the expense of another
16 Example of two parrot species which benefited from changes to the environment
17 How the varied Australian landscape resulted in a great variety of parrot species
18 A reason why most parrot species are native to the southern hemisphere
19 An example of a parrot species which did not survive changes to its habitat
Questions 20 - 22
Parrots in Australia
There are 345 varieties of parrot in existence and, of these, 23 ...................... l ive in
recognized that parrots lived in that part of the world. 26 ....................... , the famous
painter of animals and birds, commented on the size and beauty of the Australian
parrot family.
READING PASSAGE 3
You should spend about 20 minutes on Questions 27-40, which are based on Reading
Passage on pages 10 and 11.
Insect-inspired robots
A recent conference reports on developments in biorobotics
A A tiny insect navigates its way across navigational aids. The landmarks are then
featureless salt-pans. A cockroach scaled, from small to large, so that the
successfully works out how to scramble robot can recognise whether it is getting
over an obstacle. The mantis shrimp closer to or further away from them. Their
scans its aquatic world through location is built into a map in its 'mind',
hyperspectral eyes. Using the most basic which operates at different scales and
of equipment and brains tinier than a instructs the robot whether to turn left or
pinhead, insects constantly solve complex right at a particular mark. The technology
problems of movement, vision and provides a general way for a machine to
navigation - processing data that would navigate an unknown landscape.
challenge a supercomputer. How they do
it is driving one of the most exciting new C For three decades, Professor Ruediger
,ields of technology - biomimetics and Wehner has journeyed from Switzerland
biorobotics, the imitation of insect systems to the Sahara desert w here Cataglyphis,
to control man-made machines. a tiny ant with a brain weighing just 0.1
Delegates at a recent conference mg, performs acts of navigational genius
presented some outcomes of their work in when it leaves its nest, forages for food
this area. and returns successfully. Cataglyphis
uses polarised light, caused when air
B Dr Alex Zelinsky suggested that the molecules scatter light, to orient and steer
method by which wasps use landmarks to itself. Wehner's team found the ant has a
find their way back to the nest may one set of specialised photoreceptors along
day be part of a system for navigating cars the upper rim of its eyes that detect
tha t'know' where to go. A research team polarised light, while other receptors
led by Dr Zelinsky has shown that a robot perform different navigational tasks. As
can navigate its way among 50 different the sun moves, the ant notes its direction
landmarks by recognising them each time it leaves the nest and updates
individually using a panoramic camera. its internal compass. Using other eye
'The inspiration came from biology, where receptors it stores a 'snapshot' image of
wasps use a practice called "turn back and landmarks close to the nest entrance in its
look" to orient themselves as they emerge eyes and compares this with what it sees
from the nest. By flying to and fro, they as it returns. The ant also has a way of
lock in images of the nest from different measuring distance travelled, while a
angles and perspectives, so they can "path integrator' periodically informs the
recognise it again,' he explained. The ant of its current position relative to its
robot's panoramic camera logs the point of departure. Rather than integrate
surrounding area and its key landmarks, all the information it receives in its brain,
which are then sorted in its computer the ant actually performs a number of
according to how reliable they are as complex calculations in different organs.
Like a supercomputer, the ant has many strategies that capture the remarkable
separate subroutines going on capacity of these insects to traverse
simultaneously. Using the ant's ability to complex terrain and navigate safely
steer by polarised light and to store and toward goals while avoiding obstacles.
reuse landscape images, Wehner and The team has already designed a series
colleagues have built 'Sahabot', a small of robots that run on six legs or on whegs,
vehicle that uses polarisers and a digital enabling them to handle surprisingly
CCD camera to store 360° images of its rugged terrain.
surroundings. It navigates by using
polarised sunlight and comparing the F International experts believe there are
current images of landmarks to the ones tremendous opportunities in biorobotics.
in its memory. However, delegates at the conference had
differing visions for the future of the
D Professor Robert Michelson had a science. While some were concerned that
different desert challenge - to design a the initial applications of biorobotics may
flying robot that can not only navigate but be military, others, such as Dr Barbara
also stay aloft and hover in the thin Webb, predicted swarms of tiny, cheap,
atmosphere of Mars. Drawing inspiration insect-like robots as society's cleaners
from insect flight, he has gone beyond and collectors. Sonja Kleinlogel hoped the
nature to devise a completely new study of the hyperspectral eyes of the
concept for a flying machine. The mantis shrimp might yield remote sensors
'Entomopter' is a sort of double-ended that keep watch over the environmental
dragonfly whose wings beat reciprocally. health of our oceans. Several delegates
Michelson says that the flapping-wing were concerned about the ethical
design gives the craft unusually high lift implications of biorobotics, and urged that
compared with a fixed-wing flyer, enabling close attention be paid to this as the
it to fly slowly or hover in the thin Martian science and technologies develop.
air - whereas a fixed-wing craft would
have to move at more than 400 km/h and
could not stop to explore.
Write the correct letter, A-F, in boxes 27-32 on your answer sheet.
questions below.
Choose NO MORE THAN THREE WORDS from the passage for each answer. Write
36 What atmospheric effect helps the Cataglyphis ant to know its direction?
Questions 37 - 40
Look at the following people (Questions 37-40) and the list of robots below.
37 Dr Alex Zelinsky
38 Professor Ruediger Wehner
39 Professor Robert Michelson
40 Roger Quinn and Professor Roy Ritzmann
List of Robots
A a robot that
makes use of light as well as stored images for navigational
purposes
B a robot that can contribute to environmental