Library/PT 156/Sec 1/Reading Comp
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Reading Comprehension

Passage Breakdown

Most North American farms grow only a few identical crop types, which makes the food supply fragile to pests and disease. Indigenous farmers developed and kept many different local crop varieties and simple breeding methods that make those crops tougher, better suited to local climates, and less water-dependent. These seeds and farming know-how were shared through family and community exchanges and passed down by word of mouth. But modern market pressures have reduced small farms and broken those networks, so experts say we must quickly protect indigenous knowledge and use it in programs that conserve crop diversity to keep agriculture sustainable.

Logic Breakdown

Read the opening and concluding sentences to identify the author's thesis: the author presents a problem (eroding genetic diversity) and urges preserving heirloom varieties and indigenous knowledge—choose the option that best matches endorsing that approach.

Passage Stimulus

Passage Redacted

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4.

The author's main purpose in writing the passage is to

Correct Answer
E
The passage sets up a problem (loss of crop genetic diversity) and then describes the benefits of heirloom varieties and indigenous agricultural knowledge before urging action. Support: 'Because most agricultural practices in North America produce row after row of only a few, genetically identical, varieties of crops, the continent's food system rests precariously on a rapidly eroding genetic base, increasingly susceptible to pests and disease.' The passage highlights the value of indigenous knowledge: 'The store of agricultural knowledge associated with the cultivation of these varieties has only recently been recognized as a valuable resource by crop geneticists.' It concludes by explicitly recommending action: 'These recent developments have made clear that immediate steps must be taken to preserve indigenous knowledge systems and integrate them with programs for the conservation of diverse crop genetics, thus bolstering the long-term sustainability of the continent's agricultural systems.' Together these show the author's primary purpose is to support a promising approach—preserving heirloom varieties and integrating indigenous knowledge—to address the problem.
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