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IELTS雅思閱讀練習 A6

  Keeping Cut Flowers   While everybody enjoys fresh cut flowers around their house, few people

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  Keeping Cut Flowers

  While everybody enjoys fresh cut flowers around their house, few people know how

  to keep them for as long as possible. This may be done by keeping in mind a few simple

  facts.

  An important thing to remember about cut flowers is that they are sensitive to

  temperature. For example, studies have shown that cut carnations retain their

  freshness eight times longer when kept at 12 than when kept at 26. Keeping

  freshly harvested flowers at the right temperatures is probably the most important

  aspect of flower care.

  Flowers are not intended by nature to live very long. Their biological purpose is

  simply to attract birds or insects, such as bees, for pollination. After that, they

  quickly wither and die. The process by which flowers consume oxygen and emit carbon

  dioxide, called respiration,generates the energy the flower needs to give the flower

  its shape and colour. The making of seeds also depends on this energy. While all

  living things respire, flowers have a high level of respiration. A result of all

  this respiration is heat, and for flowers, the level of he at relative to the mass

  of the flower is very high. Respiration also brings about the eventual death of the

  flower, thus the greater the level of respiration, the sooner the flower dies.

  How, then to control the rate at which flowers die? By controlling respiration.

  How is respiration controlled? By controlling temperature. We know that respiration

  produces heat, but the reverse is also true. Thus by maintaining low temperatures,

  respiration is minimised and the cut flower will age more slowly. (Tropic

  al flowers are an exception to this rule; they prefer warmer temperatures.)

  Cooler temperatures also have the benefit of preserving the water content of the

  flower, which helps to slow down ageing as well. This brings us to another important

  aspect of cut flower care: humidity. The average air-conditioned room has a relative

  humidity of 65%, which contributes to greater water loss in the flower. Flowers are

  less likely to dry out if humidity levels are 90_95%, but this may be unrealistic

  unless you live in the tropics or subtropics.

  Yet another vital factor in keeping cut flowers is the quality of the water in which

  they are placed. Flowers find it difficult to `drink' water that is dirty or otherwise

  contaminated. Even when water looks and smells clean, it almost certainly contains

  bacteria and fungi that can endanger the flowers. To rid the water of these unwanted

  germs, household chlorine bleach can be used in small quantities. It is recommended

  that 15 drops of chlorine bleach (at 4% solution )be added to each litre of water.

  The water and solution should also be replaced each day.

  When going to buy cut flowers, look for ones that have not been kept (by the flower

  shop) in direct sunlight or strong wind. If the flowers are not freshly harvested,

  ask whether they have been stored in a refrigerated coolroom.

  1 The author of Keeping Cut Flowers believes flower care is dependent on

  three main factors. one of them is temperature. What are the other TWO?

  2 A DIFFERENCE OF 140C can extend the life of carnations by up to () times.

  3 () and () are two aspects of a flower's appearance that depend on respiration.

  KEY:1 humidity AND water quality(either order) 2 8/eight 3 shape AND colour(either order)

  key:5 controlling temperature//maintaining low temperatures//cooler temperatures

  6 water content 7 age(more)slowly 8 tropical

  Wild Foods Of Australia

  Over 120 years ago, the English botanist J.D.Hooker, writing of Australian edible

  plants. suggested that many of them were `eatable but not worth eating'. Nevertheless,

  the Australian flora, together with the fauna, supported the Aboriginal

  people well before the arrival of Europeans. The Aborigines were not farmers an

  d were wholly dependent for life on the wild products around them. They learned

  to eat, often after treatment, a wide variety of plants.

  The conquering Europeans displaced the Aborigines, killing many, driving others

  from their traditional tribal lands. and eventually settling many of the tribal

  remnants on government reserves, where flour and beef replaced nardoo and wallaby

  as staple foods. And so, gradually, the vast store of knowledge, accumulated

  over thousands of years, fell into disuse. Much was lost.

  However, a few European men took an intelligent and even respectful interest in

  the people who were being displaced. Explorers, missionaries, botanists,

  naturalists and government officials observed, recorded and. fortunately in some

  cases, published. Today, we can draw on these publications to form the main basis

  of our knowledge of the edible, natural products of Australia. The picture is no

  doubt mostly incomplete. We can only speculate on the number of edible plants on

  which no observation was recorded.

  Not all our information on the subject comes from the Aborigines. Times were hard

  in the early days of European settlement, and traditional foods were often in

  short supply or impossibly expensive for a pioneer trying to establish a farm in

  the bush. And so necessity led to experimentation, just as it must have done for

  the Aborigines, and experimentation led to some lucky results. So far as is known,

  the Aborigines made no use of Leptospermum or Dodonaea as food plants,

  Yet the early settlers found that one could be used as a substitute for tea and

  the other for hops. These plants are not closely related to the species they replaced,

  so their use was not based on botanical observation, Probably some experiments had

  less happy endings; L.J.Webb has used the expression `eat, die and learn' in

  connection with the Aboriginal experimentation, but it was the successful attempts

  that became widely known. It is possible the edibility of some native plants used

  by the Aborigines was discovered independently by the European settlers or their

  descendants.

  Explorers making long expeditions found it impossible to carry sufficient food for

  the whole journey and were forced to rely, in part, on food that they could find

  on the way, Still another source of information comes from the practice in other

  countries. There are many species from northern Australia which occur also

  in southeast Asia, where they are used for food.

  In general, those Aborigines living in the dry inland areas were largely dependent

  for their vegetable foods on seed such as those of grasses, acacias and eucalypts.

  They ground these seeds between flat stones to make a coarse flour. Tribes

  on the coast, and particularly those in the vicinity of coastal rainforests, had

  a more varied vegetable diet with a higher proportion of fruits and tubers. Some

  of the coastal plants, even if they had grown inland, probably would have been

  unavailable as food since they required prolonged washing or soaking to render

  them non-poisonous: many of the inland tribes could not obtain water in the

  quantities necessary for such treatment. There was also considerable variation in

  the edible plants available to Aborigines in different latitudes. In general, the

  people who lived in the moist tropical areas enjoyed a much greater variety than

  those in the southern part of Australia.

  With all the hundreds of plant species used for food by the Australian.

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