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Practising passages like "Autumn Leaves" is valuable for IELTS reading preparation because they introduce complex vocabulary and scientific concepts that enhance your language skills. These texts often involve understanding intricate natural processes, which helps develop your ability to interpret and analyze detailed information. By working with such passages, you improve your skills in identifying main ideas and summarizing content, which are crucial for answering different types of reading questions. These passages often include various question types, such as True/False/Not Given and Matching Headings, offering comprehensive practice and helping you become more adept at handling diverse question formats. Overall, they contribute to a deeper contextual understanding and improved reading proficiency.
This passage on "Autumn Leaves" is inspired by Cambridge 10 Reading Test 3. You should spend about 20 minutes on Questions 14-26, which are based on the reading passage 2 below.
Autumn Leaves Reading Passage 2
A One of the most captivating natural events of the year in many areas throughout North America is the turning of the leaves in the fall. The colours are magnificent, but the question of exactly why some trees turn yellow or orange, and others red or purple, is something which has long puzzled scientists.
B Summer leaves are green because they are full of chlorophyll, the molecule that captures sunlight converts that energy into new building materials for the tree. As fall approaches in the northern hemisphere, the amount of solar energy available declines considerably. For many trees – evergreen conifers being an exception – the best strategy is to abandon photosynthesis* until the spring. So rather than maintaining the now redundant leaves throughout the winter, the tree saves its precious resources and discards them. But before letting its leaves go, the tree dismantles their chlorophyll molecules and ships their valuable nitrogen back into the twigs. As chlorophyll is depleted, other colours that have been dominated by it throughout the summer begin to be revealed. This unmasking explains the autumn colours of yellow and orange, but not the brilliant reds and purples of trees such as the maple or sumac.
C The source of the red is widely known: it is created by anthocyanins, water-soluble plant pigments reflecting the red to blue range of the visible spectrum. They belong to a class of sugar-based chemical compounds also known as flavonoids. What’s puzzling is that anthocyanins are actually newly minted, made in the leaves at the same time as the tree is preparing to drop them. But it is hard to make sense of the manufacture of anthocyanins – why should a tree bother making new chemicals in its leaves when it’s already scrambling to withdraw and preserve the ones already there?
D Some theories about anthocyanins have argued that they might act as a chemical defence against attacks by insects or fungi, or that they might attract fruit-eating birds or increase a leafs tolerance to freezing. However there are problems with each of these theories, including the fact that leaves are red for such a relatively short period that the expense of energy needed to manufacture the anthocyanins would outweigh any anti-fungal or anti-herbivore activity achieved.* photosynthesis: the production of new material from sunlight, water and carbon dioxide.
E It has also been proposed that trees may produce vivid red colours to convince herbivorous insects that they are healthy and robust and would be easily able to mount chemical defences against infestation. If insects paid attention to such advertisements, they might be prompted to lay their eggs on a duller, and presumably less resistant host. The flaw in this theory lies in the lack of proof to support it. No one has as yet ascertained whether more robust trees sport the brightest leaves, or whether insects make choices according to colour intensity.
F Perhaps the most plausible suggestion as to why leaves would go to the trouble of making anthocyanins when they’re busy packing up for the winter is the theory known as the ‘light screen’ hypothesis. It sounds paradoxical, because the idea behind this hypothesis is that the red pigment is made in autumn leaves to protect chlorophyll, the light-absorbing chemical, from too much light. Why does chlorophyll need protection when it is the natural world’s supreme light absorber? Why protect chlorophyll at a time when the tree is breaking it down to salvage as much of it as possible?
G Chlorophyll, although exquisitely evolved to capture the energy of sunlight, can sometimes be overwhelmed by it, especially in situations of drought, low temperatures, or nutrient deficiency. Moreover, the problem of oversensitivity to light is even more acute in the fall, when the leaf is busy preparing for winter by dismantling its internal machinery. The energy absorbed by the chlorophyll molecules of the unstable autumn leaf is not immediately channelled into useful products and processes, as it would be in an intact summer leaf. The weakened fall leaf then becomes vulnerable to the highly destructive effects of the oxygen created by the excited chlorophyll molecules.
H Even if you had never suspected that this is what was going on when leaves turn red, there are clues out there. One is straightforward: on many trees, the leaves that are the reddest are those on the side of the tree which gets most sun. Not only that, but the red is brighter on the upper side of the leaf. It has also been recognised for decades that the best conditions for intense red colours are dry, sunny days and coo nights, conditions that nicely match those that make leaves susceptible to excess light. And finally, trees such as maples usually get much redder the more north you travel in the northern hemisphere. It’s colder there, they’re more stressed, their chlorophyll is more sensitive and it needs more sunblock.
I What is still not fully understood, however, is why some trees resort to producing red pigments while others don’t bother, and simply reveal their orange or yellow hues. Do these trees have other means at their disposal to prevent overexposure to light in autumn? Their story, though not as spectacular to the eye, will surely turn out to be as subtle and as complex.
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Autumn Leaves Reading Questions & Answers
The reading passage has six paragraphs: A – I
Choose the correct heading for each paragraph from the list of headings below
Write the correct numbers, i –ix, in boxes 14-19 on your answer sheet.
NB There are more headings than paragraphs, so you will not use them all.
i). Chlorophyll Depletion and the Unmasking of Yellow and Orange
ii). The ‘Healthy Tree’ Theory and Its Limitations
iii). The Mystery of Autumn Leaf Colors
iv). The ‘Light Screen’ Hypothesis for Red Pigments
v). The Role of Anthocyanins in Red Leaf Colors
vi). Evidence Supporting the Light Screen Hypothesis
vii). Function of Anthocyanins
viii). Chlorophyll Sensitivity and Light Protection
ix). Debate Over Why Only Some Trees Produce Red Pigments
14. Paragraph A
Answer: iii
Answer Location: Paragraph A, Line 2
Explanation: "The colours are magnificent, but the question of exactly why some trees turn yellow or orange, and others red or purple, is something which has long puzzled scientists." Paragraph A introduces the captivating event of leaves turning color in autumn and highlights the puzzle of why different trees turn different colors.
15. Paragraph C
Answer: v
Answer Location: Paragraph C, Line 1
Explanation: "The source of the red is widely known: it is created by anthocyanins, water-soluble plant pigments reflecting the red to blue range of the visible spectrum." Paragraph C explains that anthocyanins, which produce red pigments, are newly made in the leaves. It questions why trees produce these pigments when they are preparing to discard the leaves.
16. Paragraph D
Answer: vii
Answer Location: Paragraph D, Line 1
Explanation: "they might act as a chemical defence against attacks by insects or fungi, or that they might attract fruit-eating birds or increase a leaf's tolerance to freezing." Paragraph D discusses how anthocyanins might be produced, such as for chemical defense or attracting birds, but also highlights the issues with these theories.
17. Paragraph E
Answer: ii
Answer Location: Paragraph E, Line 1
Explanation: "It has also been proposed that trees may produce vivid red colours to convince herbivorous insects that they are healthy and robust and would be easily able to mount chemical defences against infestation." Paragraph E presents the 'healthy tree' theory suggesting that red colors might indicate tree health to deter insects but acknowledges the lack of proof supporting this theory
18. Paragraph G
Answer: viii
Answer Location: Paragraph G, Line 1
Explanation: "Chlorophyll, although exquisitely evolved to capture the energy of sunlight, can sometimes be overwhelmed by it." Paragraph G discusses how sunlight can overwhelm chlorophyll ins, leading to damage; and how the red pigments might protect chlorophyll from excess light.
19. Paragraph I
Answer: ix
Answer Location: Paragraph I, Line 1
Explanation: "What is still not fully understood, however, is why some trees resort to producing red pigments while others don’t bother, and simply reveal their orange or yellow hues.” Paragraph I reflects on the ongoing questions why some trees produce red pigments while others do not, suggesting that their methods for light protection may differ.
Autumn Leaves Reading for IELTS
Do the following statements agree with the information given in Reading Passage?
In boxes 20-26 on your answer sheet, write:
TRUE - If the statement agrees with the information
FALSE - If the statement contradicts the information
NOT GIVEN - If there is no information on this
20. Herbivorous insects choose which trees to lay their eggs.
Answer: TRUE
Answer Location: Paragraph E, Line 1
Explanation: “Trees may produce vivid red colours to convince herbivorous insects that they are healthy and robust and would be easily able to mount chemical defences against infestation. If insects paid attention to such advertisements, they might be prompted to lay their eggs on a duller, and presumably less resistant host.” This line discusses the 'Healthy Tree' theory, which suggests that insects might choose trees based on their red coloration, implying that insects choose where to lay eggs.
21. The red pigments help to protect the leaf from excess light and freezing temperatures.
Answer: NOT GIVEN
Answer Location: Not mentioned explicitly. Paragraph F, Line 3
Explanation: “The red pigment is made in autumn leaves to protect chlorophyll, the light-absorbing chemical, from too much light.” Thus, there is no mention of the protection from freezing temperatures.
22. On the side of the tree that faces away from the sun has the most vibrant colours.
Answer: FALSE
Answer Location: Paragraph H, Line 2
Explanation: “The leaves that are the reddest are those on the side of the tree which gets the most sun.” - This line implies that the reddest leaves are on the side of the tree that gets the most sun, not the side facing away from the sun.
23. The bottom surfaces of leaves contain the reddest pigment.
Answer: FALSE
Answer Location: Paragraph H, Line 3
Explanation: It can be noted from the given line that the red is brighter on the upper side of the leaf, not the bottom. “Not only that, but the red is brighter on the upper side of the leaf.”
24. Red leaves are most abundant when daytime weather conditions are dry.
Answer: TRUE
Answer Location: Paragraph H, Line 3
Explanation: “The best conditions for intense red colours are dry, sunny days and cool nights, conditions that nicely match those that make leaves susceptible to excess light.” This mentions that the best conditions for intense red colours are dry, sunny days and cool nights.
25. Leaves that turn colours other than red are more likely to be damaged by sunlight.
Answer: NOT GIVEN
Answer Location: Not mentioned explicitly.
Explanation: The passage does not specifically state that leaves turning colours other than red are more likely to be damaged by sunlight. It discusses red leaves and light sensitivity but not the comparison with non-red leaves.
26. The intensity of the red colour of leaves fluctuates as you go further north.
Answer: FALSE
Answer Location: Paragraph H, Line 5
Explanation: Paragraph H notes that trees like maples get redder as you travel further north, not that the intensity fluctuates. The red colour becomes more pronounced with northern locations. “Trees such as maples usually get much redder the more north you travel in the northern hemisphere.”
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