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Practising reading passages like "Plant Scents" is important for several reasons. It helps develop skills in understanding complex historical texts and enhances critical reading abilities. Such passages often include dense information, requiring readers to identify key details, comprehend nuanced arguments, and draw connections between different parts of the text. Moreover, these exercises prepare individuals for academic or standardized tests by improving their ability to analyze and interpret challenging material, which is essential for achieving higher scores and better comprehension in real-world contexts.
Plant Scents Reading Passage
A
Everyone is familiar with scented flowers, and many people have heard that floral odours help the plant attract pollinators. This common notion is mostly correct, but it is surprising how little scientific proof of it exists. Of course, not all flowers are pollinated by biological agents – for example, many grasses are wind-pollinated – but the flowers of the grasses may still emit volatiles. In fact, plants emit organic molecules all the time, although they may not be obvious to the human nose. As for flower scents that we can detect with our noses, bouquets that attract moths and butterflies generally smell “sweet,” and those that attract certain flies seem “rotten” to us.
B
The release of volatiles from vegetative parts of the plant is familiar, although until recently, the physiological functions of these chemicals were less clear and had received much less attention from scientists. When the trunk of a pine tree is injured – for example, when a beetle tries to burrow into it – it exudes a very smelly resin. This resin consists mostly of terpenes – hydrocarbons with a backbone of 10, 15 or 20 carbons that may also contain atoms of oxygen. The heavier C20 terpenes, called diterpenes, are glue-like and can cover and immobilise insects as they plug the hole. This defence mechanism is as ancient as it is effective: Many samples of fossilised resin, or amber, contain the remains of insects trapped inside. Many other plants emit volatiles when injured, and in some cases, the emitted signal helps defend the plant. For example, (Z)-3-hexenyl acetate, which is known as a “green leaf volatile” because it is emitted by many plants upon injury, deters females of the moth Heliothis virescens from laying eggs on injured tobacco plants. Interestingly, the profile of emitted tobacco volatiles is different at night than during the day, and it is the nocturnal blend, rich in several (Z)-3-hexen-1-olesters, that is most effective in repelling the night-active H. virescens moths.
C
Herbivore-induced volatiles often serves as indirect defenses. These bulwarks exist in a variety of plant species, including corn, beans, and the model plant species Arabidopsis thaliana. Plants not only emit volatiles acutely at the site where caterpillars, mites, aphids or similar insects are eating them but also generally from non-damaged parts of the plant. These signals attract a variety of predatory insects that prey on the plant-eaters. For example, some parasitic wasps can detect the volatile signature of a damaged plant and will lay their eggs inside the offending caterpillar; eventually, the wasp eggs hatch and the emerging larvae feed on the caterpillar from the inside hatch, and the emerging larvae feed on the caterpillar from the inside out. The growth of infected caterpillars is retarded considerably, to the benefit of the plant. Similarly, volatiles released by plants in response to herbivore egg laying can attract parasites of the eggs, thereby preventing them from hatching and avoiding the onslaught of hungry herbivores that would have emerged. Plant volatiles can also be used as a kind of currency in some very indirect defensive schemes. In the rainforest understory tree Leonardoxa Africana, ants of the species Petalomyrmex phylax patrol young leaves and attack any herbivorous insects that they encounter. The young leaves emit high levels of the volatile compound methyl salicylate, a compound that the ants use either as a pheromone or as an antiseptic in their nests. It appears that methyl salicylate is both an attractant and a reward offered by the tree to get the ants to perform this valuable deterrent role.
D
Floral scent has a strong impact on the economic success of many agricultural crops that rely on insect pollinators, including fruit trees such as the bee-pollinated cherry, apple, apricot and peach, as well as vegetables and tropical plants such as papaya. Pollination affects not only crop yield but also the quality and efficiency of crop production. Many crops require most, if not all, ovules to be fertilised for optimum fruit size and shape. A decrease in fragrance emission reduces the ability of flowers to attract pollinators and results in considerable losses for growers, particularly for introduced species that had a specialised pollinator in their place of origin. This problem has been exacerbated by recent disease epidemics that have killed many honeybees, the major insect pollinators in the United States.
E
One means by which plant breeders circumvent the pollination problem is by breeding self-compatible, or apomictic, varieties that do not require fertilisation. Although this solution is adequate, its drawbacks include near genetic uniformity and consequent susceptibility to pathogens. Some growers have attempted to enhance honeybee foraging by spraying scent compounds on orchard trees. Still, this approach was costly, had to be repeated, had potentially toxic effects on the soil or local biota, and, in the end, proved to be inefficient. The poor effectiveness of this strategy probably reflects the inherent limitations of the artificial, topically applied compounds, which clearly fail to convey the appropriate message to the bees. For example, general spraying of the volatile mixture cannot tell the insects where exactly the blossoms are. Clearly, a more refined strategy is needed. The ability to enhance existing floral scent, which could all be accomplished by genetic engineering, would allow us to manipulate the types of insect pollinators and the frequency of their visits. Moreover, the metabolic engineering of fragrance could increase crop protection against pathogens and pests.
F
Genetic manipulation of the scent will also benefit the floriculture industry. Ornamentals, including cut flowers, foliage and potted plants, play an important aesthetic role in human life. Unfortunately, traditional breeding has often produced cultivars with improved vase life, shipping characteristics, colour and shape while sacrificing desirable perfumes. The loss of scent among ornamentals, which have a worldwide value of more than $30 billion, makes them important targets for the genetic manipulation of flower fragrance. Some work has already begun in this area, as several groups have created petunia and carnation plants that express the linalool synthase gene from C. Breweri. These experiments are still preliminary: For technical reasons, the gene was expressed everywhere in the plant, and although the transgenic plants did create small amounts of linalool, the level was below the threshold of detection for the human nose. Similar experiments in tobacco used genes for other monoterpene synthases, such as the one that produces limonene, but gave similar results.
G
The next generation of experiments, already in progress, includes sophisticated schemes that target the expression of scent genes specifically to flowers or other organs – such as special glands that can store antimicrobial or herbivore-repellent compounds.
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Plant Scents Reading Mock Test
Plant Scents Reading Questions & Answers
Questions 1-8
Complete the sentences below.
Choose NO MORE THAN TWO WORDS from the passage for each answer.
Write your answers in boxes 1-8 on your answer sheet.
1. Scientists have paid far less attention to these compounds' _________ roles until recently.
Answer: PHYSIOLOGICAL
2. Indirect protections are frequently provided by ________ volatiles.
Answer: HERVIBORE INDUCED
3. To the plant's advantage, the ________ of contaminated caterpillars is significantly slowed down.
Answer: GROWTH
4. In certain highly indirect defence strategies, plant volatiles can also be utilized as a form of _________.
Answer: CURRENCY
5. ________ has an impact on crop production efficiency and quality in addition to yield.
Answer: POLLINATION
6. A decline in scent emission lessens the capacity of flowers to draw ________ and causes significant losses for farmers.
Answer: POLLINATORS
7. ________ can enable us to control the kinds of pollinators that insects use and how often they visit.
Answer: GENETIC ENGINEERING
8. Enhancing crop protection against pests and diseases may be possible through the ________ of scent.
Answer: METABOLIC ENGINEERING
Plant Scents Reading Questions for Practice
Questions 9-13
Complete each sentence with the correct ending, A-J, below.
Write the correct letter, A-J, in boxes 9-13 on your answer sheet.
A. offending caterpillars and wasp eggs coexist well.
B. scent plays a significant role in the Ornamental industry.
C. crop trees that are poisonous.
D. transgenic plants produce intense scent
E. laying eggs into caterpillars
F. genetic operation on scent can make a vast profit.
G. it needs massive manual labour
H. spreading illness
I. Linalool level is too low to be smelt by nose.
J. it can’t tell correct information to pollinators.
9. Wasps protect plants when they are attracted by scents by
Answer: E
10. The number of honeybees declined in the United States because of
Answer: H
11. The drawback of artificial fragrance is that
Answer: J
12. The number of $30 billion quoted in the passage is to illustrate the fact that
Answer: B
13. The weakness of genetic experiments on fragrance is that
Answer: I
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