单选题
{{B}}Part B{{/B}}
In the following article some paragraphs have
been removed.For Questions 66~70,choose the most suitable paragraph from the
list A~F to fit into each of the numbered gaps.There is One paragraph which does
not fit in any ofthe gaps.Mark your answers on {{B}}ANSWER SHEET 1.{{/B}}
Supermarket shoppers have never been more spoilt for
choice.But just when we thought traditional systems of selective farming had
created the most tempting array of foods money can buy,we are now being
presented with the prospect of genetically created strains of
cabbages,onion,tomato,potato and apple.
It may not tickle the
fancy of food purists but it fires the imagination of scientists.Last week they
discovered that the classic Parisian mushroom contains just the properties
that,when genetically mixed with a wild strain of mushroom from the Sonora
desert in California,could help it grow en masse while at the same time
providing it with the resilience of the wild strain.
66.______
“We have found a way of increasing the success rate from one to
90 per cent.”
This is just one of the many products
that,according to skeptics,are creating a generation of“Frankenfoods”.The first
such food that may be consumed on a wide scale is a tomato which has been
genetically manipulated so that it does not soften as it ripens.
67.______
Critics say that the new tomato—which cost $25
million to research—is designed to stay on supermarket shelves for longer.It has
a ten-day life span.
Not surprisingly,every-hungry US is
leading the search for these forbidden fruit.By changing the genes of a
grapefruit.a grower from Texas has created a sweet,red,thin-skinned grapefruit
expected to sell at a premium over its California and Florida competitors.
For chip fanatics who want to watch their waist-lines,new
high-starch,low-moisture potatoes that absorb less fat when fried have been
created,thanks to a gene from intestinal bacteria.
The
scientists behind such new food argue that genetic engineering is simply an
extension of animal and plant breeding methods and that by broadening the scope
of the genetic changes that can be made,sources of food are increased.
Accordingly,they argue,this does not inherently lead to foods that are less safe
than those developed by conventional techniques.But if desirable genes are
swapped irrespective of species barriers,could things spiral out of
control?“Knowledge is not toxic,”said Mark Cantley,head of the biotechnology
unit at the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development.“It has given
us a far greater understanding of how living systems work at a molecular level
and there is no reason for people to think that scientists and farmers should
use that knowledge to do risky things.”
Clearly,financial
incentive lies behind the development of these bigger,more productive foods.But
we may have only ourselves to blame.In the early period of mass food
commerce,food varieties were developed by traditional methods of selective
breeding to suit the local palate.But as suppliers started to select and
preserve plant variants that had larger fruit,consumer expectations rose,leading
to the development of the desirable clones.Still,traditionalists and gourmets in
Europe are fighting their development.
68.______
Even in the pre-packaged US.where the slow-softening tomato will soon be
reaching supermarkets,1,500 American chefs have lent their support to the Pure
Food Campaign which calls for the international boycott of genetically
engineered foods until more is known about the consequences of the technology
and reliable controls have been introduced.
In the short
term,much of the technology remains untested and in the long term the
consequences for human bi ology are unknown.Questions have arisen over whether
new proteins in genetically modified food could cause allergies in some people.
69.______
Then there are the vegetarians who
may be consuming animal non-vegetable proteins in what they think is a common
tomato,or the practicing Jew who unknowingly consumes a fruit that has been
enhanced with a pig's gene.As yet,producers are under no obligation to
label“transgenetic”products.
Environmentalists worry that
new,genetically engineered plants may damage natural environment.A genetically
engineered pest-resistant strain of plant that contacts with a native strain,for
example,could turn them into virulent weeds beyond chemical control.
Animal welfare groups worry about the quality of life of farm animals
manipulated so that they produce more meat,milk,and eggs but which may suffer
physical damage in the process.
70.______
Many
of these fears spring from ignorance.And although it is hard to separate the
paranoia from the benefits,the fact remains that genetic engineering offers ways
of solving serious medical and agricultural problems.
A.Western
farmers have already bred cattle with more muscle than a skeleton can carry.
B.Supporters say the tomato,unsurprisingly called Flavr
Savr,will taste better because it will be able to mature on the branch longer.
C.Consumer opposition means that there are genetically
manipulated foods on the German markets,and the Norwegian government has
recently put research into genetically engineered foods on hold.
D.For example,if a com gene is introduced into a wheat gene for pest
resistance,will those who are allergic to corn then be allergic to wheat?
E.“Mushrooms in the past were almost impossible to cross,”says
Philippe Callac,one of the three scientists working on the mushroom.
F.Genetic engineering will interfere with the balance of nature.