单选题
The farm is a major marketplace for millions of tons
of synthetic fertilizers and pesticides, and for advanced machinery and the fuel
required to run it. The modern superfarm, large and highly capitalized, is
resource dependent compared with the diversified small farms that were once
dominant. On diversified farms, major energy needs may be supplied by resident
humans and animals. Soil fertility may be maintained by alternating cash crops
and restorative crops, and also by returning animal manure to the soil. This
fanning model of relatively self-sufficient agriculture, and the way of life
associated with it, are still economically viable, as demonstrated by prosperous
Amish farmers and other practitioners of "alternative" agriculture. Particularly
relevant to today's mainstream agriculture are the energy-saving practices on
large "organic" farms, which are thoroughly mechanized but which minimize the
use of pesticides and synthetic fertilizers. By comparison,
mainstream American agriculture has until lately been careless in its use of
energy, water, and land. When fossil energy was cheap, applications of
fertilizers and pesticides paid large dividends, so farmers were encouraged to
use these products. Soon most farmers used too much fertilizer and pesticide.
Farmers in dry regions enjoyed an era of cheap water, obtained from publicly
subsidized irrigation systems or from pumping groundwater using inexpensive
energy. The soil too was expendable as demand grew for U.S. agricultural
products. The period of extraordinary profligacy in the use of
soil, water, and fossil fuels may well be at an end. The new structure of large
farms is quite sensitive to cost factors. These adaptive farms, whose
development was assisted by public tax, subsidy and research policies, have
access to capital, technologies, and management skills, enabling them to switch
relatively quickly to resource-conserving practices—for example, to low-tillage
system that requires less fuel, that shepherds soil moisture, and that may
reduce soil erosion. It seems likely that federal programs that have enlarged
our farms, therefore, have had a further result of creating the potential for a
more conserving agriculture. With respect to energy use. for example, energy
costs per unit of output are lower for large farms, mainly because these farms
quickly economized on energy as costs rose. In the future, according to one
authoritative assessment, "agricultural production is likely to use capital and
land more intensively but energy, fertilizer and labor less intensively".
单选题
The main difference between the modem super farm and diversified farms
lies in ______.
A. their sizes
B. the machinery employed
C. the degree of dependence on resources
D. the kinds of crops cultivated and animals raised
【正确答案】
C
【答案解析】
单选题
The second paragraph focuses on the fact that ______.
A. fossil energy was once very cheap
B. farm in dry areas could get cheap water
C. most American farmers used too much fertilizer and pesticide
D. mainstream American agriculture used to be wasteful of energy, water and
land
【正确答案】
D
【答案解析】
单选题
The word 'profligacy' (para. 3) most probably means ______.
A. wastefulness
B. carefulness
C. profitability
D. economy
【正确答案】
A
【答案解析】
单选题
According to the passage, which of the following is NOT true?
A. The farming model and the way of life on diversified farms are
workable.
B. Large 'organic' farms use large amounts of pesticides and synthetic
fertilizers.
C. The new adaptive farms are capable of resource-conserving
practices.
D. To reduce soil erosion is a resource-conserving practice.
【正确答案】
B
【答案解析】
单选题
It can be seen from the passage that the problem of resource
conservation in agriculture ______.
A. has been solved in the U.S.
B. has not yet been paid any attention to
C. is being seriously and effectively dealt with
D. will soon be solved by using more capital and land