The Pesticide Free Village Reading Answers

Sayantani Barman

Mar 15, 2024

The Pesticide Free Village Reading Answers is an academic reading answers topic. The Pesticide Free Village Reading Answers have a total of 14 IELTS questions in total. This topic has 4 questions in which we have to say whether the statement is true or false. The rest of the questions. questions are fill in the blanks.

Candidates should read the IELTS Reading passage thoroughly to recognize synonyms, identify keywords, and answer the questions below. IELTS Reading practice papers, which feature topics such as The pesticide free village Reading Answers. Candidates can use IELTS reading practice questions and answers to enhance their performance in the reading section.

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Section 1

Read the Passage to Answer the Following Questions

The Pesticide-Free Village

Gerry Marten and Dona Glee Williams report on reliance on the Indian village of Punukula, so nearly destroyed by reliance on pesticides. Around 20 years ago, a handful of families migrated from the Guntur district of Andhra Pradesh, south-east India, into Punukula, a community of around 900 people farming plots of between two and ten acres. The outsiders from Guntur brought cotton culture with them, and this attracted resident farmers by promising to bring in more hard cash than the mixed crops they were already growing to eat and sell, such as millet, mung beans, chilli and rice. But growing cotton meant using pesticides and fertilisers - until then a mystery to the mostly illiterate farmers of the community.

Local agro-chemical dealers obligingly filled the need for information and supplies. These'middlemen' sold commercial seeds, fertiliser: and insecticides on credit, and guaranteed purchase of the crop. They offered technical advice provided by the companies that supplied their products. The farmers depend on the dealers. If they wanted to grow cotton - and they did - it seemed they had no choice. A quick 'high' of booming yields and incomes hooked growers during the early years of cotton in the region. Outlay on insecticides was fairly low because cotton pests hadn't moved in yet. Many farmers were so impressed with the chemicals that they started using them or their other crops as well. The immediate payoffs from chemically-dependent cotton agriculture both ensured and obscured the fact that the black dirt fields had gone into a freefall of environmental degradation, dragged down by a chain of cause and effect.

Soon cotton-eaters, such as bollworms and aphids, plagued the fields. Repeated spraying killed off the most susceptible pests and left the strongest to reproduce and pass on their resistance to generations of ever-hardier offspring. As the bugs grew tougher and more abundant farmers applied a greater variety and quantity of poisons, something mixing 'cocktails' of as many as ten insecticides. At the same time cotton was gobbling up the nutrients in the soil, leaving the growers no option but to invest in chemical fertilisers.

By the time some farmers tried to break free of their chemical dependence, insecticides had already decimated the birds, wasps, beetles and other predators that had once provided natural control of crop pests. Without their balancing presence, pests ran riot it insecticide was cut back. As outlays for fertilisers and insecticides escalated, the cost of producing cotton mounted. Eventually the expense of chemical inputs outgrew the cash value of the crop, and farmers fell further and further into debt and poverty. Their vicious cycle was only broken by the willingness of a prominent village elder to experiment with something different. He had beer among the first villagers to grow cotton, and he would be the first to try it without chemicals, as set out by a programme in Non-Pesticide Management (NPM). 

This had been devised for Punukala with the help of a Non-Government Organisation called SECURE that had become aware of the hardships caused by the pesticide trap. It involved turning to neem, a fast-growing, broad-leaved evergreen tree related to mahogany. Neem protects itself against insects by producing a multitude of natural pesticides that have evolved specifically to defeat plant-eating insects. Thus they are generally harmless to human and other animals, including birds and insects that eat pests. The plant is native to India and Burma, where it has been used for centuries to control pests and to promote health. To protect cotton, neen seeds are simply ground into a powder, soaked overnight in water, and sprayed onto the crop at least every 10 days. Neem cake applied to the soil kills insect pests and doubles as an organic fertiliser high in nitrogen. As neem grows locally and is easy to process, it is much less expensive than the chemical insecticides sold for profit by the dealers and their corporate suppliers.

Quick, short-term gains had once pushed Punukula into chemical-dependent agriculture. Now they found that similar immediate rewards were helping to speed change in the other direction: the harvest of the next 20 NPM farmers was as good as the harvest of farmers using insecticides, and they came out ahead because they weren't buying insecticides, instead of investing cash (in short supply) in chemicals, they invested time and labour in NPM practices. By the end of 2000, all the farmers in Punukula village were using NPM rather than chemicals for cotton, and they began to use it on other crops as well. The was using it. The status and economic opportunities of women improved - neem change gathered momentum as NPM became even more effective once everyone became a source of income for some of them, as they gathered seeds from the surrounding area to sell for NPM in other villages. The improve situation meant that families could afford to pu

more land under cultivation.

In 2004, the panchayat (village government) formally declared Punukula to be a pesticide-free village. And they have big plans for the future, such as water purification. The village now serves as a model for disseminating NPM to other communities, with around 2000 farmers visiting each year. What began as a few farmers desperate to find a way to farm without poisons has become a movement with the potential to pull an entire region back from ecological disaster.

Section 2

Solution and Explanation 

Questions 1-4

Do the following statements agree with the information

given in Reading Passage 1? 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

  1. Cotton growing was expected to raise more money than other crop.

Answer: TRUE
Supporting statement: “.........cotton culture with them, and this attracted resident farmers by promising to bring in more hard cash than the mixed crops they were already growing to eat and sell,.........”
Keywords: hard, eat
Keyword Location: para 1, line 5
Explanation: It is given that the cotton growing was thought to be more financially supporting. 

  1. Some of the local agro-chemical dealers had been farmers in the past.

Answer: NOT GIVEN
Explanation: there has been no instance in the passage that says that the local agro-chemical dealers had been farmers in the past.

  1. Initially the farmers' cotton yields were low.

Answer: FALSE
Supporting statement: “.........A quick 'high' of booming yields and incomes hooked growers during the early years of cotton in the region.........”
Keywords: growers, cotton
Keyword Location: para 2, line 5
Explanation: It is given that there was a boom in the farming of the cotton during the early years. 

  1. At first, the farmers failed to notice the negative effects on their fields of pesticide use.

Answer: TRUE
Supporting statement: “........Soon cotton-eaters, such as bollworms and aphids, plagued the fields. Repeated spraying killed off the most susceptible pests and left the strongest to reproduce and pass on their resistance to generations of ever
hardier offspring..........”\
Keywords: fields, offspring
Keyword Location: para 3, line 1
Explanation: It is given that the cotton eaters started to plague the fields. There were a lot of side effects of pesticides. 

Questions 5-6

Choose NO MORE THAN TWO WORDS for each answer.

Non-Pesticide-Management Programme

Developed with the aid of SECURE

Based on use of an (5).....

Answer: EVERGREEN TREE
Supporting statement: “........ It involved turning to neem, a fast-growing, broad-leaved evergreen tree related to mahogany..........”
Keywords: leaved, related
Keyword Location: para 5, line 3
Explanation: It is given that the 

Neem contains many (6)....... called neem... that target plant-eating predators

Answer: NATURAL PESTICIDES
Supporting statement: “.......Neem protects itself against insects by producing a multitude of natural pesticides that have evolved specifically to defeat plant-eating insects...........”
Keywords: multitude, plant
Keyword Location: para 5, line 4
Explanation: It is given that the neem tree contains many natural pesticides that can defeat plant eating insects. 

Questions 7-10

Choose NO MORE THAN TWO WORDS for each answer.

Used as a pesticide (7)..... formed by grinding seeds

Answer: A POWDER
Supporting statement: “.......To protect cotton, neen seeds are simply ground into a powder, soaked overnight in water, and sprayed onto the crop at least every 10 days............”
Keywords: powder, soaked
Keyword Location: para 5, line 9
Explanation: It is given that neem seeds is used as pesticide in its powder form. 

left (8)...., to soak in water. Sprayed regularly

Answer: OVERNIGHT
Supporting statement: “.......To protect cotton, neen seeds are simply ground into a powder, soaked overnight in water, and sprayed onto the crop at least every 10 days............”
Keywords: powder, soaked
Keyword Location: para 5, line 9
Explanation: It is given that the seeds are left overnight to soak in water. 

Used as a pesticide and as a fertilizer added in (9)......... form to soil

Answer: CAKE
Supporting statement: “........Neem cake applied to the soil kills insect pests and doubles as an organic fertiliser high in nitrogen..........”
Keywords: organic, fertiliser
Keyword Location: para 5, line 12
Explanation: It is given that the neem cake is used and fertilizer is added onto it. 

contains a lot of (10).....

Answer: NITROGEN
Supporting statement: “........Neem cake applied to the soil kills insect pests and doubles as an organic fertiliser high in nitrogen..........”
Keywords: organic, fertiliser
Keyword Location: para 5, line 12
Explanation: It is given that the neem cake is used and fertilizer is added onto it. It has a lot of nitrogen in amount.

Questions 11-13

Choose NO MORE THAN TWO WORDS AND/OR A

NUMBER from the passage for each answer

  1. In which year did farmers finally stop using chemicals on cotton crops in Punukula?

Answer: 2000
Supporting statement: “........By the end of 2000, all the farmers in Punukula village were using NPM rather than chemicals for cotton, and they began to use it on other crops as well...........”
Keywords: rather, crops
Keyword Location: para 6, line 6
Explanation: It is given that after 2000 farmers stopped using chemicals for cotton crops. 

  1. What did the women of Punukula collect to make money?

Answer: NEEM SEEDS
Supporting statement: “..........The status and economic opportunities of women improved - neem change gathered momentum as NPM became even more effective once everyone became a source of income........”
Keywords: gathered, source
Keyword Location: para 6, line 8
Explanation: It is given that the neem seeds were collected by punukula women. It was a good income way for them. 

  1. What project do the authorities in Punukula hope to set up in the future?

Answer: WATER PURIFICATION
Supporting statement: “........In 2004, the panchayat (village government) formally declared Punukula to be a pesticide-free village. And they have big plans for the future, such as water purification...........”
Keywords: pesticide, water
Keyword Location: para 7, line 1
Explanation: It is given that water purification project was about to be set up in the future. 

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