申論題內容
IV. Please design a 4-option Discourse for the passage. You may underline the
option sentences and also explain what reading skill is tested in each option, for
example, cause & effect, coherence & cohesion, time sequence, and so on. (20%)
Geographers say that what defines a place are four properties: soil, climate, altitude, and
aspect, or attitude to the Sun. Florida’s ancient scrub demonstrates this principle. Its soil is pure
silica, so barren it supports only lichens as ground cover. It does, however, sustain a sandswimming lizard that cannot live where there is moisture or plant matter the soil. Its climate,
despite more than 50 inches of annual rainfall, is blistering desert plant life it can sustain is only
the xerophytes, the quintessentially dry. Its altitude is a mere couple of hundred feet, but it is high
ground on a peninsula elsewhere close to sea level, and its drainage is so critical that a difference
of inches in elevation can bring major changes in its plant communities. Its aspect is flat, direct,
brutal—and subtropical. Florida’s surrounding lushness cannot impinge on its desert scrubbiness.
This does not sound like an attractive place. It does not look much like one either; Shrubby little
oaks, clumps of scraggly bushes, prickly pear, thorns, and tangles. “It appears Said one early
naturalist,” to desire to display the result of the misery through which it has Passed and is passing.”
By our narrow standards, scrub is not beautiful; neither does it meet our selfish utilitarian needs.
Even the name is an epithet, a synonym for the stunted, the scruffy, the insignificant, what is
beautiful about such a place? The most important remaining patches of scrub lie along the Lake
Wales Ridge, a chain of paleo islands running for a hundred miles down the center of Florida, in
most places less than ten miles wide. It is relict seashore, tossed up millions of years ago when
ocean levels were higher and the rest of the peninsula was submerged. That ancient emergence is
precisely what makes Lake Wales Ridge so precious: it has remained unsubmerged, its ecosystems
essentially undisturbed, since the Miocene era. As a result, it has gathered to itself one of the
largest collections of rare organisms in the world. Only about 75 plant species survive there, but
at least 30 of these are found nowhere else on Earth.