Here is another paragraph for the preparation of UET entrance test. Read the passage carefully and answer the questions given below.
Visitors to Prince Edward Island, Canada, delight in the "unspoiled" scenery--the well-kept farms and peaceful hamlets of the island's central core and the rough terrain of the east and west. In reality, the Island ecosystems are almost entirely artificial.
Islanders have been tampering with the natural environment since the eighteenth century and long ago broke down the Island's natural forest cover to epoit its timber and clear land for agriculture. By 1900, 80 percent of the forest had been cut down and much of what remained has been destroyed by disease. Since then, however, some farmland has been remained had been destroyed by disease. Since then, however, some farmland has been abandoned and has returned to forest through the invasion of opportunist species, notably spruce. Few examples of the original climax forest, which consisted mostly of broad leaved trees such as maple, birch, and oak, survive today.
Apart from a few stands of native forest, the only authentic inhabitants on Prince Edward Island are its sand dunes and salt marshes. The dunes are formed from sand washed ashore by waves and then dried and blown by the wind to the land beyond the beach. The sand is prevented from spreading farther by marram grass, a tall, long-rooted species that grows with prevented from spreading farther by marram grass, a tall, long-rooted species that grows with the dunes and keeps them remarkably stable. marram grass acts as a win break and allows other plants such as beach pea and bayberry to take hold. On dunes where marram grass is broken down--fro instance, where it is trampled--the dunes may spread inland and imunddate agricultural lands or silt up fishing harbors.The white dunes of the north coast are the most impressive. There are also white dunes on the east and west coasts. Only in the south are there red dunes, created when the soft sandstone cliffs crumble into the sea and subsequently wash ashore as red sand. The dunes are once used as cattle pasture but were abandoned as the early settlers moved inland.
Salt marshes are the second remaining authentic habitant. These bogs are the result of the flooding of low coastal areas during unusually high tides. In the intervals between tides, a marsh area remains and plants take root, notably cord grass, the "marsh hy" used by the early settlers as winter forage for their livestock. Like the dunes, though, the marshes were soon dismissed as wasteland and escaped development.
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