BEST IELTS Academic Reading Test 110

BEST IELTS Academic Reading Test 110

ACADEMIC READING TEST 110 – PASSAGE – 2

BEST IELTS Academic Reading Test 110
BEST IELTS Academic Reading Test 110

ACADEMIC READING TEST – 110

READING PASSAGE – 2

Bittern Conservation

Section A

Bitterns, which are heron-like birds, once prized as a dish for medieval banquets, were considered extinct as a breeding species in the UK by the 1870s. They recolonised the UK in the early 20th century, with a peak of about 80 booming males in the 1950s, but then numbers slid to fewer than 20 in the 1990s. By 1997, the species was facing extinction in the UK again, with there being just 11 males, mainly in Norfolk and Suffolk, with a small outlying population at Leighton Moss, Lancashire. In 2007, the bittern numbers are at a record high. Ecologists attributed the rise in populations to intensive conservation efforts that have protected the birds’ preferred habitat of dense, wet, reedbeds. The wildlife charity said the turnaround in the bird’s fortunes had been helped by legal protection of the habitats and funding through two environmental projects under the EU Life scheme for the creation of new reedbed areas.

Section B 

Bitterns have cryptic plumage and a shy nature, usually remaining hidden within the cover of reedbed vegetation. Our first challenge was to develop standard methods to monitor their numbers. The call, or boom of the male bittern is its most distinctive feature during the breeding season, and we developed a method to count them using the sound patterns unique to each individual one. This not only allows us to be much more certain of the number of booming males in the UK, but also enables us to estimate local survival of males from one year to the next.

Section C 

Our first direct understanding of the habitat needs of breeding bitterns came from comparisons of reedbed sites that had lost their booming birds with those that retained them. This research showed that bitterns had been retained in reedbeds where the natural process of succession, or drying out, had been slowed through management. Based on this work, broad recommendations on how to manage and rehabilitate reedbeds for bitterns were made, and funding was provided through the EU LIFE Fund to manage 13 sites within the core breeding range. This project, though led by the RSPB, involved many other organizations.

Section D 

To refine these recommendations and provide fine-scale, quantitative habitat prescriptions on the bitterns preferred feeding habitat, we radio-tracked male bitterns on the RSPB’s Minsmere and Leighton Moss reserves. This showed clear preferences for feeding in the wetter reedbed margins, particularly within the reedbed next to larger open pools. The average home range sizes of the male bitterns we followed (about 20 hectares) provided a good indication of the area of reedbed needed when managing or creating habitat for this species. Female bitterns undertake all the incubation and care of the young, so it was important to understand their needs as well. Over the course of our research, we located 87 bittern nests and found that female bitterns preferred to nest in areas of continuous vegetation, well into the reedbed, but where water was still present during the driest part of the breeding season.

Section E 

The success of the habitat prescriptions developed from this research has been spectacular. For instance, at Minsmere, booming bittern numbers gradually increased from one to 10 following reedbed lowering, a management technique designed to halt the drying out process. After a low point of 11 booming males in 1997, bittern numbers in Britain responded to all the habitat management work and started to increase for the first time since the 1950s.

Section F 

The final phase of research involved understanding the diet, survival and dispersal of bittern chicks. To do this we fitted small radio tags to young bittern chicks in the nest, to determine their fate through to fledging and beyond. Many chicks did not survive to fledging and starvation was found to be the most likely reason for their demise. The fish prey fed to chicks was dominated by those species penetrating into the reed edge. So, an important element of recent studies (including a PhD with the University of Hull) has been the development of recommendations on habitat and water conditions to promote healthy native fish populations.

Section G 

Once independent, radio-tagged young bitterns were found to seek out new sites during their first winter; a proportion of these would remain on new sites to breed if the conditions were suitable. A second EU LIFE funded project aims to provide these suitable sites in new areas. A network of 19 sites developed through this partnership project will secure a more sustainable UK bittern population with successful breeding outside of the core area, less vulnerable to chance events and sea level rise.

Section H 

By 2004, the number of booming male bitterns in the UK had increased to 55, with almost all the increase being on those sites undertaking management based on advice derived from our research. Although science has been at the core of the bittern story, success has only been achieved through the trust, hard work and dedication of all the managers, owners and wardens of sites that have implemented, in some cases very drastic, management to secure the future of this wetland species in the UK. The constructed bunds and five major sluices now control the water level over 82 ha, with a further 50 ha coming under control in the winter of 2005/06. Reed establishment has principally used natural regeneration or planted seedlings to provide small core areas that will in time expand to create a bigger reed area. To date nearly 275,000 seedlings have been planted and reed cover is extensive. Over 3 km of new ditches have been formed, 3.7 km of existing ditch have been re-profiled and 2.2 km of old meander (former estuarine features) has been cleaned out.

Section I

Bitterns now regularly winter on the site and there is some indication that they are staying longer into the spring. No breeding has yet occurred, but a booming male was present in the spring of 2004. A range of wildfowl breed, as well as a good number of reedbed passerines including reed bunting, reed, sedge and grasshopper warblers. Numbers of wintering shoveler have increased so that the site now holds a UK important wintering population. Malltraeth Reserve now forms part of the UK network of key sites for water vole (a UK priority species) and 12 monitoring transects has been established. Otter and brown-hare occur on the site as does the rare plant.

Questions 14-22

The reading passage has nine sections, A-I.
Choose the correct heading for sections A-I from the list of headings below.

List of Headings

i. Collection of data on the habitat

ii. The decline of the bittern population

iii. A focus on food for young bitterns

iv. Developing new sites to improve successful breeding

v. Boom vocalizations used to evaluate population

vi. Positive outcome of bittern population and reedbed area

vii. Management technique implemented proved successful

viii. Identifying the habitat

ix. Bittern present throughout one season and into the next

x. fluctuation in bittern population

xi. Distinct boom of the male bittern

xii. Preferred habitats for female bitterns

14. Section A

15. Section B

16. Section C

17. Section D

18. Section E

19. Section F

20. Section G

21. Section H

22. Section I 

Questions 23-26

Choose NO MORE THAN THREE WORDS from the passage for each answer.

23. How many bittern nests were found over the course of the research?

24. What management technique was used to halt the drying out process of the reedbed?

25. What was the main reason for chicks not surviving?

26. How many new sites were developed through partnership projects?

ANSWERS ARE BELOW

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ANSWERS

14. x

15. v

16. viii

17. i

18. vii

19. iii

20. iv

21. vi

22. ix

23. 87

24. REEDBES LOWERING

25. STARVATION

26. 19

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