- A.involved
- B.participated
- C.attended
- D.employed
- A.after
- B.on
- C.with
- D.to
- A.contrasting
- B.comparing
- C.matching
- D.measuring
The government-run command post in Tunis is staffed around the clock bymilitary personnel, meteorologists and civilians. On the wall are maps, crisscrossedwith brightly colors arrows that painstakingly track the fearsome path of the enemy.
What kind of invader gives rise to such high-level monitoring? Not man, notbeast, but the lowly desert locust (蝗虫). In recent moths, billions of the 3-inch-long winged warriors have descended on Algeria, Libya, Morocco and Tunisia,blackening the sky and eating up crops and vegetation. The insect invasion, theworst in 30 years, is already creating great destruction in the Middle East and is nowtreating southern Europe. The current crisis began in late 1985 near the Red Sea.Unusually rainy weather moistened the sands of the Sudan, making them idealbreeding grounds for the locust, which lays its eggs in the earth. The insectonslaught threatens to create yet another African famine. Each locust can eat itsweight (not quite a tenth of an ounce) in vegetation every 24 hours. A good-sizeswarm of 50 billion insects eats up 100,000 tons of grass, trees and crops in a singlenight.
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