READ TEXT II AND ANSWER QUESTIONS 14 TO 20:
TEXT II
THE CEREALS

Cereals are the staff of life for most of mankind.
Even our milk and our meat derive largely from them.
They are grasses nurtured and bred by man so that their
grain is large and nourishing. Except in parts of the
5tropics where such roots as tapioca and yams are the
staple carbohydrate, and in wet cold places where the
potato plugs the gap, wheat, barley, oats, rye, rice,
maize and sorghum are what keeps us all alive and
kicking.
The cereals have all been bred from wild grasses,
and bred so far away from their parent stocks that they
are now distinct species. In fact it is sometimes difficult
to guess which wild grass a particular cereal is derived
from, and, in some cases, maize for example, the wild
15species is now probably extinct.
(from Seymour, John. The Complete Book of Self-Sufficiency,London: Faber & Faber, 1980: 56)
The opposite of wet in "in wet cold places" (l.6) is: