This is not the hardest passage I read in my life. But it is a bit tricky.
However, I do think you didnt read it very carefully. The first question is an inference one.
Quote:
Historians credit repeated locust invasions in the nineteenth century with reshaping United States agriculture west of the Mississippi River. Admonished by government entomologists, farmers began to diversify. Wheat had come to nearly monopolize the region, but it was particularly vulnerable to the locusts. In 1873, just before the locusts’ most withering offensive, nearly two-thirds of Minnesota farmland was producing
wheat
if you see the red part, you suddenly notice that someone among all farmers cultivated something else other than wheat.
Regards