Reading comp PrepTest 119 · Section 1 · Question 18

Passage

Questions 16-21  .        The pronghorn, an antelope–like mammal that  . lives on the western plains of North America, is Remaining source text redacted.
Passage walkthrough
Passage Summary

Topic: Science


Paragraph 1

  • Paragraph note
    • Phenomenon/Explanation
  • Views, minor Meta-Structures, and the author's attitude
    • Phenomenon - North American pronghorn can run much faster than any current predator
    • Biologists - Difficult to explain
    • Recent Biologist Explanation - Evolved to run faster than predators that are now extinct (fossil record)

Paragraph 2

  • Paragraph note
    • Relevant term; Biologist reaction to explanation; Author response
  • Views, minor Meta-Structures, and the author's attitude
    • Term - Relict behavior - Present behavior due to long-extinct condition
    • Most Biologists - Distrust relict behavior hypotheses (like explanation from P1); only accept when all alternatives ruled out
    • Author - Evidence can support these hypotheses

Paragraph 3

  • Paragraph note
    • Modern-day pronghorn evidence supporting relict hypothesis
  • Views, minor Meta-Structures, and the author's attitude
    • Example 1 - Herding behavior (helps with predators; less per-animal food) explained by predation
    • Example 2 - Mating based on speed/endurance

Paragraph 4

  • Paragraph note
    • Support that relict behavior happens
  • Views, minor Meta-Structures, and the author's attitude
    • Example 1 - Stickleback fish respond to sculpins even when long free of them
    • Example 2 - Ground squirrels respond to snakes after 70-300k years
    • (Counter)Example 3 - Arctic ground squirrels don’t respond to snakes after 3m years
      • Author - Shows it doesn’t last forever

Main Point: While most biologists are suspicious of relict behavior hypotheses, there is evidence that the pronghorn’s speed is due to evolutionary pressure from long-dead predators.

Key Lines?

Lines 5-8 - The phenomenon that needs explaining (could also be viewed as a question or a paradox)

Lines 8-14 - An explanation

Lines 19-21 - Why biologists are skeptical of that type of explanation

Lines 24-25 - Author is more positive on the explanation

Lines 26-27 - More Author support for explanation

Line 29 - First example

Line 38 - Second example

Lines 44-46 - Author pivots to general support for type of theory

Line 46 - First example

Line 52 - Second example

Line 56 - Third example/counterexample (concession/caveat by Author)

Meta-Structure?

Phenomenon/Explanation - As with many Science passages, this one starts with a phenomenon in need of an explanation: the North American pronghorn is so fast that no predator comes close to catching it, leading to the question of why it developed such speed (Lines 1-8). This phenomenon receives an explanation from a Biologist, starting in Line 8 - the pronghorn’s speed developed in response to predators that have since gone extinct, a type of hypothesis known as a “relict behavior hypothesis” (Lines 15-18). When a passage has a Phenomenon and an Explanation, the Author’s preferred explanation (or her opinion of a key explanation) generally serves as the main point. In this passage, the Author argues in favor of this Biologist’s hypothesis despite general skepticism from the biologist community, saying that there is “much supporting evidence” for it (Lines 26-29) and that such theories are supported by other examples (Lines 44-46). Since the Author buys into the Biologist’s explanation, the main point of this passage is that explanation - that the pronghorn’s speed can be explained by the presence of since-extinct predators, as we stated above.

Examples - The Author hops into a lot of examples in this passage throughout Paragraphs 3 and 4, though they serve different functions. Paragraph 3’s examples are of behaviors seen in pronghorns that suggest they did face predation in the past, directly supporting the biologist’s explanation of the development of their speed. Paragraph 4’s first two examples are of animals that display relict behavior, supporting relict hypotheses in general and thus indirectly supporting the relict hypothesis of the pronghorn’s speed. Finally, Paragraph 4’s last example is a bit of a counterexample, showing a situation where a relict behavior didn’t persist. While the Author adds this in to add to information about relict behavior, we should view it as a bit of a counterpoint to her other examples since it shows an outcome that doesn’t support her main point.

Last Thoughts?

First, the central Meta-Structure here could be viewed in a variety of ways - as a Question and Answer, or as a Paradox and Resolution. All of these Meta-Structures are strongly related to each other, and the primary difference between them is the language used to describe the relevant elements. This also implicates correct language in answer choices. Since they’re so strongly related, you should be willing to pick answers that use any of these words to describe the elements in the passage, as long as they make sense in the specific context.

Second, there is a subtlety here related to our Meta-Structures we should discuss, especially in light of the end of Paragraph 2 and the entirety of Paragraph 4. Because those two sections are about relict behavior hypotheses and not the specific situation of the pronghorn, you might have considered this a Generalization/Example passage, with the passage being about relict hypotheses generally and exploring it through the example of the pronghorn. However, the structure of the passage shows us that this isn’t the case. Whenever a discussion of relict behavior hypotheses comes up, it’s to back up the explanation about pronghorn behavior. At the end of Paragraph 2, the generalization is meant to rebut the presumption of most biologists, who don’t like these hypotheses - and the Author then immediately hops back to the pronghorn theory and the evidence supporting it. The last paragraph is also noted as serving to support the “general plausibility” of these theories, in order to strengthen the argument that it applies to the pronghorn’s behavior. So this passage is about explaining pronghorn behavior, and it uses support for the general plausibility of such a theory to support that conclusion.

Third, note the role of the third example in Paragraph 4. There, the Author brings up a situation where relict behavior doesn’t persist. This doesn’t back up her argument the way the other two examples do, as it shows a behavior that disappeared with time, suggesting that relict behavior hypotheses do have some issues - after all, if behaviors disappear over time and this one didn’t, it might thus have a modern explanation after all. As such, we should be careful with questions about the Arctic squirrels or about the Author’s overall opinion of relict behavior hypotheses, as she does bring up this example highlighting a situation where they don’t apply.

Question prompt

The last paragraph most Remaining source text redacted.
Why the credited answer is right

Credited answer: C

The notes below walk through why it fits the stem and how to eliminate the rest.

Question Type

Science

Strategy Overview

Review the overall purpose of Paragraph 4, then find answers within that scope, using the passage itself to verify any details as necessary

Answer Anticipation

When we’re looking for an answer supported by a whole paragraph, we’re going to need to be willing to do a little back and forth. We can’t reread the whole paragraph and remember all the details, so we’ll have to use what we know about the purpose of the paragraph generally to narrow down the answers. This might lead us to the correct one, but it might leave more than one answer. If that’s the case, then we’ll need to use the passage itself to figure out which is correct.With that in mind, what was the purpose of Paragraph 4? It was generally meant to support that relict behavior is a real phenomenon, by bringing up some examples of relict behaviors. And we know that there were three examples - the first two showed relict behaviors, the third showed a situation where (the Author argues) a relict behavior disappeared over time.With this big-picture info in mind, let’s head to the answers and find ones that line up with it.

Answer choices

  1. A
    An absence of predators Remaining source text redacted.
    Why choice A is not credited

    (A) (Lines 33-34) This answer doesn’t line up with the purpose of Paragraph 4 as it’s not about examples of relict behavior, so we can defer/eliminate it. (The closest the passage gets to discussing this is when it says that herd behavior can lead to overcrowding and increased competition for food, but there’s no indication this is a bigger problem than predation.)

  2. B
    Relict behaviors are found Remaining source text redacted.
    Why choice B is not credited

    (B) This answer is too strong - Paragraph 4 suggests that some animals alive today display relict behaviors, but there’s no language supporting the “most” in this answer.

  3. C
    If a behavior is Remaining source text redacted.
    Why choice C matches the stem

    (C) (Lines 56-61) This answer lines up with the third example, where the Arctic ground squirrel showed no fear of snakes after 3m years of that predator being absent from their environment. Since this answer is backed up by an example provided in Paragraph 4, it’s the correct answer.

  4. D
    Behavior patterns that originated Remaining source text redacted.
    Why choice D is not credited

    (D) (Lines 56-61) The third example in the paragraph is used to argue that such behaviors won’t persist interminably in the absence of the original cause. However, there’s no discussion of what level of absence or how frequently the cause must “pop up” for the behavior to persist, so this answer is unsupported. (And note that it would be nearly impossible to prove this answer - how can you prove something will last forever?)

  5. E
    Behavior patterns invariably take Remaining source text redacted.
    Why choice E is not credited

    (E) (Line 54; Line 59) We can infer from two of the examples that at least one behavior pattern disappeared between 300k and 3m years - the squirrels’ fear of snakes. However, that’s a wide range without a similar one for the development of that fear to be compared to. And, on top of that, it’s a single behavior, while this answer is general. This answer is therefore unsupported.

What this tests

Question analytics

Based on historical answer selection rates for this question.

Answer choice distribution

  1. A 6%
  2. B 4%
  3. C Credited 77%
  4. D 12%
  5. E 1%

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