mohammad Ali Khan
akansal211SANA0203blueshoresHere it is.
Official Explanation
Topic and Scope:
A basic scientific principle: “Population size is partly a reflection of available food resources.” Specifically, author uses two experiments (one by Berger, one by Bryant) to illustrate how changes in food supply can dramatically affect the size of rodent populations.
Purpose and Main Idea:
Author wants to demonstrate that the relationship between population and food supply “is more complex than formerly thought.”
Paragraph Structure:
In paragraph 1 the second sentence is key: “Recent experiments suggest that the relationship is more complex than formerly thought.” You can guess from these words that the passage will go on to discuss these experiments. The next sentence identifies the nature of the complexity—rodent browsing affects plant chemicals, which in turn affect the rodents.
Paragraph 2 details Berger’s experiment, which studied how plant chemicals trigger reproductive activity among voles.
Paragraph 3 details Bryant’s experiment, which studied the effect of plant chemicals on declining populations of snowshoe hares.
Paragraph 4 discusses possible future research involving lemmings, another rodent with fluctuating populations.
1) The author provides specific information to answer which of the following questions?
Difficulty Level: 750
Explanation
With a question like this, you need to check each choice against the passage. A faster way to eliminate choices is to remember that the right answer often fits with the main idea, here the food-population relationship. Thus, (A) is wrong because it ventures away from this. (B) looks excellent, because the author devotes several lines at the end of paragraph 2 to explaining the importance of timing for vole reproduction. (C) is simply never covered. (D) is wrong because the author discusses the significance of 6- MBOA, but not its biologic mechanism. With (E), why the hares overpopulate is dismissed in the third paragraph with the words “for reasons that are unclear.” The answer is (B).
2) The passage describes the effect of 6-MBOA on voles as a “significant biological adaptation” (Highlighted) because it
Difficulty Level: 700
Explanation
This question asks about a detail from paragraph 2. The cited sentence says that timing is crucial because voles are short-lived and the timing of plant growth is unpredictable. You can infer that the plant-rodent relationship increases the vole population at times when food is more plentiful. The best restatement of this inference is (C). (A) goes the wrong way. 6- MBOA triggers breeding—it doesn’t discourage it. (B), (D) and (E) are never mentioned anywhere.
ANSWER: C
3) Which of the following statements can be inferred about plant shoots containing large amounts of terpene and phenolic resins?
Difficulty Level: 750
Explanation
The resinous shoots are discussed in the third paragraph. There, we are told that these shoots function as part of “a phytochemical defense against the depredations of snowshoe hares in Canada.” This means that statement I is correct. We are also told the resins in these shoots “discourage hare browsing,” and that hares avoid shoots artificially treated with these resins. This means that statement III must also appear in the correct answer. But the passage does not say that increases in the hare population cause plants to produce more resinous shoots, so statement II is not supported by the passage. Therefore, the answer is (D).
4) It can be inferred that the study of lemmings proposed by the author would probably
Difficulty Level: 750
Explanation
The lemmings are mentioned in the last paragraph, which speculates that lemmings might, like voles, be affected by a plant trigger for breeding behavior. Some answer choices mention Berger and some mention Bryant. The lemmings are likened to voles, so Berger is the pertinent researcher here. This eliminates (A) and (B). (E) conflicts with the main idea. The author wants to prove something, not disprove it. That leaves (C), supporting Berger’s specific findings, and (D), indicating whether Berger’s findings can be generalized. The paragraph doesn’t talk about proving Berger’s specific results with the voles; those are accepted as given. It does say that the lemmings, like voles, may be affected by a plant trigger. This implies (D), that Berger’s findings may be applicable to other animals.
ANSWER: D
5) The author of the passage is primarily concerned with
Difficulty Level: 750
Explanation
The answer to this global question has to focus on something about the complex relationship between food and population size, including the rodent examples; it should also encompass the entire passage. Thus, the best answer is (A). (B) is a detail appearing only in the second paragraph, while (E) appears only in paragraph 3. (C) is too general, and (D) mentions a topic the author never covers.
ANSWER: A
6) Bryant’s interpretation of the results of his experiment (Highlighted) depends on which of the following assumptions?
Difficulty Level: 700
Explanation
When you read about the hares, notice that Bryant’s conclusion is pure speculation. He sees that the hares don’t eat resinous shoots, and concludes that this “may play a role” in population decline. The assumption is that there’s a connection between not eating the plants and a population reduction. Choice (C) corresponds: The avoidance of plants would lead to starvation, and population decline.
(A), if true, would weaken, not strengthen, Bryant’s conclusion. (B) is irrelevant—the cause of the rise is unknown and doesn’t concern Bryant; it’s the decline
that interests him. (D) mixes up the hares with the voles and their breeding behavior. The hare experiment has nothing to do with breeding and reproduction. Finally, (E) is never suggested. Bryant concluded that the population decline was caused by avoiding the shoots, not by eating them.
ANSWER: C
7) The experiments described in the passage did each of the following EXCEPT
Difficulty Level: 750
Explanation
For this question, you need to eliminate each choice that was part of both experiments. Choice (A) was part of both—Berger measured how voles changed breeding behavior and Bryant measured how hares changed eating behavior. (B) also appears in both: Berger measured the rise and fall of vole populations, while Bryant measured hare populations. (C) and (D) apply to both experiments, since both scientists fed the animals chemically treated foods and noted consumption. (E) is correct: Only Berger’s experiment dealt with the effect of food on breeding behavior. Bryant’s hare experiment dealt with the effect of food on eating behavior.
ANSWER: E
Hope it helps