Henry: Some scientists explain the dance of honeybees as the means by which honeybees communicate the location of whatever food source they have just visited to other members of the hive. But honeybees do not need so complicated a mechanism to communicate that information. Forager honeybees returning to their hive simply leave a scent trail from the food source they have just visited. There must therefore be some other explanation for the honeybees’ dance.
Winifred: Not necessarily. Most animals have several ways of accomplishing critical tasks. Bees of some species can navigate using either the position of the Sun or the memory of landmarks. Similarly, for honeybees, scent trails are a supplementary not an exclusive means of communicating.
Henry says that "therefore be some other explanation for the honeybees’ dance." whereas Winifred mentions that "scent trails are a supplementary not an exclusive means of communicating." thus they both argue over the role of honeybees for food source detection.
C correctly states so .
C should be the answer
The point at issue between Henry and Winifred is whether
(A)
theories of animal behavior can be established on the basis of evidence about only one species of animal
. Out of scope
(B) there is more than one valid explanation for the dance of honeybees
they both do not discuss multiple roles but specific to role of dance for food (C)
honeybees communicate the location of food sources through their dance Matches the stmts discussion
(D) the honeybee is the only species of bee that is capable of communicating navigational information to other hive members
out of scope (E) the honeybee’s sense of smell plays a role in its foraging strategies
out of scopeC is the answer _________________
Keep it simple. Keep it blank