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Cowonga lion cubs in the wild often engage in aggressive and
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Updated on: 23 Apr 2006, 12:49
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Cowonga lion cubs in the wild often engage in aggressive and even violent play with their siblings. This activity is apparently instigated by the parent lion. Cowonga lion cubs born in captivity, however, rarely engage in aggressive play. Zoologists have concluded that this form of play teaches the young lions the aggressive skills neccessary for successful hunting in the wild, and that such play is not instigated in captivity because the development of hunging skills is unecessary there.
The zoologist's conclusion would be most strengthend by demonstrating that.
A) Cowonga lions raised in captivity are unable to hunt successfully in the wild.
B)The skills developed from agressive play are simliar to those used for hunting in the wild.
C) The young of other types of predatory animals also engage in agressive play
D) Parent lions that were raised in captivity do not instigate this play in their young
E) None of the Cowonga lions raised in the wild is incapable of hunting successfully
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This topic has been closed and archived due to inactivity or violation of community quality standards. No more replies are possible here.
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Originally posted by joemama142000 on 23 Apr 2006, 03:48.
Last edited by joemama142000 on 23 Apr 2006, 12:49, edited 1 time in total.
Re: Cowonga lion cubs in the wild often engage in aggressive and
[#permalink]
23 Apr 2006, 06:56
I vote for B
Zoologists concluded that skills for the play are the same as those used for hunting. What makes them think so? The similarity of both types of skills.
Re: Cowonga lion cubs in the wild often engage in aggressive and
[#permalink]
23 Apr 2006, 07:20
I pick B as well.
Zoologist think that the playfull skills teaches the young how to hunt in the wild. If these skills are similar to the aggressive playfull skils, then it streghtens the conclusion.
Re: Cowonga lion cubs in the wild often engage in aggressive and
[#permalink]
23 Apr 2006, 08:49
myc2004 wrote:
I pick B as well.
Zoologist think that the playfull skills teaches the young how to hunt in the wild. If these skills are similar to the aggressive playfull skils, then it streghtens the conclusion.
Yes agreed it should be B.....And this always burnt me....Without properly reading the choices...
Re: Cowonga lion cubs in the wild often engage in aggressive and
[#permalink]
23 Apr 2006, 12:56
joemama142000 wrote:
Cowonga lion cubs in the wild often engage in aggressive and even violent play with their siblings. This activity is apparently instigated by the parent lion. Cowonga lion cubs born in captivity, however, rarely engage in aggressive play. Zoologists have concluded that this form of play teaches the young lions the aggressive skills neccessary for successful hunting in the wild, and that such play is not instigated in captivity because the development of hunging skills is unecessary there.
The zoologist's conclusion would be most strengthend by demonstrating that.
A) Cowonga lions raised in captivity are unable to hunt successfully in the wild.
B)The skills developed from agressive play are simliar to those used for hunting in the wild.
C) The young of other types of predatory animals also engage in agressive play
D) Parent lions that were raised in captivity do not instigate this play in their young
E) None of the Cowonga lions raised in the wild is incapable of hunting successfully
here is my attempt
Conclusion: Play leads to successful hunting
If don't play then they are not successful strengthens
But i can't really neg B
Archived Topic
Hi there,
This topic has been closed and archived due to inactivity or violation of community quality standards. No more replies are possible here.
Still interested in this question? Check out the "Best Topics" block above for a better discussion on this exact question, as well as several more related questions.
Thank you for understanding, and happy exploring!
gmatclubot
Re: Cowonga lion cubs in the wild often engage in aggressive and [#permalink]