Some flowering plant species, entirely dependent on bees for pollination, lure their pollinators with abundant nectar and pollen, which are the only source of food for bees. Often the pollinating species is so highly adapted that it can feed from—and thus pollinate—only a single species of plant. Similarly, some plant species have evolved flowers that only a single species of bee can pollinate—an arrangement that places the plant species at great risk of extinction. If careless applications of pesticides destroy the pollinating bee species, the plant species itself can no longer reproduce.
The information above, if true, most strongly supports which one of the following?
(A) The earliest species of flowering plants appeared on Earth contemporaneously with the earliest bee species. - WRONG. Its about evolution not earliest species when evolution just has started or not at all started.
(B) If the sole pollinator of a certain plant species is in no danger of extinction, the plant species it pollinates is also unlikely to become extinct. - WRONG. No only the word unlikely creates doubt, this option also reverse causality using conditional which is questionable.
(C) Some bees are able to gather pollen and nectar from any species of plant. - WRONG. May be, may be not(most likely as per passage) we can't say.
(D) The blossoms of most species of flowering plants attract some species of bees and do not attract others. - WRONG. Again not backed up in passage. Not inferable.
(E) The total destruction of the habitat of some plant species could cause some bee species to become extinct. - CORRECT. This is most generic of all the option and is the right answer. Some species would definitely impact some pollinator species since those pollinator species sole food source would have been destroyed.
Took 4minutes of time but it was correct. It was between B and E for me.
Answer E.