Reading Comprehension
Passage Breakdown
There are more species near the equator than near the poles. Scientists suggest four simple reasons: (1) the tropics have been stable longer so species had more time to evolve; (2) more sunlight might boost growth and thus support more species, though that idea has problems and isn’t fully tested; (3) steady tropical climates let species survive on fewer kinds of food and tolerate more overlap, but local community interactions can’t explain regional differences; and (4) the most likely reason is that new species form more often in the tropics because small isolated groups there survive and evolve into new species, while similar groups in cold places tend to die out.
Logic Breakdown
Focus on the time theory's core claim that the tropics were spared repeated ice-age disruptions and thus had more uninterrupted time for speciation; apply that claim to a scenario in which high-latitude regions also stop experiencing ice-age interruptions.
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage17.As presented in the passage, the principles of the time theory most strongly support which one of the following predictions?
Correct Answer
A
The passage states the time theory: "diverse species adapted to today's climatic conditions have had more time to emerge in the tropical regions, which, unlike the temperate and arctic zones, have been unaffected by a succession of ice ages." The principle is that uninterrupted time allows more speciation. If high-latitude regions experienced an absence of additional ice ages (i.e., gained uninterrupted time), the time-theory mechanism predicts they too could accumulate many more species—precisely the outcome described in choice A.
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