Library/PT 103/Sec 4/Reading Comp
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Reading Comprehension

Passage Breakdown

From June 1987 to May 1988 a large number of Atlantic bottlenose dolphins died, showing skin sores and damage to internal organs. Scientists found brevetoxin (a red‑tide toxin) in some dolphins and PCBs (synthetic pollutants) in almost all; they first blamed the red‑tide toxin, thinking dolphins ate contaminated fish, became weak, and then died from infections, but that idea conflicts with the timing and location of the deaths and with what is known about PCBs. A simpler explanation is that a sudden increase in synthetic pollutants (for example from dumping) pushed already‑polluted dolphins over the edge and caused the die-off, with brevetoxin possibly contributing.

Logic Breakdown

Look to the final paragraph for the author's purpose: the Gulf-of-Mexico reference is given as a counterexample to the brevetoxin (red-tide) explanation.

Passage Stimulus

Passage Redacted

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20.

The author refers to dolphins in the Gulf of Mexico in the last paragraph in order to

Correct Answer
C
The author uses the Gulf example to weaken the idea that P. brevis (red tides) was the primary cause. As the passage states: "First, bottlenose dolphins and P. brevis red tides are both common in the Gulf of Mexico, yet no dolphin die-off of a similar magnitude has been noted there." That absence of similar die-offs where red tides and dolphins commonly coexist casts doubt on the claim that P. brevis contributes substantially to dolphin die-offs.
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