Reading Comprehension
Passage Breakdown
Pigeons can be taken far from home and still find their way back, and scientists offer two main ideas: either pigeons keep track of their outward movement, or they have an internal “map” that tells them where home is. The movement-tracking idea looks weak because changing magnets, moving them in the dark, or anesthetizing them usually doesn’t stop them, though no one has tried all those tests together. The map idea—especially that pigeons use smells carried by the wind—has some support (plugging nostrils sometimes makes birds confused), but other studies suggest nose-plugging may just upset the birds or that blocking smell doesn’t stop orientation. So the smell-map idea seems promising but the real explanation is still uncertain.
Logic Breakdown
Ask what role the parenthetical plays: does it present an example, endorse, or criticize the outward-displacement theory? Locate the clause and read it as part of the two explanations the author introduces.
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage19.The author refers to "the system of many short-range species such as honeybees" (middle of the first paragraph) most probably in order to
Correct Answer
B
"there are two basic explanations for the remarkable ability of pigeons to 'home': the birds might keep track of their outward displacement (the system of many short-range species such as honeybees)" — the parenthetical names honeybees as an instance of the outward-displacement system, so the author is presenting this model as a comparable, plausible explanation to be considered among the two basic alternatives.
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