Library/PT 105/Sec 3/Reading Comp
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Reading Comprehension

Passage Breakdown

Scientists used to think invertebrate groups were just accidental crowds pushed together by currents, but new research shows many invertebrates (like krill) form true, organized schools like fish. In these schools each animal keeps a regular spot near its neighbors and the group stays steady until a predator appears. Schooling helps by making it harder for predators to track the group, improving overall watchfulness, and allowing coordinated defenses (tightening up, freezing, splitting, or rushing away) so many individuals survive. Schools also help find food and mates, but very large schools can cause food competition and lower reproduction, so some animals leave when a group gets too big.

Logic Breakdown

Locate explicit statements about spacing, orientation, and group-size effects in the passage and choose the option that contradicts those statements (look especially for the sentence about relative positions).

Passage Stimulus

Passage Redacted

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2.

According to the passage, each of the following is characteristic of an invertebrate school EXCEPT:

Correct Answer
B
The passage states that schooling invertebrates 'will swim in positions that are consistent relative to fellow school members, and are neither directly above nor directly below a neighbor.' Thus option B (members arranged directly above and below one another) contradicts this explicit description and is the EXCEPT answer.
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