Library/PT 108/Sec 4/Reading Comp
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Reading Comprehension

Passage Breakdown

Scientists know some small forest birds stay warm by sleeping in holes, lowering their body temperature, or eating fatty seeds. Kinglets are puzzling because they are tiny but keep very high body heat and eat only insects, yet they don’t forage at night or store much food and their stomach holds only about an hour’s worth. They can build up fat during the day, but that only covers about half the overnight energy they need. Researchers haven’t found evidence of torpor in kinglets, so one untested idea is that many small groups join together at night to huddle and share warmth.

Logic Breakdown

Go to paragraph 2 where the passage discusses the 'physical laws of heating and cooling' and cites a quantified comparison of heat loss and required food consumption between kinglets and birds twice their mass.

Passage Stimulus

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3.

According to the passage, the physical laws of heating and cooling suggest that in order to maintain body temperature in winter, kinglets must

Correct Answer
D
Paragraph 2 states: According to the physical laws of heating and cooling, kinglets would lose heat at a rate about 75 percent faster than birds twice their mass — chickadees, for example — and so would have to consume and burn 75 percent more food per unit of body mass than the larger birds to maintain the same body temperature. This sentence directly supports choice D, which says kinglets must consume more food per unit of body mass than birds twice their mass do.
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