Library/PT 110/Sec 4/Reading Comp
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Reading Comprehension

Passage Breakdown

Okapis are shy forest animals from central Africa that early scientists thought looked like horses or zebras but are actually closest to giraffes (they have skin-covered horns, special teeth, and a long tongue). Radio collars put on okapis in 1985 showed they live in a small, narrow stretch of forest rather than being extremely rare. They’re hard to see because their coloring hides them, they live and feed alone in the forest interior instead of in groups at the edges, and they eat many different kinds of leaves. Scientists think okapis stay inside forests either to hide from predators, because other grazing animals pushed them to the edges, or because they still follow old forest boundaries from long ago.

Logic Breakdown

Look for an answer that summarizes both findings that research has resolved and the remaining puzzles: classification and radio-tracking data answered some questions, but questions about habitat preference and geographic concentration remain.

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1.

Which one of the following most completely and accurately expresses the main idea of the passage?

Correct Answer
C
Option C is correct because the passage shows that research has answered some long-standing questions (classification and improved population/habit data) while still leaving other puzzles about distribution and feeding/behavior. Supporting sentences: (1) classification resolved: 'The okapi's rightful place within the giraffe family is confirmed by its skin-covered horns (in males), two-lobed canine teeth, and long prehensile tongue.' (2) radio-tracking yielded reliable data: 'It was not until 1985, when zoologists started tracking okapis by affixing collars equipped with radio transmitters to briefly captured specimens, that reliable information about okapi numbers and habits began to be collected.' (3) unanswered questions remain: 'But other questions about okapi behavior arise... Why, for example, do they prefer to remain within forested areas... Another question is why okapis are absent from other nearby forest regions that would seem hospitable to them.' C accurately states that some questions have been answered by research while others (notably geographic concentration and feeding/behavior) remain.
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