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
Locate the zoologists' stated theory in the final paragraph (the 'relicts' hypothesis) and match that explicit claim to the answer choices.
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage4.Suppose that numerous okapis are discovered living in a remote forest region in northeastern central Africa that zoologists had not previously explored. Based on their current views, which one of the following would the zoologists be most likely to conclude about this discovery?
Correct Answer
E
The passage explicitly states that "Zoologists theorize that okapis are relicts of an era when forestland was scarce and that they continue to respect those borders even though available forestland has long since expanded." The passage also locates okapi populations in northeastern central Africa: they are "concentrated in an extremely limited chain of forestland in northeastern central Africa." Given a discovery of numerous okapis in an unexplored northeastern-central-African forest, zoologists would most likely conclude that these okapis had lived in that forest from an earlier era when forestland was scarce (the relict hypothesis).
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