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
Scan the passage for explicit explanatory statements or hypotheses tied to each choice; the correct EXCEPT choice will be mentioned without any explanation.
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage5.The passage provides information intended to help explain each of the following EXCEPT:
Correct Answer
E
E is correct because the passage describes the behavior but gives no explanation: 'Okapis never eat one plant to the exclusion of others; even where preferred foliage is abundant, okapis will leave much of it uneaten, choosing to move on and sample other leaves.' The other choices are supported by explanatory statements in the passage: A (the rarity belief) is explained: 'Because okapis were infrequently captured by hunters, some zoologists believed that they were rare...'; B (classification with giraffes) is explained: 'their closest relatives were giraffes. 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.' C (forest-interior preference) is discussed with hypotheses: 'One possibility is that this is a defense against predators; another is that the okapi was pushed into the forest by competition...; Zoologists theorize that okapis are relicts of an era when forestland was scarce...' D (individual foraging) is directly explained: 'Because of this, and because of the distribution of their food, okapis engage in individual rather than congregated foraging.'
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