Reading Comprehension
Passage Breakdown
A lichen is a fungus living together with an alga. Scientists couldn’t tell where lichen-forming fungi fit on the fungus family tree because they’re hard to separate from their algae, but a new DNA study that can isolate fungal genes found that lichen fungi belong to several ordinary fungus groups — they are close relatives of things like brewer’s yeast, morel mushrooms, and the fungus that causes Dutch elm disease. This shows lichens aren’t a strange separate group, and it also suggests fungi can switch back and forth between harming hosts and living in helpful partnerships over long periods.
Logic Breakdown
Approach: identify the author’s claim (that the lichen study undercuts the assumption that parasites generally evolve toward symbiosis) and find an answer that explains why the observed reversals to parasitism would not undercut that assumption. Relevant passage quotes: 'One implication of the new research is that it provides evidence to help overturn the long-standing evolutionary assumption that parasitic interactions inevitably evolve over time to a greater benignity and eventually to symbiosis...' and 'Fungi both harmful and benign can now be found both early and late in fungus evolutionary history.' The correct answer must explain why late-occurring parasitic branches fail to negate the general trend (for example, by showing such branches are short-lived).
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage19.Which one of the following, if true, most weakens the author's criticism of the assumption that parasitic interactions generally evolve toward symbiosis?
Correct Answer
E
The author's criticism depends on the observation that parasitic fungi appear both early and late on the fungus family tree (passage: 'Fungi both harmful and benign can now be found both early and late in fungus evolutionary history'), and from that concludes fungi can revert from mutualism to parasitism ('...fungi can evolve toward mutualism and then just as easily turn back again toward parasitism'). If, as E states, 'Branches of the fungus family tree that have evolved from symbiosis to parasitism usually die out shortly thereafter,' then those late parasitic occurrences are transient and do not represent a sustained reversal of evolutionary trend. Thus E shows the fungal data would not overturn the general tendency for parasites to evolve toward symbiosis, weakening the author's criticism.
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