Reading Comprehension
Passage Breakdown
Pronghorns are much faster than any living North American predator, so one scientist says their speed is a leftover adaptation to fast predators that died out long ago, like American cheetahs. Many scientists doubt such "leftover behavior" ideas because they are hard to test, but pronghorns still do things—like herding and choosing the fastest mates—that make sense if fast hunters once chased them. Other animals also keep old anti-predator behaviors long after their predators are gone, though those reactions can fade after very long times.
Logic Breakdown
Use the explicit claims in paragraph 3 about herding and present-day carnivores: determine which choice follows from the statements that herding reduces attack risk yet pronghorns "have nothing to fear from present-day carnivores."
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage21.The third paragraph of the passage provides the most support for which one of the following inferences?
Correct Answer
E
Paragraph 3 states that herding "allows more eyes to watch for predators and diminishes the chances of any particular animal being attacked" but then immediately says, "since pronghorns have nothing to fear from present-day carnivores and thus have nothing to gain from herding, their herding behavior appears to be another adaptation to extinct threats." Those sentences together imply that herding primarily reduces predator risk, but because present-day carnivores are not a threat to pronghorns, the absence of herding would not make them appreciably more vulnerable to present-day carnivores. This is exactly what choice E asserts.
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