Reading Comprehension
Passage Breakdown
People used to think disease-causing germs would evolve to be harmless so their hosts would stay healthy, but scientists now say germs can still succeed if they make a host very sick as long as they still spread to enough new people. How a germ spreads matters: germs that need close contact (like the common cold) usually don’t make people too sick because sick people can’t spread them, germs carried by insects (like mosquitoes) can be much worse because the insect can pass them on even from a bedridden person, and some germs that survive a long time outside a body can also afford to be deadly. So, insect-carried germs and germs that last a long time outside hosts tend to be more dangerous than those that need direct contact.
Logic Breakdown
Compare the prevailing view (parasites evolve toward benign coexistence because harming hosts reduces long-term survival) with the 'some biologists' claim (even lethal pathogens can succeed if transmission offsets host loss); pick the choice that says the prevailing view overlooks alternative routes to evolutionary success.
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage21.With which one of the following statements about the prevailing view of host-parasite relations would the biologists mentioned in the second-to-last sentence of the first paragraph be most likely to agree?
Correct Answer
D
Support in passage: the prevailing view is stated as 'Such behavior is at odds with the prevailing view of host-parasite relations—that, in general, host and parasite ultimately develop a benign coexistence. This view is based on the idea that parasites that do not harm their hosts have the best chance for long-term survival: they thrive because their hosts thrive.' The biologists' alternative is described immediately after: 'Some biologists, however, recently have suggested that if a pathogen reproduced so extensively as to cause its host to become gravely sick, it could still achieve evolutionary success...' Together these passages show that the biologists believe the traditional view focuses on nonharmful strategies and therefore fails to consider other strategies (e.g., high transmission despite host incapacitation). Thus the biologists would agree that the prevailing view 'ignores the possibility that there is more than one way to achieve evolutionary success.'
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