Library/PT 124/Sec 4/Reading Comp
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Reading Comprehension

Passage Breakdown

Letting a natural predator control a pest works well for cyclamen mites on strawberry plants. Cyclamen mites arrive soon after planting and only become harmful in the plants’ second year, and a predatory mite called Typhlodromus usually shows up then, breeds quickly (both species make female offspring without mating, and Typhlodromus lays eggs over a longer time), and eats enough pests to prevent damage. Typhlodromus survives winter by feeding on sugary secretions from other insects and only reproduces when it can eat cyclamen mites, so its timing matches the pest. Greenhouse and field tests show that removing these predators (for example by spraying the insecticide parathion) lets cyclamen mites explode—about 25 times more—so using that pesticide can do more harm than good.

Logic Breakdown

Approach: Find the choice directly supported by explicit statements that when both mites are present the predator keeps the pest below damaging levels. Support: "Typhlodromus mites usually invade the strawberry fields during the second year, rapidly subdue the cyclamen mite populations, and keep them from reaching significantly damaging levels." "Throughout the study, populations of cyclamen mites remained low in plots shared with Typhlodromus, but their infestation attained significantly damaging proportions on predator-free plants." "On average, cyclamen mites were about 25 times more abundant in the absence of predators than in their presence."

Passage Stimulus

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27.

Information in the passage most strongly supports which one of the following statements?

Correct Answer
A
The passage explicitly reports that Typhlodromus invades in the second year and "rapidly subdue[s] the cyclamen mite populations, and keep[s] them from reaching significantly damaging levels," and it cites greenhouse and field evidence that "populations of cyclamen mites remained low in plots shared with Typhlodromus" while infestations became damaging when predators were eliminated. The quantitative statement that cyclamen mites were "about 25 times more abundant in the absence of predators than in their presence" further confirms that the presence of both species is associated with non-damaging pest levels. Choice A restates this directly and so is best supported.
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