Library/PT 127/Sec 4/Reading Comp
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Reading Comprehension

Passage Breakdown

Many plants and animals can tell who their relatives are. One explanation, called inclusive fitness, says they act to help relatives because relatives share genes, which explains things like bees that care for relatives and toad tadpoles that nip and release siblings but eat nonsiblings (unless they are very hungry). But kin recognition can also be a self-protection tool: tiger salamander larvae avoid eating relatives because relatives with similar immune systems can pass on a deadly bacterium, so avoiding kin helps the eater survive. In short, animals may recognize kin both to help shared genes and to avoid catching diseases.

Logic Breakdown

Locate the passage's contrast between the traditional view of evolution and inclusive fitness theory and the example about honeybees; the relevant sentences show that honeybees are explained by inclusive fitness rather than by the traditional view alone. Relevant quotes: 'Whereas the traditional view of evolution held that natural selection favors the continued genetic representation of individuals within a species that produce the greatest number of offspring, the inclusive fitness theory posits that natural selection similarly favors organisms that help their relatives...' and 'The theory has helped to explain previously mysterious phenomena, including the evolution of social insect species like the honeybee, most of whose members do not produce offspring and exist only to nurture relatives.'

Passage Stimulus

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14.

The information in the passage most strongly suggests that the fact that most honeybees exist only to nurture relatives

Correct Answer
E
The passage explicitly contrasts the traditional view (selection favors individuals that produce the most offspring) with inclusive fitness (selection can favor helping relatives). It then says that inclusive fitness 'has helped to explain previously mysterious phenomena, including ... the honeybee, most of whose members do not produce offspring and exist only to nurture relatives.' This indicates that the honeybee fact is hard to account for using the traditional view alone and is explained only when the traditional view is supplemented (for example, by inclusive fitness).
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