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 paragraph about spadefoot toad tadpoles and read the sentence describing what happens when one tadpole eats another; the question asks for an explicitly stated fact about some tadpoles.
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage9.The passage states which one of the following about some spadefoot toad tadpoles?
Correct Answer
C
The passage explicitly states: 'This event can trigger changes in the tadpole's physiology and dietary preference, causing the tadpole to become larger and exclusively carnivorous, feasting on other animals including members of its own species.' This directly supports choice C (they change in body size when they become carnivores).
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