Reading Comprehension
Passage Breakdown
Calvaria major is a tree that used to be common on Mauritius, where the dodo lived and died out centuries ago. In 1977 Temple saw only old trees and guessed that after the dodo disappeared the tree stopped reproducing because its seeds need the dodo’s gizzard to wear down their hard pits before they can sprout. He offered some tests (estimating gizzard force and feeding pits to turkeys, with a few sprouts) as support. But later experts found many younger Calvaria trees and showed that some seeds can germinate without bird abrasion, so Temple’s dodo-dependence idea is doubtful and the tree’s decline could be from disease or introduced animals instead.
Logic Breakdown
Locate the sentence describing Temple's primary research; the passage says his investigation of Calvaria major was a sidelight to his research on endangered birds, so interpret the bird research as focused on species facing extinction.
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage23.The author indicates that Temple's research on birds of the island of Mauritius
Correct Answer
A
The passage states: 'In 1977 Stanley Temple, an ecologist whose investigation of Calvaria major was a sidelight to his research on endangered birds of Mauritius, proposed...' This explicitly indicates Temple's bird research concerned 'endangered birds' — i.e., species facing the threat of extinction.
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