Library/PT 139/Sec 3/Reading Comp
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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

Ask how the author evaluates Temple's hypothesis: locate the passage's assessment and the counterevidence (Strahm, Speke) that directly undercuts Temple's assumption that seeds no longer germinated.

Passage Stimulus

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26.

It can be most logically inferred from the passage that the author regards Temple's hypothesis that the extinction of the dodo was the cause of Calvaria major's seeming loss of the ability to reproduce as which one of the following?

Correct Answer
E
The author treats Temple's hypothesis as an attempt to explain a condition that did not, in fact, exist. The passage notes Temple 'assumed [the fruits] could no longer germinate, given his failure to find younger trees.' But the author then cites stronger counterevidence: 'Where Temple had found only thirteen specimens of Calvaria major, Wendy Strahm, the foremost expert on the plant ecology of Mauritius, has identified hundreds, many far younger than three centuries. So Calvaria major seeds have in fact germinated, and the tree's reproductive cycle has thus continued, since the dodo's disappearance.' The author further notes Speke's work showing that 'while only a minority of unabraded Calvaria major seeds germinate, the number is still probably sufficient to keep this species from becoming extinct.' These passages show the author believes Temple tried to explain a "loss of reproductive ability" that did not actually occur, so E is correct.
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