Reading Comprehension
Passage Breakdown
For decades scientists thought cholera spread only through infected people and couldn’t explain where the bacteria hid between outbreaks. In the 1970s Rita Colwell used a new glowing-antibody test and found Vibrio cholerae living in coastal waters that standard culture tests missed. She showed the bacteria can go dormant—shrinking and stopping reproduction so they can’t be grown in lab dishes—yet remain alive in seawater. Later changes in water temperature or salinity may wake them up and lead to new outbreaks, explaining how cholera can suddenly reappear along coasts.
Logic Breakdown
Locate the sentence explaining why Colwell's claim 'met with great skepticism.' The passage states: "In the 1970s, microbiologist Rita Colwell's claim ... met with great skepticism, as no biologists believed V. cholerae could persist without a human host, and no cholera outbreaks were occurring anywhere near the Chesapeake." That line shows biologists thought the bacterium could not survive in the environment (e.g., seawater).
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage15.The passage suggests that biologists were skeptical of Colwell's claim to have isolated V. cholerae from the Chesapeake Bay because they believed that
Correct Answer
B
The passage explicitly says other biologists were skeptical because "no biologists believed V. cholerae could persist without a human host," which implies they believed the bacterium could not persist in seawater. Option B restates this belief directly.
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