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
Approach: The hypothetical says that dormant (nonculturable) bacteria in water inevitably cause cholera when ingested, so ask what must happen after ingestion. The passage states that V. cholerae enters a dormant, 'viable but nonculturable' state and 'stops reproducing and therefore cannot be cultured,' and it suggests that environmental changes (e.g., sea-surface temperature or salinity) 'may ... enable them to spread among humans again.' These lines point to the need for dormant bacteria to be able to awaken under some environmental conditions—so the human body is a plausible awakening environment.
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage17.The passage suggests that if V. cholerae bacteria undetectable by traditional culture methods inevitably caused cholera in humans who ingested them, then which one of the following is most likely to be true?
Correct Answer
E
If ingestion of dormant, nonculturable V. cholerae inevitably produces cholera, the bacteria must be able to exit dormancy inside human hosts. The passage describes the bacteria's 'viable but nonculturable' dormant state ('It stops reproducing and therefore cannot be cultured') and notes that changes in environmental conditions correlate with cholera outbreaks ('it is possible that changes in seawater temperature or salinity are what enable them to spread among humans again'). Thus the best-supported inference is that the human body is an environment in which dormant V. cholerae can awaken (answer E).
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