Reading Comprehension
Passage Breakdown
The passage says that people assume we know what a species is, but scientists disagree. Some "lumpers" group very similar bird populations into one species if they interbreed in the wild, while "splitters" call any population with a clear genetic difference a separate species. Charles Sibley, a splitter, used DNA tests to rearrange bird relationships, but many scientists think DNA differences are hard to interpret and species labels are fuzzy. This debate matters because calling more groups separate species could mean more animals need protection."}
Logic Breakdown
Locate Sibley's specific claim in the last two sentences of paragraph 2 and choose the option that directly conflicts with his reported relationships (American vultures closer to storks than to European vultures).
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage19.If valid, Charles G. Sibley's findings, as described in the last two sentences of the second paragraph, most seriously challenge which one of the following assertions?
Correct Answer
C
Quote from passage: "From his studies he concluded that many earlier classifications of the relationships of bird families were wrong. For instance, he said that vultures found in North and South America were more closely related to storks than to European vultures, and that loons and grebes, which many taxonomists had argued were closely related, were not." This statement implies that North American vultures are not closely related to European vultures and therefore are unlikely to be the same species; option C asserts they are likely the same species and is thus most seriously contradicted by Sibley's findings.
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