Reading ComprehensionDifficulty: Hard

PT119 S1 P3 Q20 Explanation

Pronghorns

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Passage

The pronghorn, an antelope-like mammal that lives on the western plains of North America, is the continent’s fastest land animal, capable of running 90 kilometers per hour and of doing so for several kilometers. Because no North American predator is nearly fast enough to chase it down, biologists have had difficulty explaining long-legged hyenas, either of which, it is believed, were fast enough to run down the pronghorn.

Like all explanations that posit what is called a relict behavior—a behavior that persists though its only evolutionary impetus comes from long-extinct environmental conditions—this one is likely to meet with skepticism. Most biologists distrust explanations positing relict behaviors, in part because testing these hypotheses is so difficult due to the extinction of do so. But present-day observations sometimes yield evidence that supports relict behavior hypotheses.

In the case of the pronghorn, researchers have identified much supporting evidence, as several aspects of pronghorn behavior appear to have been shaped by enemies that no longer exist. For example, pronghorns—like many other grazing animals—roam in herds, which allows more eyes to watch for predators and diminishes the chances of any pronghorns, for example, choosing the victor after male pronghorns challenge each other in sprints and chases.

Relict behaviors appear to occur in other animals as well, increasing the general plausibility of such a theory. For example, one study reports relict behavior in stickleback fish belonging to populations that have long been free of a dangerous predator, the sculpin. In the study, when presented with sculpin, these stickleback fish to recognize the threat of a rattlesnake, exhibiting only disorganized caution even after being bitten repeatedly.

What this question is testing

Locate Detail

Topic

The author is investigating a small mystery: why is the pronghorn (an antelope-like animal) so weirdly fast when nothing currently chases it?

Framework

Problem-Solution. The author presents the puzzle and walks through a proposed answer with its supporting evidence.

Main Point

The simpler version: pronghorns can run 90 km/h, but no current predator is anywhere close to that fast. Why? One theory says they're still running from predators that went extinct 10,000 years ago — basically, evolution hasn't caught up. Biologists are usually skeptical of "they're running from ghosts" explanations because they're hard to test, but in the pronghorn case the rest of the animal's behavior (herd grouping, mate preferences) lines up. Other animals show similar leftover behaviors too — fish that fear extinct fish predators, squirrels that recognize rattlesnakes despite no contact for thousands of years.

P1: The mystery

Pronghorns run way faster than anything currently chasing them. One biologist's theory: they're adapted to predators that went extinct 10,000 years ago — American cheetahs and long-legged hyenas.

P2: Why this kind of theory is hard to swallow

"Relict behavior" — a behavior left over from extinct conditions — is hard to test because the predator is gone. Biologists usually only accept it when nothing else works.

P3: The evidence stacks up

Pronghorns herd — useful for spotting and avoiding predators, but costly because of food competition. Why bother if no predator threatens? Looks like a leftover. Similarly, female pronghorns choose mates by speed, which would have mattered when fast predators existed.

Reading along? Open the full official question in LawHub — we show a fragment here and keep the reasoning in our own words.

The question
20.

The passage mentions each of the following as support for the explanation of the pronghorn’s speed proposed by the biologist referred to

Answer choices

  1. Supported5% picked this

    fossils of extinct animals believed to have been able to run

    The last sentence of the first paragraph does say that we know from the fossil record about the cheetahs and hyenas that explain the pronghorn's speed.

  2. Correct68% picked this

    the absence of carnivores in the pronghorn’s

    Why this is right

    This goes the opposite direction. The fact that pronghorns don't have any carnivorous predators in their present-day environment doesn't explain why they're so fast, it actually makes us paradoxically confused about why they're so fast.

    Skill tested: Locate Detail · how this choice captures the passage's function is the move to repeat next time.

  3. Supported3% picked this

    the present-day preference of pronghorns for

    This is discussed at the end of the 2nd paragraph. This supports the idea that at some point in the pronghorn's evolutionary history, being fast had a huge survival advantage. It was selected for. Females instinctively favored the faster males. Males competed to see who was fastest, i.e. fittest / most likely to survive in that habitat.

  4. Supported17% picked this

    the apparent need for a similar explanation to account for the herding behavior

    The discussion of herding in the beginning of the 2nd paragraph is meant to support the idea that at some point in the pronghorn's evolution, it was threatened by a carnivorous predator. Animals only go to the hassle of herding if they're seeking protection from a predator. This helps support the idea that cheetahs and hyenas were preying on pronghorns, which is why pronghorns evolved to be as fast as they are.

  5. Supported6% picked this

    the occurrence of relict behavior in

    The beginning of the 3rd paragraph says, Relict behaviors appear to occur in other animals as well, increasing the general plausibility of such a theory ... the theory that pronghorns developed their speed because of predators that no longer exist in their environment.

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