Reading ComprehensionDifficulty: Hard

PT139 S3 P4 Q27 Explanation

Calvaria Major and the Dodo

A free, expert breakdown of this official LSAT Reading Comprehension question.

TopicsAuthor OpinionScience

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Passage

Calvaria major is a rare but once-abundant tree found on the island of Mauritius, which was also home to the dodo, a large flightless bird that became extinct about three centuries ago. In 1977 Stanley Temple, an ecologist whose investigation of Calvaria major was a sidelight to his research on endangered birds fertile but that Temple assumed could no longer germinate, given his failure to find younger trees.

The temporal coincidence between the extinction of the dodo and what Temple considered the last evidence of natural germination of Calvaria major seeds led him to posit a causal connection. Specifically, he hypothesized that the fruit of Calvaria major had developed its extremely thick-walled pit as an evolutionary response to the dodo’s once been adaptive, Temple maintained, became a lethal imprisonment for the seeds after the dodo vanished.

Although direct proof was unattainable, Temple did offer some additional findings in support of his hypothesis, which lent his argument a semblance of rigor. From studies of other birds, he estimated the abrasive force generated within a dodo’s gizzard. Based on this estimate and on test results determining the crush-resistant strength of abraded yet intact. Three of these sprouted when planted, which he saw as vindicating his hypothesis.

Though many scientists found this dramatic and intriguing hypothesis plausible, Temple’s proposals have been strongly challenged by leading specialists in the field. 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. disease and damage done by certain nonindigenous animals introduced onto Mauritius in the past few centuries.

What this question is testing

Author Opinion

Your task

Pin down exactly what the question asks about the passage — a detail, the author's view, the structure, or the main point — before looking at the choices.

Common trap

Answers that restate a true detail from the passage but don't answer the specific question being asked.

Winning move

Anticipate the answer in your own words from the passage, then find the choice that matches that prediction.

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

The question
27.

Based on the passage, it can be inferred that the author would be likely to agree with each of the following statements

Answer choices

  1. Supported7% picked this

    The causes of the evolution of the tree's particularly durable pit wall have not been definitively

    There's no direct support for this, but it's supportable since it is a very safely worded idea. It would be a very strong idea to say that "the causes of the durable pit wall have been definitively identified". Temple speculated that the durable pit wall evolved as a defense against the digestive system of the dodo bird. Since the tree wants the pits of its fruit to seed the next generation of C.m., it's not happy if dodo birds are swallowing the whole fruit and in the process breaking down the pit, in their digestive system. Thick-walled pits could be pooped out of the dodo and still be intact enough to germinate once they got implanted into the ground. In the final paragraph where Temple's critics push back against his ideas, no one ever pushes back against this one or offers an alternative hypothesis, so it's somewhat supportable to say that the matter hasn't been definitively settled.

  2. Supportable13% picked this

    The notion that the thickness of the pit wall in the tree's fruit has been a factor contributing to the decline of the

    Just like (A), this idea doesn't have a great line reference to stand on, but it's an appealingly weak claim. It would be very strong to say that we have definitively discredited something. The last paragraph is only saying (2nd sentence) that Temple's proposals have been strongly challenged, but that is a lower bar than full-on discredited. Also, it's very weak to say that "X has been a factor contributing to Y". Discrediting Temple's idea here would mean, "scientists have proven that the thickness of the pit wall has zero to do with the declining population of the tree." The last paragraph presents evidence from scientists showing that "a minority of unabraded seeds can still germinate". The thickness of the pit wall makes it very low percentage that a pit will germinate. If an animal like a dodo or turkey digests the seed, it will wear down that wall somewhat (abrade it) and make it more likely that the seed will germinate. So while the last paragraph shows that the thickness of the pit wall is not a "death sentence" (the "lethal imprisonment" Temple talked about), it is still a reproductive challenge facing the C.m. species.

  3. Correct65% picked this

    In light of the current rate of germination of seeds of the species, it is surprising that the tree has not been

    Why this is right

    The current rate of germination is discussed in the final paragraph: "only a minority of unabraded seeds germinate". The author is saying that this low percentage of germination is "probably enough to hold off extinction", but that's a far cry from saying "it would lead us to expect an abundance of this tree".

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

  4. Supported10% picked this

    There is good reason to believe that the tree is not threatened

    The second to last sentence of the passage says that the rate of unabraded germination is "still probably sufficient to keep this species from becoming extinct".

  5. Supported6% picked this

    Calvaria major seeds can germinate even if they do not first pass through a

    "Unabraded" (not suffering any abrasions) is the term being used in this passage for seeds that have not been digested by a turkey or a dodo. The second to last sentence of the passage says that "a minority of unabraded seeds germinate", so that shows that C.m. seeds can germinate even if they don't pass through a bird's gut.

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