One Hell of a Passage
Carcass, Need explanation of Q4.
1. According to the passage(Detail type question), which of the following would be true if the described snow leopards were being studied?
" In such cases, the theory can guide insight, but the insight must be tempered by local understanding of how well the organisms in question fit assumptions of relevant models." - meaning that understanding of how organism's nature fits the model.
A. Predictions of the leopards’ persistence would have to be made on a
quantitative basis due to the animals’ small numbers. opposite. Last line of first para says that
"estimate turnover on a quantitative basis is quite likely out of reach."B. The ecological paradigm used to make predictions about the leopards would be
invalid. "populations might usually be so small that firm estimates and therefore predictions of persistence, extinction, or colonization are
infeasible." meaning that predictions are not possible. If something is not possible, then how could it be invalid.
C. Insight about the leopards’ behavior would be more important than selecting a model that emulated their behavior. - That's what above line says.
D. Individual humans living in the valley would have to be closely
monitored. - out of scope.
E. Care would have to be taken so as to avoid disturbing the leopards’ habitat. - Noble but out of scope.
Hence, C
2. In the passage’s final paragraph, the author is primarily concerned with
"The gist is not that ecological paradigms are failing, but that expectations of ecology as a science are not realistic in the real world" - Drawback of Ecological model.
A. describing the
limitations of a method
B.
advocating a new ecological model - out of scope
C. postulating that certain fields of study
are supported by related fields - out of scope
D. arguing that endangered animals are a
bigger problem than previously thought - out of scope
E.
dismissing ecology as a science due to its lack of methodological rigor - extreme
Hence, A
3. According to the passage, which of the following circumstances would have the greatest chance of undermining a typical ecological model?
"
but proximity of human settlements may overshadow it in many places. Contingencies that are not present in armchair models affect both examples." - meaning that human involvement will somehow will hurt the ecological model.
A. The organism being studied populates an area more quickly than anticipated. - out of scope
B. Humans native to a studied organism’s habitat hunt
it more extensively due to poor crop yields.
C. Experimental data is lost due to faulty data storage. - out of scope
D. Humans native to a studied organism’s habitat migrate to another area. - opposite. Settlement would harm rather than migration.
E. The experimental data gathered from a large fishery is found to be based on faulty methodology. - out of scope
Hence, B