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Passage-Based Question

Passage-Based Question: Western Barred Bandicoots

Passage:

Landing in Australia, the British colonists weren’t much impressed with the small-bodied, slender-snooted marsupials called bandicoots. “Their muzzle, which is much too long, gives them an air exceedingly stupid,” one naturalist noted in 1805. They nicknamed one type the “zebra rat” because of its black-striped rump.

Silly-looking or not, though, the zebra rat—the smallest bandicoot, more commonly known today as the western barred bandicoot—exhibited a genius for survival in the harsh outback, where its ancestors had persisted for some 26 million years. Its births were triggered by rainfall in the bone-dry desert. It carried its breath-mint-size babies in a backward-facing pouch so mothers could forage for food and dig shallow, camouflaged shelters.

Still, these adaptations did not prepare the western barred bandicoot for the colonial-era transformation of its ecosystem, particularly the onslaught of imported British animals, from cattle and rabbits that damaged delicate desert vegetation to ravenous house cats that soon developed a taste for bandicoots. Several of the dozen-odd bandicoot species went extinct, and by the 1940s the western barred bandicoot, whose original range stretched across much of the continent, persisted only on two predator-free islands in Shark Bay, off Australia’s western coast.

“Our isolated fauna had simply not been exposed to these predators,” says Reece Pedler, an ecologist with the Wild Deserts conservation program.

Now Wild Deserts is using descendants of those few thousand island survivors, called Shark Bay bandicoots, in a new effort to seed a mainland bandicoot revival. They’ve imported 20 bandicoots to a preserve on the edge of the Strzelecki Desert, in the remote interior of New South Wales. This sanctuary is a challenging place, desolate much of the year, with one of the world’s most mercurial rainfall patterns—relentless droughts followed by sudden drenching floods.

For now, though, a recent surge of rainfall has led to a bandicoot joey boom, raising the Wild Deserts population to about 100, with other sanctuaries adding to that number. There are also signs of rebirth in the landscape itself. With their constant digging, the bandicoots trap moisture and allow for seed germination so the cattle-damaged desert can restore itself.

Question:
Which one of the following statements provides a gist of this passage?
  1. A type of bandicoots was nearly wiped out by invasive species but rescuers now pin hopes on a remnant island population.
  2. Marsupials are going extinct due to the colonial-era transformation of the ecosystem which also destroyed natural vegetation.
  3. The onslaught of animals, such as cattle, rabbits and housecats, brought in by the British led to the extinction of the western barred bandicoot.
  4. The negligent attitude of the British colonists towards these bandicoots evidenced by the names given to them led to their annihilation.
Correct Answer: Option 1

Analysis:

The passage describes the near extinction of the western barred bandicoot due to invasive species and colonial-era changes. It also highlights conservation efforts using survivors from Shark Bay to revive the species on the mainland. The correct gist must capture both the threats and ongoing efforts to save the bandicoot.

Evaluation of Options:

  • Option 1: Correct. This option accurately summarizes the near extinction caused by invasive species and the current hope placed on Shark Bay survivors.
  • Option 2: Incorrect. While the colonial-era transformation is mentioned, the passage focuses on the specific case of the western barred bandicoot rather than marsupials in general.
  • Option 3: Incorrect. The western barred bandicoot was not extinct but survived on Shark Bay islands, making this statement inaccurate.
  • Option 4: Incorrect. The colonists’ dismissive attitude is mentioned, but the primary cause of the bandicoot’s decline was invasive species, not negligence.
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Passage:

Landing in Australia, the British colonists weren’t much impressed with the small-bodied, slender-snooted marsupials called bandicoots. “Their muzzle, which is much too long, gives them an air exceedingly stupid,” one naturalist noted in 1805. They nicknamed one type the “zebra rat” because of its black-striped rump.

Silly-looking or not, though, the zebra rat—the smallest bandicoot, more commonly known today as the western barred bandicoot—exhibited a genius for survival in the harsh outback, where its ancestors had persisted for some 26 million years. Its births were triggered by rainfall in the bone-dry desert. It carried its breath-mint-size babies in a backward-facing pouch so mothers could forage for food and dig shallow, camouflaged shelters.

Still, these adaptations did not prepare the western barred bandicoot for the colonial-era transformation of its ecosystem, particularly the onslaught of imported British animals, from cattle and rabbits that damaged delicate desert vegetation to ravenous house cats that soon developed a taste for bandicoots. Several of the dozen-odd bandicoot species went extinct, and by the 1940s the western barred bandicoot, whose original range stretched across much of the continent, persisted only on two predator-free islands in Shark Bay, off Australia’s western coast.

Question:

Which one of the following options does NOT represent the characteristics of the western barred bandicoot?

  1. Smallest black striped marsupial that uses camouflage and digs
  2. Look of a rat but with a baby pouch and a slender snout
  3. Shallow diggers having an elongated muzzle
  4. Long thin nose, black striped back, pouch for joeys

Solution:

The passage describes several characteristics of the western barred bandicoot:

  • It is the smallest bandicoot, with black stripes on its rump, and was nicknamed the “zebra rat.”
  • It has a long, slender snout and a pouch for carrying its babies.
  • It digs shallow, camouflaged shelters and uses its digging to aid survival.

Option 4 is incorrect because it states “black striped back,” which is not accurate according to the passage. The passage specifies black stripes on the rump, not the entire back.

Correct Answer: Option 4

“` Interactive Quiz

The history of any major technological or industrial advance is inevitably shadowed by a less predictable history of unintended consequences and secondary effects — what economists sometimes call “externalities.” Sometimes those consequences are innocuous ones, or even beneficial. Gutenberg invents the printing press, and literacy rates rise, which causes a significant part of the reading public to require spectacles for the first time, which creates a surge of investment in lens-making across Europe, which leads to the invention of the telescope and the microscope.

Oftentimes the secondary effects seem to belong to an entirely different sphere of society. When Willis Carrier hit upon the idea of air-conditioning, the technology was primarily intended for industrial use: ensuring cool, dry air for factories that required low-humidity environments. But…it touched off one of the largest migrations in the history of the United States, enabling the rise of metropolitan areas like Phoenix and Las Vegas that barely existed when Carrier first started tinkering with the idea in the early 1900s.

Sometimes the unintended consequence comes about when consumers use an invention in a surprising way. Edison famously thought his phonograph, which he sometimes called “the talking machine,” would primarily be used to take dictation….But then later innovators… discovered a much larger audience willing to pay for musical recordings made on descendants of Edison’s original invention…

We live under the gathering storm of modern history’s most momentous unintended consequence….carbon-based climate change…

Question 9: Which of the following best conveys the main point of the first paragraph?

Solution:

The first paragraph illustrates how the ripple effects of technological advances can extend beyond their immediate uses. The mention of Gutenberg’s printing press and subsequent advancements (e.g., lens-making, telescopes) exemplifies that the broader implications of inventions often take time to unfold. While the paragraph highlights some beneficial secondary effects, the focus is not solely on the positive but on the unpredictability of ripple effects. Therefore, the correct answer is: Option 3.

Interactive Quiz

Fears of artificial intelligence (AI) have haunted humanity since the very beginning of the computer age. Hitherto these fears focused on machines using physical means to kill, enslave or replace people. But over the past couple of years new AI tools have emerged that threaten the survival of human civilisation from an unexpected direction. AI has gained some remarkable abilities to manipulate and generate language, whether with words, sounds or images. AI has thereby hacked the operating system of our civilisation.

Language is the stuff almost all human culture is made of. Human rights, for example, aren’t inscribed in our DNA. Rather, they are cultural artefacts we created by telling stories and writing laws. Gods aren’t physical realities. Rather, they are cultural artefacts we created by inventing myths and writing scriptures….What would happen once a non-human intelligence becomes better than the average human at telling stories, composing melodies, drawing images, and writing laws and scriptures? When people think about Chatgpt and other new AI tools, they are often drawn to examples like school children using AI to write their essays. What will happen to the school system when kids do that? But this kind of question misses the big picture. Forget about school essays. Think of the next American presidential race in 2024, and try to imagine the impact of AI tools that can be made to mass-produce political content, fake-news stories and scriptures for new cults…

Through its mastery of language, AI could even form intimate relationships with people, and use the power of intimacy to change our opinions and worldviews. Although there is no indication that AI has any consciousness or feelings of its own, to foster fake intimacy with humans it is enough if the AI can make them feel emotionally attached to it….

What will happen to the course of history when AI takes over culture, and begins producing stories, melodies, laws and religions? Previous tools like the printing press and radio helped spread the cultural ideas of humans, but they never created new cultural ideas of their own. AI is fundamentally different. AI can create completely new ideas, completely new culture…. Of course, the new power of AI could be used for good purposes as well. I won’t dwell on this, because the people who develop AI talk about it enough….

We can still regulate the new AI tools, but we must act quickly. Whereas nukes cannot invent more powerful nukes, AI can make exponentially more powerful AI.… Unregulated AI deployments would create social chaos, which would benefit autocrats and ruin democracies. Democracy is a conversation, and conversations rely on language. When AI hacks language, it could destroy our ability to have meaningful conversations, thereby destroying democracy….And the first regulation I would suggest is to make it mandatory for AI to disclose that it is an AI. If I am having a conversation with someone, and I cannot tell whether it is a human or an AI—that’s the end of democracy. This text has been generated by a human. Or has it?

Question 6: The tone of the passage could best be described as

Solution:

The passage warns of the negative consequences of unregulated AI while analyzing its societal and cultural impact, especially on language, democracy, and human emotions. The tone is not alarmist (Option 2) or solely quizzical (Option 1). Rather, it is cautionary (Option 3), emphasizing the need for action to regulate AI tools. Thus, the correct answer is: Option 3.

Interactive Quiz

There is a group in the space community who view the solar system not as an opportunity to expand human potential but as a nature preserve, forever the provenance of an elite group of scientists and their sanitary robotic probes. These planetary protection advocates [call] for avoiding “harmful contamination” of celestial bodies. Under this regime, NASA incurs great expense sterilizing robotic probes in order to prevent the contamination of entirely theoretical biospheres. . . .

Transporting bacteria would matter if Mars were the vital world once imagined by astronomers who mistook optical illusions for canals. Nobody wants to expose Martians to measles, but sadly, robotic exploration reveals a bleak, rusted landscape, lacking oxygen and flooded with radiation ready to sterilize any Earthly microbes. Simple life might exist underground, or down at the bottom of a deep canyon, but it has been very hard to find with robots. . . . The upsides from human exploration and development of Mars clearly outweigh the welfare of purely speculative Martian fungi. . . .

The other likely targets of human exploration, development, and settlement, our moon and the asteroids, exist in a desiccated, radiation-soaked realm of hard vacuum and extreme temperature variations that would kill nearly anything. It’s also important to note that many international competitors will ignore the demands of these protection extremists in any case. For example, China recently sent a terrarium to the moon and germinated a plant seed—with, unsurprisingly, no protest from its own scientific community. In contrast, when it was recently revealed that a researcher had surreptitiously smuggled super-resilient microscopic tardigrades aboard the ill-fated Israeli Beresheet lunar probe, a firestorm was unleashed within the space community. . . .

NASA’s previous human exploration efforts made no serious attempt at sterility, with little notice. As the Mars expert Robert Zubrin noted in the National Review, U.S. lunar landings did not leave the campsites cleaner than they found it. Apollo’s bacteria-infested litter included bags of feces. Forcing NASA’s proposed Mars exploration to do better, scrubbing everything and hauling out all the trash, would destroy NASA’s human exploration budget and encroach on the agency’s other directorates, too. Getting future astronauts off Mars is enough of a challenge, without trying to tote weeks of waste along as well.

A reasonable compromise is to continue on the course laid out by the U.S. government and the National Research Council, which proposed a system of zones on Mars, some for science only, some for habitation, and some for resource exploitation. This approach minimizes contamination, maximizes scientific exploration . . . Mars presents a stark choice of diverging human futures. We can turn inward, pursuing ever more limited futures while we await whichever natural or manmade disaster will eradicate our species and life on Earth. Alternatively, we can choose to propel our biosphere further into the solar system, simultaneously protecting our home planet and providing a backup plan for the only life we know exists in the universe. Are the lives on Earth worth less than some hypothetical microbe lurking under Martian rocks?

Question 15: The author’s overall tone in the first paragraph can be described as:

  1. Equivocal about the reasons extended by the group of scientists seeking to limit space exploration.
  2. Approving of the amount of money NASA spends to restrict the spread of contamination in space.
  3. Sceptical about the excessive efforts to sanitise planets where life has not yet been proven to exist.
  4. Indifferent to the elitism of a few scientists aiming to corner space exploration.

Detailed Solution:

The correct answer is 3. Sceptical about the excessive efforts to sanitise planets where life has not yet been proven to exist.

Explanation:

  • Option 1: Incorrect. The tone in the first paragraph is not equivocal; the author is clearly critical of planetary protection advocates.
  • Option 2: Incorrect. The author does not approve of the money spent on sterilization efforts; instead, they question its necessity.
  • Option 3: Correct. The author is sceptical of the efforts to sterilize probes, particularly when targeting “entirely theoretical biospheres.”
  • Option 4: Incorrect. While the author criticizes the elitism of the group, the tone is not indifferent but critical.

Thus, the correct answer is Option 3.

Interactive Quiz

There is a group in the space community who view the solar system not as an opportunity to expand human potential but as a nature preserve, forever the provenance of an elite group of scientists and their sanitary robotic probes. These planetary protection advocates [call] for avoiding “harmful contamination” of celestial bodies. Under this regime, NASA incurs great expense sterilizing robotic probes in order to prevent the contamination of entirely theoretical biospheres. . . .

Transporting bacteria would matter if Mars were the vital world once imagined by astronomers who mistook optical illusions for canals. Nobody wants to expose Martians to measles, but sadly, robotic exploration reveals a bleak, rusted landscape, lacking oxygen and flooded with radiation ready to sterilize any Earthly microbes. Simple life might exist underground, or down at the bottom of a deep canyon, but it has been very hard to find with robots. . . . The upsides from human exploration and development of Mars clearly outweigh the welfare of purely speculative Martian fungi. . . .

The other likely targets of human exploration, development, and settlement, our moon and the asteroids, exist in a desiccated, radiation-soaked realm of hard vacuum and extreme temperature variations that would kill nearly anything. It’s also important to note that many international competitors will ignore the demands of these protection extremists in any case. For example, China recently sent a terrarium to the moon and germinated a plant seed—with, unsurprisingly, no protest from its own scientific community. In contrast, when it was recently revealed that a researcher had surreptitiously smuggled super-resilient microscopic tardigrades aboard the ill-fated Israeli Beresheet lunar probe, a firestorm was unleashed within the space community. . . .

NASA’s previous human exploration efforts made no serious attempt at sterility, with little notice. As the Mars expert Robert Zubrin noted in the National Review, U.S. lunar landings did not leave the campsites cleaner than they found it. Apollo’s bacteria-infested litter included bags of feces. Forcing NASA’s proposed Mars exploration to do better, scrubbing everything and hauling out all the trash, would destroy NASA’s human exploration budget and encroach on the agency’s other directorates, too. Getting future astronauts off Mars is enough of a challenge, without trying to tote weeks of waste along as well.

A reasonable compromise is to continue on the course laid out by the U.S. government and the National Research Council, which proposed a system of zones on Mars, some for science only, some for habitation, and some for resource exploitation. This approach minimizes contamination, maximizes scientific exploration . . . Mars presents a stark choice of diverging human futures. We can turn inward, pursuing ever more limited futures while we await whichever natural or manmade disaster will eradicate our species and life on Earth. Alternatively, we can choose to propel our biosphere further into the solar system, simultaneously protecting our home planet and providing a backup plan for the only life we know exists in the universe. Are the lives on Earth worth less than some hypothetical microbe lurking under Martian rocks?

Question 15: The author’s overall tone in the first paragraph can be described as:

  1. Equivocal about the reasons extended by the group of scientists seeking to limit space exploration.
  2. Approving of the amount of money NASA spends to restrict the spread of contamination in space.
  3. Sceptical about the excessive efforts to sanitise planets where life has not yet been proven to exist.
  4. Indifferent to the elitism of a few scientists aiming to corner space exploration.

Detailed Solution:

The correct answer is 3. Sceptical about the excessive efforts to sanitise planets where life has not yet been proven to exist.

Explanation:

  • Option 1: Incorrect. The tone in the first paragraph is not equivocal; the author is clearly critical of planetary protection advocates.
  • Option 2: Incorrect. The author does not approve of the money spent on sterilization efforts; instead, they question its necessity.
  • Option 3: Correct. The author is sceptical of the efforts to sterilize probes, particularly when targeting “entirely theoretical biospheres.”
  • Option 4: Incorrect. While the author criticizes the elitism of the group, the tone is not indifferent but critical.

Thus, the correct answer is Option 3.

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