CAT 2020 Slot 1VARC Question 1

Mixed PracticeEasy
Passage / Data

Direction for Reading Comprehension: The passages given here are followed by some questions that have four answer choices; read the passage carefully and pick the option whose answer best aligns with the passage

In the late 1960s, while studying the northern-elephant-seal population along the coasts of Mexico and California, Burney Le Boeuf and his colleagues couldn’t help but notice that the threat calls of males at some sites sounded different from those of males at other sites. . .. 
That was the first time dialects were documented in a nonhuman mammal. . .. 

All the northern elephant seals that exist today are descendants of the small herd that survived on Isla Guadalupe [after the near extinction of the species in the nineteenth century]. As that tiny population grew, northern elephant seals started to recolonize former breeding locations. It was precisely on the more recently colonized islands where Le Boeuf found that the tempos of the male vocal displays showed stronger differences to the ones from Isla Guadalupe, the founder colony.

In order to test the reliability of these dialects over time, Le Boeuf and other researchers visited Año Nuevo Island in California—the island where males showed the slowest pulse rates in their calls—every winter from 1968 to 1972. “What we found is that the pulse rate increased, but it still remained relatively slow compared to the other colonies we had measured in the past” Le Boeuf told me. 

At the individual level, the pulse of the calls stayed the same: A male would maintain his vocal signature throughout his lifetime. But the average pulse rate was changing. Immigration could have been responsible for this increase, as in the early 1970s, 43 percent of the males on Año Nuevo had come from southern rookeries that had a faster pulse rate. This led Le Boeuf and his collaborator, Lewis Petrinovich, to deduce that the dialects were, perhaps, a result of isolation over time, after the breeding sites had been recolonized. For instance, the first settlers of Año Nuevo could have had, by chance, calls with low pulse rates. At other sites, where the scientists found faster pulse rates, the opposite would have happened—seals with faster rates would have happened to arrive first. 

As the population continued to expand and the islands kept on receiving immigrants from the original population, the calls in all locations would have eventually regressed to the average pulse rate of the founder colony. In the decades that followed, scientists noticed that the geographical variations reported in 1969 were not obvious anymore. . . . In the early 2010s, while studying northern elephant seals on Año Nuevo Island, [researcher Caroline] Casey noticed, too, that what Le Boeuf had heard decades ago was not what she heard now. . . . By performing more sophisticated statistical analyses on both sets of data, [Casey and Le Boeuf] confirmed that dialects existed back then but had vanished. Yet there are other differences between the males from the late 1960s and their great-greatgrandsons: Modern males exhibit more individual diversity, and their calls are more complex. While 50 years ago the drumming pattern was quite simple and the dialects denoted just a change in tempo, Casey explained, the calls recorded today have more complex structures, sometimes featuring doublets or triplets. . . . 

From the passage it can be inferred that the call pulse rate of male northern elephant seals in the southern rookeries was faster because: 

Answer & solution

  • A

    a large number of male northern elephant seals from Año Nuevo Island might have migrated to the southern rookeries to recolonise them.

  • B

    a large number of male northern elephant seals migrated from the southern rookeries to Año Nuevo Island in the early 1970s.

  • the male northern elephant seals of Isla Guadalupe with faster call pulse rates might have been the original settlers of the southern rookeries.

  • D

    the calls of male northern elephant seals in the southern rookeries have more sophisticated structures, containing doublets and triplets.

Solution

Easy

This is an inference question anchored to one explicit causal claim in the passage. Find where Le Boeuf explains why some sites had faster pulse rates, then match the option to that mechanism. The relevant idea is in the fourth paragraph: dialects arose from "isolation over time" depending on who the first settlers happened to be.

A

Wrong — reverses the logic. If seals from Ano Nuevo (the slowest-pulse colony) had migrated to the southern rookeries, they would have made the southern pulse rate slower, not faster. This option would explain a slow southern rate, the opposite of what is asked.

B

Wrong — wrong direction of migration. The passage says males migrated from the southern rookeries to Ano Nuevo ("43 percent of the males on Ano Nuevo had come from southern rookeries that had a faster pulse rate"). That explains why Ano Nuevo's average rose — it does not explain why the southern rookeries themselves were fast in the first place.

C

Correct. The passage states dialects were "a result of isolation over time": "the first settlers of Ano Nuevo could have had, by chance, calls with low pulse rates. At other sites, where the scientists found faster pulse rates, the opposite would have happened — seals with faster rates would have happened to arrive first." So a southern rookery was fast because the original settlers (drawn from the Isla Guadalupe founder stock) happened to be fast-pulse seals.

D

Wrong — irrelevant and anachronistic. Doublets and triplets describe the complexity of modern calls (last paragraph), not the historical pulse rate of the southern rookeries. It addresses the wrong attribute and the wrong time period.

Option C. The fast southern pulse rate is explained by chance founder effects: fast-pulse seals from the Isla Guadalupe stock happened to arrive first and settle those rookeries.

CAT 2020 Slot 1 VARC Q1: From the passage it can be inferred that the call pulse rate of male northern elephant seals in the southern r — Solution | TheCATExam