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  • Question 1
    1 / -0.33

    Directions For Questions

    Direction: Read the passage carefully and answer the questions that follow.

    The first hurricane of the season formed off Mexico’s southern Pacific coast Sunday and rapidly gained power ahead of an expected strike along a stretch of tourist beaches and fishing towns as a major storm. The U.S. National Hurricane Center said Agatha was expected to make landfall as a powerful Category 3 hurricane Monday afternoon or evening in the area near Puerto Escondido and Puerto Angel in the southern State of Oaxaca a region that includes the laid-back tourist resorts of Huatulco, Mazunte, and Zipolite. The center warned that the hurricane could deliver a dangerous storm surge.

    By late Sunday, the recently formed hurricane had maximum sustained winds of 110 mph (175 kph) just 1 mph under the threshold for a Category 3, the hurricane center said. Agatha was centered about 140 miles (225 kilometers) southwest of Puerto Angel and heading to the northeast at 6 mph (9 kph). The center said Agatha could have winds of 120 mph (193 kph) when it makes landfall. A hurricane warning was in effect between the port of Salina Cruz and the Lagunas de Chacahua The civil defense office in Oaxaca said the hurricane’s outer bands were already hitting the coast. The office published photos of fishermen hauling their boats up on beaches to protect them from the storm.

    Municipal authorities in Huatulco ordered, “the absolute closure” of all the resort's beaches and its famous “seven bays,” many of which are reachable only by boat. They also closed local schools and began setting up emergency storm shelters. To the east in Zipolite, long known for its clothing-optional beach and bohemian vibe, personnel at the small Casa Kalmar hotel gathered up outdoor furniture and put up wooden storm shutters to prevent strong winds from blowing out glass windows and doors. “The biggest worry here is the wind,” hotel manager Silvia Ranfagni said. With only one guest and plenty of cancellations due to the hurricane, Ms. Ranfagni planned to ride out Agatha at the property, which is three or four blocks from the beach. “I'm going to shut myself in here with my animals,” she said, referring to her dog and cats. The government's Mexican Turtle Center a former slaughterhouse turned conservation center in Mazunte announced it was closed to visitors until further notice because of the hurricane. The U.S. National Hurricane Center warned of dangerous coastal flooding as well as large and destructive waves near where Agatha made landfall.

    ...view full instructions

    What did the Municipal authorities do to prevent the people from this hurricane?

    (a) The absolute closure of all the resorts' beaches and its famous seven bays.

    (b)  warned of dangerous coastal flooding as well as large and destructive waves near where Agatha made landfall.

    (c) They announced Mexican Turtle Center was closed to visitors until further notice because of the hurricane.

    (d) closed local schools and began setting up emergency storm shelters.

  • Question 2
    1 / -0.33

    Directions For Questions

    Direction: Read the passage carefully and answer the questions that follow.

    The first hurricane of the season formed off Mexico’s southern Pacific coast Sunday and rapidly gained power ahead of an expected strike along a stretch of tourist beaches and fishing towns as a major storm. The U.S. National Hurricane Center said Agatha was expected to make landfall as a powerful Category 3 hurricane Monday afternoon or evening in the area near Puerto Escondido and Puerto Angel in the southern State of Oaxaca a region that includes the laid-back tourist resorts of Huatulco, Mazunte, and Zipolite. The center warned that the hurricane could deliver a dangerous storm surge.

    By late Sunday, the recently formed hurricane had maximum sustained winds of 110 mph (175 kph) just 1 mph under the threshold for a Category 3, the hurricane center said. Agatha was centered about 140 miles (225 kilometers) southwest of Puerto Angel and heading to the northeast at 6 mph (9 kph). The center said Agatha could have winds of 120 mph (193 kph) when it makes landfall. A hurricane warning was in effect between the port of Salina Cruz and the Lagunas de Chacahua The civil defense office in Oaxaca said the hurricane’s outer bands were already hitting the coast. The office published photos of fishermen hauling their boats up on beaches to protect them from the storm.

    Municipal authorities in Huatulco ordered, “the absolute closure” of all the resort's beaches and its famous “seven bays,” many of which are reachable only by boat. They also closed local schools and began setting up emergency storm shelters. To the east in Zipolite, long known for its clothing-optional beach and bohemian vibe, personnel at the small Casa Kalmar hotel gathered up outdoor furniture and put up wooden storm shutters to prevent strong winds from blowing out glass windows and doors. “The biggest worry here is the wind,” hotel manager Silvia Ranfagni said. With only one guest and plenty of cancellations due to the hurricane, Ms. Ranfagni planned to ride out Agatha at the property, which is three or four blocks from the beach. “I'm going to shut myself in here with my animals,” she said, referring to her dog and cats. The government's Mexican Turtle Center a former slaughterhouse turned conservation center in Mazunte announced it was closed to visitors until further notice because of the hurricane. The U.S. National Hurricane Center warned of dangerous coastal flooding as well as large and destructive waves near where Agatha made landfall.

    ...view full instructions

    What is the minimum threshold for a major Category 3 hurricane?

  • Question 3
    1 / -0.33

    Directions For Questions

    Direction: Read the passage carefully and answer the questions that follow.

    The first hurricane of the season formed off Mexico’s southern Pacific coast Sunday and rapidly gained power ahead of an expected strike along a stretch of tourist beaches and fishing towns as a major storm. The U.S. National Hurricane Center said Agatha was expected to make landfall as a powerful Category 3 hurricane Monday afternoon or evening in the area near Puerto Escondido and Puerto Angel in the southern State of Oaxaca a region that includes the laid-back tourist resorts of Huatulco, Mazunte, and Zipolite. The center warned that the hurricane could deliver a dangerous storm surge.

    By late Sunday, the recently formed hurricane had maximum sustained winds of 110 mph (175 kph) just 1 mph under the threshold for a Category 3, the hurricane center said. Agatha was centered about 140 miles (225 kilometers) southwest of Puerto Angel and heading to the northeast at 6 mph (9 kph). The center said Agatha could have winds of 120 mph (193 kph) when it makes landfall. A hurricane warning was in effect between the port of Salina Cruz and the Lagunas de Chacahua The civil defense office in Oaxaca said the hurricane’s outer bands were already hitting the coast. The office published photos of fishermen hauling their boats up on beaches to protect them from the storm.

    Municipal authorities in Huatulco ordered, “the absolute closure” of all the resort's beaches and its famous “seven bays,” many of which are reachable only by boat. They also closed local schools and began setting up emergency storm shelters. To the east in Zipolite, long known for its clothing-optional beach and bohemian vibe, personnel at the small Casa Kalmar hotel gathered up outdoor furniture and put up wooden storm shutters to prevent strong winds from blowing out glass windows and doors. “The biggest worry here is the wind,” hotel manager Silvia Ranfagni said. With only one guest and plenty of cancellations due to the hurricane, Ms. Ranfagni planned to ride out Agatha at the property, which is three or four blocks from the beach. “I'm going to shut myself in here with my animals,” she said, referring to her dog and cats. The government's Mexican Turtle Center a former slaughterhouse turned conservation center in Mazunte announced it was closed to visitors until further notice because of the hurricane. The U.S. National Hurricane Center warned of dangerous coastal flooding as well as large and destructive waves near where Agatha made landfall.

    ...view full instructions

    What Ranfagni planned to do because of this hurricane?

  • Question 4
    1 / -0.33

    Directions For Questions

    Direction: After reading the passage choose the best answer to the given question based on what is stated or implied in the passage and in any accompanying graphics (such as a table or graph).

    Questions are based on the following passage.

    Texas gourd vines unfurl their large, flared
    blossoms in the dim hours before sunrise. Until they
    close at noon, their yellow petals and mild, squashy
    aroma attract bees that gather nectar and shuttle
    5 pollen from flower to flower. But “when you
    advertise [to pollinators], you advertise in an
    open communication network,” says chemical
    ecologist Ian Baldwin of the Max Planck Institute for
    Chemical Ecology in Germany. “You attract not just
    10 the good guys, but you also attract the bad guys.” For
    a Texas gourd plant, striped cucumber beetles are
    among the very bad guys. They chew up pollen and
    petals, defecate in the flowers and transmit the
    dreaded bacterial wilt disease, an infection that can
    15 reduce an entire plant to a heap of collapsed tissue in
    mere days.
    In one recent study, Nina Theis and Lynn Adler
    took on the specific problem of the Texas
    gourd—how to attract enough pollinators but not
    20 too many beetles. The Texas gourd vine’s main
    pollinators are honey bees and specialized squash
    bees, which respond to its floral scent. The aroma
    includes 10 compounds, but the most
    abundant—and the only one that lures squash bees
    25 into traps—is 1,4-dimethoxybenzene.
    Intuition suggests that more of that aroma should
    be even more appealing to bees. “We have this
    assumption that a really fragrant flower is going to
    attract a lot of pollinators,” says Theis, a chemical
    30 ecologist at Elms College in Chicopee,
    Massachusetts. But, she adds, that idea hasn’t really
    been tested—and extra scent could well call in more
    beetles, too. To find out, she and Adler planted
    168 Texas gourd vines in an Iowa field and,
    35 throughout the August flowering season, made half
    the plants more fragrant by tucking
    dimethoxybenzene-treated swabs deep inside their
    flowers. Each treated flower emitted about 45 times
    more fragrance than a normal one; the other half of
    40 the plants got swabs without fragrance.
    The researchers also wanted to know whether
    extra beetles would impose a double cost by both
    damaging flowers and deterring bees, which might
    not bother to visit (and pollinate) a flower-laden with
    45 other insects and their feces. So every half hour
    throughout the experiments, the team plucked all the
    beetles off of half the fragrance-enhanced flowers and
    half the control flowers, allowing bees to respond to
    the blossoms with and without interference by

    50 beetles.
    Finally, they pollinated by hand half of the female
    flowers in each of the four combinations of fragrance
    and beetles. Hand-pollinated flowers should develop
    into fruits with the maximum number of seeds,
    55 providing a benchmark to see whether the
    fragrance-related activities of bees and beetles
    resulted in reduced pollination.
    “It was very labor-intensive,” says Theis.
    “We would be out there at four in the morning, three
    60 in the morning, to try and set up before these flowers
    open.” As soon as they did, the team spent the next
    several hours walking from flower to flower,
    observing each for two-minute intervals “and writing
    down everything we saw.”
    65 What they saw was double the normal number of
    beetles on fragrance-enhanced blossoms.
    Pollinators, to their surprise, did not prefer the
    highly scented flowers. Squash bees were indifferent,
    and honey bees visited enhanced flowers less often
    70 than normal ones. This thinks the bees were
    repelled not by the fragrance itself, but by the
    abundance of beetles: The data showed that the more
    beetles on a flower, the less likely a honey bee was to
    visit it.
    75 That added up to less reproduction for
    fragrance-enhanced flowers. Gourds that developed
    from those blossoms weighed 9 percent less and had,
    on average, 20 fewer seeds than those from normal
    flowers. Hand pollination didn’t rescue the seed set,
    80 indicating that beetles damaged flowers directly
    —regardless of whether they also repelled
    pollinators. (Hand pollination did rescue fruit
    weight, a hard-to-interpret result that suggests that
    lost bee visits did somehow harm fruit development.)
    85 The new results provide a reason that Texas gourd
    plants never evolved to produce a stronger scent: “If
    you really ramp up the odor, you don’t get more
    pollinators, but you can really get ripped apart by
    your enemies,” says Rob Raguso, a chemical ecologist
    90 at Cornell University who was not involved in the
    Texas gourd study.

    ...view full instructions

    According to the passage, Theis and Adler’s research offers an answer to which of the following questions?

  • Question 5
    1 / -0.33

    Directions For Questions

    Direction: After reading the passage choose the best answer to the given question based on what is stated or implied in the passage and in any accompanying graphics (such as a table or graph).

    Questions are based on the following passage.

    Texas gourd vines unfurl their large, flared
    blossoms in the dim hours before sunrise. Until they
    close at noon, their yellow petals and mild, squashy
    aroma attract bees that gather nectar and shuttle
    5 pollen from flower to flower. But “when you
    advertise [to pollinators], you advertise in an
    open communication network,” says chemical
    ecologist Ian Baldwin of the Max Planck Institute for
    Chemical Ecology in Germany. “You attract not just
    10 the good guys, but you also attract the bad guys.” For
    a Texas gourd plant, striped cucumber beetles are
    among the very bad guys. They chew up pollen and
    petals, defecate in the flowers and transmit the
    dreaded bacterial wilt disease, an infection that can
    15 reduce an entire plant to a heap of collapsed tissue in
    mere days.
    In one recent study, Nina Theis and Lynn Adler
    took on the specific problem of the Texas
    gourd—how to attract enough pollinators but not
    20 too many beetles. The Texas gourd vine’s main
    pollinators are honey bees and specialized squash
    bees, which respond to its floral scent. The aroma
    includes 10 compounds, but the most
    abundant—and the only one that lures squash bees
    25 into traps—is 1,4-dimethoxybenzene.
    Intuition suggests that more of that aroma should
    be even more appealing to bees. “We have this
    assumption that a really fragrant flower is going to
    attract a lot of pollinators,” says Theis, a chemical
    30 ecologist at Elms College in Chicopee,
    Massachusetts. But, she adds, that idea hasn’t really
    been tested—and extra scent could well call in more
    beetles, too. To find out, she and Adler planted
    168 Texas gourd vines in an Iowa field and,
    35 throughout the August flowering season, made half
    the plants more fragrant by tucking
    dimethoxybenzene-treated swabs deep inside their
    flowers. Each treated flower emitted about 45 times
    more fragrance than a normal one; the other half of
    40 the plants got swabs without fragrance.
    The researchers also wanted to know whether
    extra beetles would impose a double cost by both
    damaging flowers and deterring bees, which might
    not bother to visit (and pollinate) a flower-laden with
    45 other insects and their feces. So every half hour
    throughout the experiments, the team plucked all the
    beetles off of half the fragrance-enhanced flowers and
    half the control flowers, allowing bees to respond to
    the blossoms with and without interference by

    50 beetles.
    Finally, they pollinated by hand half of the female
    flowers in each of the four combinations of fragrance
    and beetles. Hand-pollinated flowers should develop
    into fruits with the maximum number of seeds,
    55 providing a benchmark to see whether the
    fragrance-related activities of bees and beetles
    resulted in reduced pollination.
    “It was very labor-intensive,” says Theis.
    “We would be out there at four in the morning, three
    60 in the morning, to try and set up before these flowers
    open.” As soon as they did, the team spent the next
    several hours walking from flower to flower,
    observing each for two-minute intervals “and writing
    down everything we saw.”
    65 What they saw was double the normal number of
    beetles on fragrance-enhanced blossoms.
    Pollinators, to their surprise, did not prefer the
    highly scented flowers. Squash bees were indifferent,
    and honey bees visited enhanced flowers less often
    70 than normal ones. This thinks the bees were
    repelled not by the fragrance itself, but by the
    abundance of beetles: The data showed that the more
    beetles on a flower, the less likely a honey bee was to
    visit it.
    75 That added up to less reproduction for
    fragrance-enhanced flowers. Gourds that developed
    from those blossoms weighed 9 percent less and had,
    on average, 20 fewer seeds than those from normal
    flowers. Hand pollination didn’t rescue the seed set,
    80 indicating that beetles damaged flowers directly
    —regardless of whether they also repelled
    pollinators. (Hand pollination did rescue fruit
    weight, a hard-to-interpret result that suggests that
    lost bee visits did somehow harm fruit development.)
    85 The new results provide a reason that Texas gourd
    plants never evolved to produce a stronger scent: “If
    you really ramp up the odor, you don’t get more
    pollinators, but you can really get ripped apart by
    your enemies,” says Rob Raguso, a chemical ecologist
    90 at Cornell University who was not involved in the
    Texas gourd study.

    ...view full instructions

    Which choice provides the best evidence for the answer to the given question?

  • Question 6
    1 / -0.33

    Directions For Questions

    Direction: After reading the passage choose the best answer to the given question based on what is stated or implied in the passage and in any accompanying graphics (such as a table or graph).

    Questions are based on the following passage.

    Texas gourd vines unfurl their large, flared
    blossoms in the dim hours before sunrise. Until they
    close at noon, their yellow petals and mild, squashy
    aroma attract bees that gather nectar and shuttle
    5 pollen from flower to flower. But “when you
    advertise [to pollinators], you advertise in an
    open communication network,” says chemical
    ecologist Ian Baldwin of the Max Planck Institute for
    Chemical Ecology in Germany. “You attract not just
    10 the good guys, but you also attract the bad guys.” For
    a Texas gourd plant, striped cucumber beetles are
    among the very bad guys. They chew up pollen and
    petals, defecate in the flowers and transmit the
    dreaded bacterial wilt disease, an infection that can
    15 reduce an entire plant to a heap of collapsed tissue in
    mere days.
    In one recent study, Nina Theis and Lynn Adler
    took on the specific problem of the Texas
    gourd—how to attract enough pollinators but not
    20 too many beetles. The Texas gourd vine’s main
    pollinators are honey bees and specialized squash
    bees, which respond to its floral scent. The aroma
    includes 10 compounds, but the most
    abundant—and the only one that lures squash bees
    25 into traps—is 1,4-dimethoxybenzene.
    Intuition suggests that more of that aroma should
    be even more appealing to bees. “We have this
    assumption that a really fragrant flower is going to
    attract a lot of pollinators,” says Theis, a chemical
    30 ecologist at Elms College in Chicopee,
    Massachusetts. But, she adds, that idea hasn’t really
    been tested—and extra scent could well call in more
    beetles, too. To find out, she and Adler planted
    168 Texas gourd vines in an Iowa field and,
    35 throughout the August flowering season, made half
    the plants more fragrant by tucking
    dimethoxybenzene-treated swabs deep inside their
    flowers. Each treated flower emitted about 45 times
    more fragrance than a normal one; the other half of
    40 the plants got swabs without fragrance.
    The researchers also wanted to know whether
    extra beetles would impose a double cost by both
    damaging flowers and deterring bees, which might
    not bother to visit (and pollinate) a flower-laden with
    45 other insects and their feces. So every half hour
    throughout the experiments, the team plucked all the
    beetles off of half the fragrance-enhanced flowers and
    half the control flowers, allowing bees to respond to
    the blossoms with and without interference by

    50 beetles.
    Finally, they pollinated by hand half of the female
    flowers in each of the four combinations of fragrance
    and beetles. Hand-pollinated flowers should develop
    into fruits with the maximum number of seeds,
    55 providing a benchmark to see whether the
    fragrance-related activities of bees and beetles
    resulted in reduced pollination.
    “It was very labor-intensive,” says Theis.
    “We would be out there at four in the morning, three
    60 in the morning, to try and set up before these flowers
    open.” As soon as they did, the team spent the next
    several hours walking from flower to flower,
    observing each for two-minute intervals “and writing
    down everything we saw.”
    65 What they saw was double the normal number of
    beetles on fragrance-enhanced blossoms.
    Pollinators, to their surprise, did not prefer the
    highly scented flowers. Squash bees were indifferent,
    and honey bees visited enhanced flowers less often
    70 than normal ones. This thinks the bees were
    repelled not by the fragrance itself, but by the
    abundance of beetles: The data showed that the more
    beetles on a flower, the less likely a honey bee was to
    visit it.
    75 That added up to less reproduction for
    fragrance-enhanced flowers. Gourds that developed
    from those blossoms weighed 9 percent less and had,
    on average, 20 fewer seeds than those from normal
    flowers. Hand pollination didn’t rescue the seed set,
    80 indicating that beetles damaged flowers directly
    —regardless of whether they also repelled
    pollinators. (Hand pollination did rescue fruit
    weight, a hard-to-interpret result that suggests that
    lost bee visits did somehow harm fruit development.)
    85 The new results provide a reason that Texas gourd
    plants never evolved to produce a stronger scent: “If
    you really ramp up the odor, you don’t get more
    pollinators, but you can really get ripped apart by
    your enemies,” says Rob Raguso, a chemical ecologist
    90 at Cornell University who was not involved in the
    Texas gourd study.

    ...view full instructions

    In describing squash bees as “indifferent”, the author most likely means that they:

  • Question 7
    1 / -0.33

    Directions For Questions

    Direction: After reading the passage choose the best answer to the given question based on what is stated or implied in the passage and in any accompanying graphics (such as a table or graph).

    Questions are based on the following passage.

    Texas gourd vines unfurl their large, flared
    blossoms in the dim hours before sunrise. Until they
    close at noon, their yellow petals and mild, squashy
    aroma attract bees that gather nectar and shuttle
    5 pollen from flower to flower. But “when you
    advertise [to pollinators], you advertise in an
    open communication network,” says chemical
    ecologist Ian Baldwin of the Max Planck Institute for
    Chemical Ecology in Germany. “You attract not just
    10 the good guys, but you also attract the bad guys.” For
    a Texas gourd plant, striped cucumber beetles are
    among the very bad guys. They chew up pollen and
    petals, defecate in the flowers and transmit the
    dreaded bacterial wilt disease, an infection that can
    15 reduce an entire plant to a heap of collapsed tissue in
    mere days.
    In one recent study, Nina Theis and Lynn Adler
    took on the specific problem of the Texas
    gourd—how to attract enough pollinators but not
    20 too many beetles. The Texas gourd vine’s main
    pollinators are honey bees and specialized squash
    bees, which respond to its floral scent. The aroma
    includes 10 compounds, but the most
    abundant—and the only one that lures squash bees
    25 into traps—is 1,4-dimethoxybenzene.
    Intuition suggests that more of that aroma should
    be even more appealing to bees. “We have this
    assumption that a really fragrant flower is going to
    attract a lot of pollinators,” says Theis, a chemical
    30 ecologist at Elms College in Chicopee,
    Massachusetts. But, she adds, that idea hasn’t really
    been tested—and extra scent could well call in more
    beetles, too. To find out, she and Adler planted
    168 Texas gourd vines in an Iowa field and,
    35 throughout the August flowering season, made half
    the plants more fragrant by tucking
    dimethoxybenzene-treated swabs deep inside their
    flowers. Each treated flower emitted about 45 times
    more fragrance than a normal one; the other half of
    40 the plants got swabs without fragrance.
    The researchers also wanted to know whether
    extra beetles would impose a double cost by both
    damaging flowers and deterring bees, which might
    not bother to visit (and pollinate) a flower-laden with
    45 other insects and their feces. So every half hour
    throughout the experiments, the team plucked all the
    beetles off of half the fragrance-enhanced flowers and
    half the control flowers, allowing bees to respond to
    the blossoms with and without interference by

    50 beetles.
    Finally, they pollinated by hand half of the female
    flowers in each of the four combinations of fragrance
    and beetles. Hand-pollinated flowers should develop
    into fruits with the maximum number of seeds,
    55 providing a benchmark to see whether the
    fragrance-related activities of bees and beetles
    resulted in reduced pollination.
    “It was very labor-intensive,” says Theis.
    “We would be out there at four in the morning, three
    60 in the morning, to try and set up before these flowers
    open.” As soon as they did, the team spent the next
    several hours walking from flower to flower,
    observing each for two-minute intervals “and writing
    down everything we saw.”
    65 What they saw was double the normal number of
    beetles on fragrance-enhanced blossoms.
    Pollinators, to their surprise, did not prefer the
    highly scented flowers. Squash bees were indifferent,
    and honey bees visited enhanced flowers less often
    70 than normal ones. This thinks the bees were
    repelled not by the fragrance itself, but by the
    abundance of beetles: The data showed that the more
    beetles on a flower, the less likely a honey bee was to
    visit it.
    75 That added up to less reproduction for
    fragrance-enhanced flowers. Gourds that developed
    from those blossoms weighed 9 percent less and had,
    on average, 20 fewer seeds than those from normal
    flowers. Hand pollination didn’t rescue the seed set,
    80 indicating that beetles damaged flowers directly
    —regardless of whether they also repelled
    pollinators. (Hand pollination did rescue fruit
    weight, a hard-to-interpret result that suggests that
    lost bee visits did somehow harm fruit development.)
    85 The new results provide a reason that Texas gourd
    plants never evolved to produce a stronger scent: “If
    you really ramp up the odor, you don’t get more
    pollinators, but you can really get ripped apart by
    your enemies,” says Rob Raguso, a chemical ecologist
    90 at Cornell University who was not involved in the
    Texas gourd study.

    ...view full instructions

    What did Theis and Adler do as part of their study that most directly allowed Theis to reason that “bees were repelled not by the fragrance itself”?

  • Question 8
    1 / -0.33

    Directions For Questions

    Direction: After reading the passage choose the best answer to the given question based on what is stated or implied in the passage and in any accompanying graphics (such as a table or graph).

    Questions are based on the following passage.

    Texas gourd vines unfurl their large, flared
    blossoms in the dim hours before sunrise. Until they
    close at noon, their yellow petals and mild, squashy
    aroma attract bees that gather nectar and shuttle
    5 pollen from flower to flower. But “when you
    advertise [to pollinators], you advertise in an
    open communication network,” says chemical
    ecologist Ian Baldwin of the Max Planck Institute for
    Chemical Ecology in Germany. “You attract not just
    10 the good guys, but you also attract the bad guys.” For
    a Texas gourd plant, striped cucumber beetles are
    among the very bad guys. They chew up pollen and
    petals, defecate in the flowers and transmit the
    dreaded bacterial wilt disease, an infection that can
    15 reduce an entire plant to a heap of collapsed tissue in
    mere days.
    In one recent study, Nina Theis and Lynn Adler
    took on the specific problem of the Texas
    gourd—how to attract enough pollinators but not
    20 too many beetles. The Texas gourd vine’s main
    pollinators are honey bees and specialized squash
    bees, which respond to its floral scent. The aroma
    includes 10 compounds, but the most
    abundant—and the only one that lures squash bees
    25 into traps—is 1,4-dimethoxybenzene.
    Intuition suggests that more of that aroma should
    be even more appealing to bees. “We have this
    assumption that a really fragrant flower is going to
    attract a lot of pollinators,” says Theis, a chemical
    30 ecologist at Elms College in Chicopee,
    Massachusetts. But, she adds, that idea hasn’t really
    been tested—and extra scent could well call in more
    beetles, too. To find out, she and Adler planted
    168 Texas gourd vines in an Iowa field and,
    35 throughout the August flowering season, made half
    the plants more fragrant by tucking
    dimethoxybenzene-treated swabs deep inside their
    flowers. Each treated flower emitted about 45 times
    more fragrance than a normal one; the other half of
    40 the plants got swabs without fragrance.
    The researchers also wanted to know whether
    extra beetles would impose a double cost by both
    damaging flowers and deterring bees, which might
    not bother to visit (and pollinate) a flower-laden with
    45 other insects and their feces. So every half hour
    throughout the experiments, the team plucked all the
    beetles off of half the fragrance-enhanced flowers and
    half the control flowers, allowing bees to respond to
    the blossoms with and without interference by

    50 beetles.
    Finally, they pollinated by hand half of the female
    flowers in each of the four combinations of fragrance
    and beetles. Hand-pollinated flowers should develop
    into fruits with the maximum number of seeds,
    55 providing a benchmark to see whether the
    fragrance-related activities of bees and beetles
    resulted in reduced pollination.
    “It was very labor-intensive,” says Theis.
    “We would be out there at four in the morning, three
    60 in the morning, to try and set up before these flowers
    open.” As soon as they did, the team spent the next
    several hours walking from flower to flower,
    observing each for two-minute intervals “and writing
    down everything we saw.”
    65 What they saw was double the normal number of
    beetles on fragrance-enhanced blossoms.
    Pollinators, to their surprise, did not prefer the
    highly scented flowers. Squash bees were indifferent,
    and honey bees visited enhanced flowers less often
    70 than normal ones. This thinks the bees were
    repelled not by the fragrance itself, but by the
    abundance of beetles: The data showed that the more
    beetles on a flower, the less likely a honey bee was to
    visit it.
    75 That added up to less reproduction for
    fragrance-enhanced flowers. Gourds that developed
    from those blossoms weighed 9 percent less and had,
    on average, 20 fewer seeds than those from normal
    flowers. Hand pollination didn’t rescue the seed set,
    80 indicating that beetles damaged flowers directly
    —regardless of whether they also repelled
    pollinators. (Hand pollination did rescue fruit
    weight, a hard-to-interpret result that suggests that
    lost bee visits did somehow harm fruit development.)
    85 The new results provide a reason that Texas gourd
    plants never evolved to produce a stronger scent: “If
    you really ramp up the odor, you don’t get more
    pollinators, but you can really get ripped apart by
    your enemies,” says Rob Raguso, a chemical ecologist
    90 at Cornell University who was not involved in the
    Texas gourd study.

    ...view full instructions

    The primary function of the seventh and eighth paragraphs is to:

  • Question 9
    1 / -0.33

    Directions For Questions

    Direction: After reading the passage choose the best answer to the given question based on what is stated or implied in the passage and in any accompanying graphics (such as a table or graph).

    Questions are based on the following passage.

    Texas gourd vines unfurl their large, flared
    blossoms in the dim hours before sunrise. Until they
    close at noon, their yellow petals and mild, squashy
    aroma attract bees that gather nectar and shuttle
    5 pollen from flower to flower. But “when you
    advertise [to pollinators], you advertise in an
    open communication network,” says chemical
    ecologist Ian Baldwin of the Max Planck Institute for
    Chemical Ecology in Germany. “You attract not just
    10 the good guys, but you also attract the bad guys.” For
    a Texas gourd plant, striped cucumber beetles are
    among the very bad guys. They chew up pollen and
    petals, defecate in the flowers and transmit the
    dreaded bacterial wilt disease, an infection that can
    15 reduce an entire plant to a heap of collapsed tissue in
    mere days.
    In one recent study, Nina Theis and Lynn Adler
    took on the specific problem of the Texas
    gourd—how to attract enough pollinators but not
    20 too many beetles. The Texas gourd vine’s main
    pollinators are honey bees and specialized squash
    bees, which respond to its floral scent. The aroma
    includes 10 compounds, but the most
    abundant—and the only one that lures squash bees
    25 into traps—is 1,4-dimethoxybenzene.
    Intuition suggests that more of that aroma should
    be even more appealing to bees. “We have this
    assumption that a really fragrant flower is going to
    attract a lot of pollinators,” says Theis, a chemical
    30 ecologist at Elms College in Chicopee,
    Massachusetts. But, she adds, that idea hasn’t really
    been tested—and extra scent could well call in more
    beetles, too. To find out, she and Adler planted
    168 Texas gourd vines in an Iowa field and,
    35 throughout the August flowering season, made half
    the plants more fragrant by tucking
    dimethoxybenzene-treated swabs deep inside their
    flowers. Each treated flower emitted about 45 times
    more fragrance than a normal one; the other half of
    40 the plants got swabs without fragrance.
    The researchers also wanted to know whether
    extra beetles would impose a double cost by both
    damaging flowers and deterring bees, which might
    not bother to visit (and pollinate) a flower-laden with
    45 other insects and their feces. So every half hour
    throughout the experiments, the team plucked all the
    beetles off of half the fragrance-enhanced flowers and
    half the control flowers, allowing bees to respond to
    the blossoms with and without interference by

    50 beetles.
    Finally, they pollinated by hand half of the female
    flowers in each of the four combinations of fragrance
    and beetles. Hand-pollinated flowers should develop
    into fruits with the maximum number of seeds,
    55 providing a benchmark to see whether the
    fragrance-related activities of bees and beetles
    resulted in reduced pollination.
    “It was very labor-intensive,” says Theis.
    “We would be out there at four in the morning, three
    60 in the morning, to try and set up before these flowers
    open.” As soon as they did, the team spent the next
    several hours walking from flower to flower,
    observing each for two-minute intervals “and writing
    down everything we saw.”
    65 What they saw was double the normal number of
    beetles on fragrance-enhanced blossoms.
    Pollinators, to their surprise, did not prefer the
    highly scented flowers. Squash bees were indifferent,
    and honey bees visited enhanced flowers less often
    70 than normal ones. This thinks the bees were
    repelled not by the fragrance itself, but by the
    abundance of beetles: The data showed that the more
    beetles on a flower, the less likely a honey bee was to
    visit it.
    75 That added up to less reproduction for
    fragrance-enhanced flowers. Gourds that developed
    from those blossoms weighed 9 percent less and had,
    on average, 20 fewer seeds than those from normal
    flowers. Hand pollination didn’t rescue the seed set,
    80 indicating that beetles damaged flowers directly
    —regardless of whether they also repelled
    pollinators. (Hand pollination did rescue fruit
    weight, a hard-to-interpret result that suggests that
    lost bee visits did somehow harm fruit development.)
    85 The new results provide a reason that Texas gourd
    plants never evolved to produce a stronger scent: “If
    you really ramp up the odor, you don’t get more
    pollinators, but you can really get ripped apart by
    your enemies,” says Rob Raguso, a chemical ecologist
    90 at Cornell University who was not involved in the
    Texas gourd study.

    ...view full instructions

    “Treated” most nearly means:

  • Question 10
    1 / -0.33

    Directions For Questions

    Direction: After reading the passage choose the best answer to the given question based on what is stated or implied in the passage and in any accompanying graphics (such as a table or graph).

    Questions are based on the following passage.

    Texas gourd vines unfurl their large, flared
    blossoms in the dim hours before sunrise. Until they
    close at noon, their yellow petals and mild, squashy
    aroma attract bees that gather nectar and shuttle
    5 pollen from flower to flower. But “when you
    advertise [to pollinators], you advertise in an
    open communication network,” says chemical
    ecologist Ian Baldwin of the Max Planck Institute for
    Chemical Ecology in Germany. “You attract not just
    10 the good guys, but you also attract the bad guys.” For
    a Texas gourd plant, striped cucumber beetles are
    among the very bad guys. They chew up pollen and
    petals, defecate in the flowers and transmit the
    dreaded bacterial wilt disease, an infection that can
    15 reduce an entire plant to a heap of collapsed tissue in
    mere days.
    In one recent study, Nina Theis and Lynn Adler
    took on the specific problem of the Texas
    gourd—how to attract enough pollinators but not
    20 too many beetles. The Texas gourd vine’s main
    pollinators are honey bees and specialized squash
    bees, which respond to its floral scent. The aroma
    includes 10 compounds, but the most
    abundant—and the only one that lures squash bees
    25 into traps—is 1,4-dimethoxybenzene.
    Intuition suggests that more of that aroma should
    be even more appealing to bees. “We have this
    assumption that a really fragrant flower is going to
    attract a lot of pollinators,” says Theis, a chemical
    30 ecologist at Elms College in Chicopee,
    Massachusetts. But, she adds, that idea hasn’t really
    been tested—and extra scent could well call in more
    beetles, too. To find out, she and Adler planted
    168 Texas gourd vines in an Iowa field and,
    35 throughout the August flowering season, made half
    the plants more fragrant by tucking
    dimethoxybenzene-treated swabs deep inside their
    flowers. Each treated flower emitted about 45 times
    more fragrance than a normal one; the other half of
    40 the plants got swabs without fragrance.
    The researchers also wanted to know whether
    extra beetles would impose a double cost by both
    damaging flowers and deterring bees, which might
    not bother to visit (and pollinate) a flower-laden with
    45 other insects and their feces. So every half hour
    throughout the experiments, the team plucked all the
    beetles off of half the fragrance-enhanced flowers and
    half the control flowers, allowing bees to respond to
    the blossoms with and without interference by

    50 beetles.
    Finally, they pollinated by hand half of the female
    flowers in each of the four combinations of fragrance
    and beetles. Hand-pollinated flowers should develop
    into fruits with the maximum number of seeds,
    55 providing a benchmark to see whether the
    fragrance-related activities of bees and beetles
    resulted in reduced pollination.
    “It was very labor-intensive,” says Theis.
    “We would be out there at four in the morning, three
    60 in the morning, to try and set up before these flowers
    open.” As soon as they did, the team spent the next
    several hours walking from flower to flower,
    observing each for two-minute intervals “and writing
    down everything we saw.”
    65 What they saw was double the normal number of
    beetles on fragrance-enhanced blossoms.
    Pollinators, to their surprise, did not prefer the
    highly scented flowers. Squash bees were indifferent,
    and honey bees visited enhanced flowers less often
    70 than normal ones. This thinks the bees were
    repelled not by the fragrance itself, but by the
    abundance of beetles: The data showed that the more
    beetles on a flower, the less likely a honey bee was to
    visit it.
    75 That added up to less reproduction for
    fragrance-enhanced flowers. Gourds that developed
    from those blossoms weighed 9 percent less and had,
    on average, 20 fewer seeds than those from normal
    flowers. Hand pollination didn’t rescue the seed set,
    80 indicating that beetles damaged flowers directly
    —regardless of whether they also repelled
    pollinators. (Hand pollination did rescue fruit
    weight, a hard-to-interpret result that suggests that
    lost bee visits did somehow harm fruit development.)
    85 The new results provide a reason that Texas gourd
    plants never evolved to produce a stronger scent: “If
    you really ramp up the odor, you don’t get more
    pollinators, but you can really get ripped apart by
    your enemies,” says Rob Raguso, a chemical ecologist
    90 at Cornell University who was not involved in the
    Texas gourd study.

    ...view full instructions

    The primary purpose of the passage is to:

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