Great Migrations Reading Answers: IELTS Reading Test

International English Language Testing System ( IELTS )

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Raushan Kumar

Raushan KumarAssistant Manager Content

Updated on Aug 7, 2024 14:00 IST

The reading passage "Great Migrations" is about the complex nature of animal migration, highlighting its characteristics, the determination of migrating animals, and their ability to remain focused despite challenges and distractions. These passages often provide complex information and require readers to comprehend intricate details and broader concepts. By engaging with such material, readers improve their ability to analyze and synthesize information, which is crucial for the IELTS exam. Additionally, these passages can enhance Academic Reading Skills, such as understanding main ideas, identifying specific details, and interpreting the author’s intent, by solving different types of questions like Sentence Completion, True/False/Not Given and Matching Sentence Endings

The passage below, "Great Migrations", is inspired by passage 2 of Cambridge Book 11, Test 3. You should spend about 20 minutes on Questions 14-26, which are based on the reading passage 2 below.

Great Migrations Reading Passage 2

Animal migration, however it is defined, is far more than just the movement of animals. It can loosely be described as travel that takes place at regular intervals - often in an annual cycle - that may involve many members of a species, and is rewarded only after a long journey. It suggests inherited instinct. The biologist Hugh Dingle has identified five characteristics that apply, in varying degrees and combinations, to all migrations. They are prolonged movements that carry animals outside familiar habitats; they tend to be linear, not zigzaggy;they involve special behaviours concerning preparation (such as overfeeding) and arrival; they demand special allocations of energy. And one more: migrating animals maintain an intense attentiveness to the greater mission, which keeps them undistracted by temptations and undeterred by challenges that would turn other animals aside.  

An arctic tern, on its 20,000 km flight from the extreme south of South America to the Arctic circle, will take no notice of a nice smelly herring offered from a bird-watcher's boat along the way. While local gulls will dive voraciously for such handouts, the tern flies on.

Why? The arctic tern resists distraction because it is driven at that moment by an instinctive sense of something we humans find admirable: larger purpose. In other words, it is determined to reach its destination. The bird senses that it can eat, rest and mate later. Right now it is totally focused on the journey; its undivided intent is arrival.

Reaching some gravelly coastline in the Arctic, upon which other arctic terns have converged, will serve its larger purpose as shaped by evolution: finding a place, a time, and a set of circumstances in which it can successfully hatch and rear offspring.

But migration is a complex issue, and biologists define it differently, depending in part on what sorts of animals they study. Joe! Berger, of the University of Montana, who works on the American pronghorn and other large terrestrial mammals, prefers what he calls a simple, practical definition suited to his beasts: 'movements from a seasonal home area away to another home area and back again'. Generally the reason for such seasonal back-and-forth movement is to seek resources that aren't available within a single area year-round.

But daily vertical movements by zooplankton in the ocean - upward by night to seek food, downward by day to escape predators - can also be considered migration. So can the movement of aphids when, having depleted the young leaves on one food plant, their offspring then fly onward to a different host plant, with no one aphid ever returning to where it started.

Dingle is an evolutionary biologist who studies insects. His definition is more intricate than Berger's, citing those five features that distinguish migration from other forms of movement. They allow for the fact that, for example, aphids will become sensitive to blue light (from the sky) when it's time for takeoff on their big journey, and sensitive to yellow light (reflected from tender young leaves) when it's appropriate to land.

Birds will fatten themselves with heavy feeding in advance of a long migrational flight. The value of his definition, Dingle argues, is that it focuses attention on what the phenomenon of wildebeest migration shares with the phenomenon of the aphids, and therefore helps guide researchers towards understanding how evolution has produced them all. Human behaviour, however, is having a detrimental impact on animal migration.

The pronghorn, which resembles an antelope, though they are unrelated, is the fastest land mammal of the New World. One population, which spends the summer in the mountainous Grand Teton National Park of the western USA, follows a narrow route from its summer range in the mountains, across a river, and down onto the plains. Here they wait out the frozen months, feeding mainly on sagebrush blown clear of snow. These pronghorn are notable for the invariance of their migration route and the severity of its constriction at three bottlenecks. If they can't pass through each of the three during their spring migration, they can't reach their bounty of summer grazing; if they can't pass through again in autumn, escaping south onto those windblown plains, they are likely to die trying to overwinter in the deep snow.

Pronghorn, dependent on distance vision and speed to keep safe from predators, traverse high, open shoulders of land, where they can see and run. At one of the bottlenecks, forested hills rise to form a V, leaving a corridor of open ground only about 150 metres wide, filled with private homes. Increasing development is leading toward a crisis for the pronghorn, threatening to choke off their passageway.

Conservation scientists, along with some biologists and land managers within the USA's National Park Service and other agencies, are now working to preserve migrational behaviours, not just species and habitats. A National Forest has recognised the path of the pronghorn, much of which passes across its land, as a protected migration corridor. But neither the Forest Service nor the Park Service can control what happens on private land at a bottleneck. And with certain other migrating species, the challenge is complicated further - by vastly greater distances traversed, more jurisdictions, more borders, more dangers along the way. We will require wisdom and resoluteness to ensure that migrating species can continue their journeying a while longer.

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Great Migrations Reading Questions and Answers

Complete the sentences below.
Choose ONE WORD ONLY from the passage for each answer.
Write your answers in boxes 14-18 on your answer sheet.

14. Migrating Arctic terns are driven by a ________ of purpose while reaching their destination.

Answer: SENSE
Answer Location: Paragraph 3, Line 1
Explanation: "The arctic tern resists distraction because it is driven at that moment by an instinctive sense of something we humans find admirable." This line states that migrating arctic terns follow a sense of purpose to reach their destination.

15. Definitions of ________ about migration tend to vary according to their area of study.

Answer: BIOLOGISTS
Answer Location: Paragraph 4, Line 1
Explanation: "Biologists define it differently, depending in part on what sorts of animals they study." This line indicates that biologists' definitions of migration vary based on their study focus.

16. Experts agree that the movement of zooplankton can be considered ________.

Answer: MIGRATION
Answer Location: Paragraph 6, Line 2
Explanation: "Daily vertical movements by zooplankton in the ocean... can also be considered migration." This line suggests that experts consider zooplankton's movement as migration.

17. Aphids’ ________ is affected by changes in the light that they perceive.

Answer: JOURNEY
Answer Location: Paragraph 7, Line 3
Explanation: "Aphids will become sensitive to blue light (from the sky) when it's time for takeoff on their big journey, and sensitive to yellow light (reflected from tender young leaves) when it's appropriate to land." This indicates that aphids' journeys are influenced by light changes.

18. Dingles aim is to recognise how the evolution of the migratory ________ of different species is related.

Answer: BEHAVIOURS
Answer Location: Paragraph 8, Line 4
Explanation:
"Dingle argues that it focuses attention on what the phenomenon of wildebeest migration shares with the phenomenon of the aphids, and therefore helps guide researchers towards understanding how evolution has produced them all." This shows that Dingle aims to understand the evolutionary relationship between migratory behaviours.








Great Migrations Reading Answers for True/False/Not Given

Do the following statements agree with the information given in Reading Passage?
In boxes 19-22 on your answer sheet, write
TRUE if the statement agrees with the information
FALSE if the statement contradicts the information
NOT GIVEN if there is no information on this

19. According to Dingle, migratory routes are likely to follow a straight line.

Answer: TRUE
Answer Location: Paragraph 1, Line 5
Explanation:  "They tend to be linear, not zigzaggy." This means migratory routes are likely straight.

20. To prepare for migration, animals are likely to engage in the availability of water.

Answer: FALSE
Answer Location: Paragraph 1, Line 5 
Explanation: "They involve special behaviours concerning preparation (such as overfeeding) and arrival." The text mentions overfeeding rather than the availability of water as a preparation activity for migration. Thus, incorrect information makes the answer false.

21. During migration, animals are unlikely to be discouraged by difficulties.

Answer: TRUE
Answer Location: Paragraph 1, Line 6
Explanation: "Migrating animals maintain an intense attentiveness to the greater mission, which keeps them undistracted by temptations and undeterred by challenges that would turn other animals aside." This indicates that animals are not discouraged by difficulties.

22. Arctic terns illustrate migrating animals’ ability to eat more than they need for immediate purposes.

Answer: NOT GIVEN
Answer Location: Not mentioned explicitly
Explanation: The passage contains information about "Arctic terns," but it does not mention Arctic terns eating more than they need for immediate purposes.







Great Migrations IELTS Reading

Complete each sentence with the correct ending, A-G, below.
Write the correct letter, A-G. in boxes 23-26 on your answer sheet

A. offer refuge from the deep mountain snow.
B. possess the danger presented by the snow.
C. faces challenges due to critical bottlenecks in its migration route.
D. is a national park, and their winter home.
E. speed to avoid predators.
F. is one particular population’s summer habitat.
G contains three bottlenecks.
H. is one problem due to the construction of new homes.

23. Pronghorns rely on their eyesight and

Answer: E
Answer Location: Paragraph 10, Line 1
Explanation: "Pronghorn, dependent on distance vision and speed to keep safe from predators." This shows pronghorns rely on eyesight and speed.

24. The plains where they go to avoid winter

Answer: A
Answer Location: Paragraph 9, Line 4
Explanation: "Here they wait out the frozen months, feeding mainly on sagebrush blown clear of snow." This indicates the plains offer refuge from the deep mountain snow.

25. A narrow corridor of land on the pronghorns' route

Answer: H
Answer Location: Paragraph 10, Line 2
Explanation:  "At one of the bottlenecks, forested hills rise to form a V, leaving a corridor of open ground only about 150 metres wide, filled with private homes." This suggests that building new homes is a problem.

26. The fastest land mammal of the New World

Answer: C
Answer Location: Paragraph 9, Line 1
Explanation: "The pronghorn, which resembles an antelope, though they are unrelated, is the fastest land mammal of the New World... leading toward a crisis for the pronghorn, threatening to choke off their passageway." This indicates that the fastest land mammal of the New World faces challenges due to bottlenecks.

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Tajkia Sultana

8 months ago

Hii, I want to complete my Bachelors in Malaysia from Bangladesh. But I am not understanding which books to choose for taking preparation as I want to take preparation at home.Pls help me to choose the best books and let me know if there is any free-student scholarship in Malaysia.

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Rahul Singha

8 months ago

Hello Tajkia. I would highly recommend that you opt for books/ study material that is available on the official website of IDP - the conducting body of the IELTS exam. The books would have the latest syllabus and cover everything you would need to know to ace your IELTS exam.

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TOM Titus

a year ago

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Rahul Singha

12 months ago

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Hello shiksha I just finish my B A in political science. I want to study abroad now? Can I complete MA here. And then what kind of work will I get. I would be very happy if you answer. Thank you

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Rahul Singha

a year ago

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Aditi

a year ago

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Rahul Singha

a year ago

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