Avleen KaurSr. Executive Training
It is essential to practice passages like "The History of Tortoises" as they improve critical thinking, reasoning, and reading comprehension. This passage describes how all living turtles have terrestrial ancestors. It highlights the tortoises' ultimate return to land by examining their evolutionary route from marine turtles. To score higher band scores in the IELTS exam, you must practice the IELTS Reading Section properly, as it increases confidence in taking on difficult reading portions and familiarizes oneself with academic language and organization.
This passage on "The History of Tortoises" is inspired by Cambridge 9, Reading Test 1. You should spend about 20 minutes on Questions 1-13, which are based on the reading passage 1 below.
The History of Tortoises Reading Passage
If you go back far enough, everything lived in the sea. At various points in evolutionary history, enterprising individuals within many different animal groups moved out onto the land, sometimes even to the most parched deserts, taking their own private seawater with them in blood and cellular fluids. In addition to the reptiles, birds, mammals and insects which we see all around us, other groups that have succeeded out of water include scorpions, snails, crustaceans such as woodlice and land crabs, millipedes and centipedes, spiders and various worms. And we mustn’t forget the plants, without whose prior invasion of the land none of the other migrations could have happened.
Moving from water to land involved a major redesign of every aspect of life, including breathing and reproduction. Nevertheless, a good number of thoroughgoing land animals later turned around, abandoned their hard-earned terrestrial re-tooling, and returned to the water again. Seals have only gone part way back. They show us what the intermediates might have been like, on the way to extreme cases such as whales and dugongs. Whales (including the small whales we call dolphins) and dugongs, with their close cousins the manatees, ceased to be land creatures altogether and reverted to the full marine habits of their remote ancestors. They don’t even come ashore to breed. They do, however, still breathe air, having never developed anything equivalent to the gills of their earlier marine incarnation. Turtles went back to the sea a very long time ago and, like all vertebrate returnees to the water, they breathe air. However, they are, in one respect, less fully given back to the water than whales or dugongs, for turtles still lay their eggs on beaches.
There is evidence that all modem turtles are descended from a terrestrial ancestor which lived before most of the dinosaurs. There are two key fossils called Proganochelys quenstedti and Palaeochersis talampayensis dating from early dinosaur times, which appear to be close to the ancestry of all modem turtles and tortoises. You might wonder how we can tell whether fossil animals lived on land or in water, especially if only fragments are found. Sometimes it’s obvious. Ichthyosaurs were reptilian contemporaries of the dinosaurs, with fins and streamlined bodies. The fossils look like dolphins and they surely lived like dolphins, in the water. With turtles it is a little less obvious. One way to tell is by measuring the bones of their forelimbs.
Walter Joyce and Jacques Gauthier, at Yale University, obtained three measurements in these particular bones of 71 species of living turtles and tortoises. They used a kind of triangular graph paper to plot the three measurements against one another. All the land tortoise species formed a tight cluster of points in the upper part of the triangle; all the water turtles cluster in the lower part of the triangular graph. There was no overlap, except when they added some species that spend time both in water and on land. Sure enough, these amphibious species show up on the triangular graph approximately half way between the ‘wet cluster’ of sea turtles and the ‘dry cluster’ of land tortoises. The next step was to determine where the fossils fell. The bones of P quenstedti and JR talampayensis leave us in no doubt. Their points on the graph are right in the thick of the dry cluster. Both these fossils were dry-land tortoises. They come from the era before our turtles returned to the water.
You might think, therefore, that modem land tortoises have probably stayed on land ever since those early terrestrial times, as most mammals did after a few of them went back to the sea. But apparently not. If you draw out the family tree of all modem turtles and tortoises, nearly all the branches are aquatic. Today’s land tortoises constitute a single branch, deeply nested among branches consisting of aquatic turtles. This suggests that modem land tortoises have not stayed on land continuously since the time of P. quenstedti and P talampayensis. Rather, their ancestors were among those who went back to the water, and they then re-emerged back onto the land in (relatively) more recent times.
Tortoises therefore represent a remarkable double return. In common with all mammals, reptiles and birds, their remote ancestors were marine fish and before that various more or less worm-like creatures stretching back, still in the sea, to the primeval bacteria. Later ancestors lived on land and stayed there for a very large number of generations. Later ancestors still evolved back into the water and became sea turtles. And finally they returned yet again to the land as tortoises, some of which now live in the driest of deserts.
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The History of Tortoises IELTS Practice Answers
Questions 1-6Â
Complete the summary below.
Choose NO MORE THAN TWO WORDS from the word list for each answer.
At Yale University, researchers studied the 1. _______ of various turtle and tortoise species. The measurements were plotted on 2. _________. In the upper part of the triangle, the 3. _______ formed a tight cluster, while the 4. _______ gathered in the lower part. Except for some species found on land and in the sea, there was no overlap. Aquatic and terrestrial species appeared 5._______ between these two categories. 6.______ were found in the graph's dry section, suggesting that the creatures were tortoises that existed before turtles went back into the water.
Word List:
|
Â
The History of the Tortoise Answers 1-6
- Answer: BONES
Explanation: The paragraph focuses on a study done at Yale University by scholars Walter Joyce and Jacques Gauthier. In it, they looked at "the bones of 71 species of living turtles and tortoises." They explicitly stated that the bones were the objects of their measurements. - Answer: TRIANGULAR GRAPH
Explanation: The researchers "plotted the three measurements against one another using a kind of triangular graph paper." "Triangular graph," which refers to the instrument for measuring the bones. - Answer: LAND TORTOISES
Explanation: When the measurements of the various land tortoise species were placed on the triangle graph, all of the land tortoise species formed a close cluster in the upper region of the triangle. - Answer: WATER TURTLES
Explanation: The text describes how the water turtles gathered in the lowest region of the triangular graph, in contrast to the land tortoises. - Answer: HALFWAY
Explanation: The section also mentions that species alternates between land and water found on the triangle graph around midway between the land tortoise "dry cluster" and the sea turtle "wet cluster."Â - Answer: FOSSILS
Explanation: The last section of paragraph 4 explores the locations on the triangle graph where the fossils of P. quenstedti and P. talampayensis were found, suggesting that the ancient tortoises that had roamed the country before any return to water occurred.Â
The History of Tortoises Answers Explanations
Questions 7-13
Do the following statements agree with the information given in Reading Passage?
In boxes 7-13 on your answer sheet, write
TRUE Â Â Â if the statement agrees with the information
FALSE if the statement contradicts the information
NOT GIVEN if there is no information on this
7. Other migrations would have been possible without the plant’s earlier colonization of the continent.
8. Some of the first species to migrate from the ocean to land were snails and scorpions.
9. Proganochelys quenstedti and Palaeochersis talampayensis are confirmed terrestrial fossils.
10. Ichthyosaurs could only survive in aquatic habitats.
11. The process of tortoises evolving from sea turtles required continuous stay on land.
12. Since their ancient predecessors, modern land tortoises have always lived on land.
13. All modern land tortoises live in arid regions.
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