READING
Choose the best option.
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FATAL ATTRACTION
1. Rats have evolved a strong, innate aversion to the
smells of their predators. Healthy rats-even those bred for hundreds of
generations in the laboratory-show distinct anxiety around feline odors. When
the amoebic parasite Toxoplasma gondii gets into their brains, however, many of
the rodents seem to lose their fear: 2. Zoologist Manuel Berdoy, epidemiologist
Joanne Webster, and colleagues at the University of Oxford have studied the
life cycle of T. gondii to test the hypothesis that the parasite manipulates
the behavior of its intermediate host, the rat, to reach its ultimate target,
the cat. The researchers infected captive rats with oocysts of the parasite and
then placed them in large outdoor pens containing both cat and rabbit urine.
Uninfected rats tended to shun the cat-scented areas, while the parasitized
rats became substantially less afraid. With their fear of felines diminished,
parasitized rats may become uninhibited about approaching their arch predators,
with the predictable result of ending up as dinner. 3. Although all mammals are
susceptible to infection by T. gondii, the amoebas can reproduce only within
members of the cat family. Once T. gondii has bred in the brain of a cat that
has ingested an infected rat, the parasite’s oocysts are expelled with the
cat’s feces. After being washed away by rain, these oocysts can remain
infectious in moist soil for more than a year. They can be ingested by beetles
and worms, which are readily eaten by rats. 4. While the parasite affects rats’
fear of cats, it appears to leave other aspects of rat behavior intact and to
leave cat behavior completely unchanged, The Oxford researchers believe that T.
gondii has evolved to alter rat behavior in this specific way and that the
reduction of fear is not simply a side effect of cerebral malfunction.
("Fatal Attraction in Rats Infected With Toxoplasma gondii,"
Proceedings of the Royal Society of London B 267, 2000. Natural History 4/01)
You can infer from the information in the article that
the T. gondii parasite…
( ) can
weaken the reasoning capacity of cats as well as rats, though it is
particularly destructive to rats;
( ) can weaken
the reasoning capacity of cats as well as rats, though it is particularly
destructive to cats;
( ) can
attack and weaken the muscles of any mammal, though it must infect rats and
cats to reproduce;
( ) is a
fundamental element in the life cycle of cats as well as rats, though it causes
behavioral changes only in rats;
( ) seems to make any animal that it infects less
susceptible to feelings of fear or anxiety.
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