- Wed May 17, 2017 2:47 pm
#34975
Complete Question Explanation
(See the complete passage discussion here: lsat/viewtopic.php?t=14154)
The correct answer choice is (A)
This question concerns secondary substances, but the concept reference is too broad to produce a
workable prephrase. The process of elimination is likely to be more useful: any answer choice that
cannot be proven by the passage will be incorrect. As always, passage organization is key: secondary
substances are introduced in the first paragraph, and the evolutionary pressures exerted on them are
described in the second. Either paragraph can serve as a useful reference point.
Answer choice (A): This is the correct answer choice, although many students find it difficult
to prove that the natural mutations in question are “recent.” Read closely! While not all mutations
are recent, some are: In the beginning of the second paragraph, the author observes that secondary
substances “first appeared, and new ones continue to appear, as the result of genetic mutations in
individual plants” (lines 19-21, italics mine). Clearly, if new substances continue to appear, we can
infer that some of them are the result of recent mutations in plants.
Answer choice (B): It is entirely possible that most (if not all) secondary substances give their
plants both their distinctive taste, and their distinctive smell. The passage provides no indication that
secondary substances typically contribute to one or the other, but not both.
Answer choice (C): Although some secondary substances are detoxified by insects or stored safely in
their bodies, we have no evidence that this process alters the plants’ chemical composition.
Answer choice (D): This is an attractive, but incorrect answer choice. In the first paragraph, the
author mentions that only a few of these substances occur in any one species of plant (lines 11-
12). That does not mean, however, that some species of plants necessarily produce only one such
substance: this is possible, of course, but cannot be proven with the information provided.
Answer choice (E): Secondary substances are never described are regulators of plants’ production of
primary substances. A quick look at the first paragraph should be sufficient to eliminate this answer
choice.
(See the complete passage discussion here: lsat/viewtopic.php?t=14154)
The correct answer choice is (A)
This question concerns secondary substances, but the concept reference is too broad to produce a
workable prephrase. The process of elimination is likely to be more useful: any answer choice that
cannot be proven by the passage will be incorrect. As always, passage organization is key: secondary
substances are introduced in the first paragraph, and the evolutionary pressures exerted on them are
described in the second. Either paragraph can serve as a useful reference point.
Answer choice (A): This is the correct answer choice, although many students find it difficult
to prove that the natural mutations in question are “recent.” Read closely! While not all mutations
are recent, some are: In the beginning of the second paragraph, the author observes that secondary
substances “first appeared, and new ones continue to appear, as the result of genetic mutations in
individual plants” (lines 19-21, italics mine). Clearly, if new substances continue to appear, we can
infer that some of them are the result of recent mutations in plants.
Answer choice (B): It is entirely possible that most (if not all) secondary substances give their
plants both their distinctive taste, and their distinctive smell. The passage provides no indication that
secondary substances typically contribute to one or the other, but not both.
Answer choice (C): Although some secondary substances are detoxified by insects or stored safely in
their bodies, we have no evidence that this process alters the plants’ chemical composition.
Answer choice (D): This is an attractive, but incorrect answer choice. In the first paragraph, the
author mentions that only a few of these substances occur in any one species of plant (lines 11-
12). That does not mean, however, that some species of plants necessarily produce only one such
substance: this is possible, of course, but cannot be proven with the information provided.
Answer choice (E): Secondary substances are never described are regulators of plants’ production of
primary substances. A quick look at the first paragraph should be sufficient to eliminate this answer
choice.