Reading Passage
The Thylacine
The extinct thylacine, also
known as the Tasmanian tiger, was a marsupial that bore a superficial
resemblance to a dog. Its most distinguishing feature was the 13-19 dark brown
stripes over its back, beginning at the rear of the body and extending onto the
tail. The thylacine’s average nose- to-tail length for adult males was 162.6
cm, compared to 153.7 cm for females.
The thylacine appeared to
occupy most types of terrain except dense rainforest, with open eucalyptus
forest thought to be its prime habitat. In terms of feeding, it was exclusively
carnivorous, and its stomach was muscular with an ability to distend so that it
could eat large amounts of food at one time, probably an adaptation to
compensate for long periods when hunting was unsuccessful and food scarce. The
thylacine was not a fast runner and probably caught its prey by exhausting it
during a long pursuit. During long-distance chases, thylacines were likely to
have relied more on scent than any other sense. They emerged to hunt during the
evening, night and early morning and tended to retreat to the hills and forest
for shelter during the day. Despite the common name ‘tiger’, the thylacine had
a shy, nervous temperament. Although mainly nocturnal, it was sighted moving
during the day and some individuals were even recorded basking in the sun.
The thylacine had an extended
breeding season from winter to spring, with indications that some breeding took
place throughout the year. The thylacine, like all marsupials, was tiny and
hairless when born. New-borns crawled into the pouch on the belly of their
mother, and attached themselves to one of the four teats, remaining there for
up to three months. When old enough to leave the pouch, the young stayed in a
lair such as a deep rocky cave, well-hidden nest or hollow log, whilst the
mother hunted.
Approximately 4,000 years ago,
the thylacine was widespread throughout New Guinea and most of mainland
Australia, as well as the island of Tasmania. The most recent, well-dated
occurrence of a thylacine on the mainland is a carbon-dated fossil from Murray
Cave in Western Australia, which is around 3,100 years old. Its extinction
coincided closely with the arrival of wild dogs called dingoes in Australia and
a similar predator in New Guinea. Dingoes never reached Tasmania, and most
scientists see this as the main reason for the thylacine’s survival there.
The dramatic decline of the
thylacine in Tasmania, which began in the 1830s and continued for a century, is
generally attributed to the relentless efforts of sheep farmers and bounty
hunters with shotguns. While this determined campaign undoubtedly played a
large part, it is likely that various other factors also contributed to the
decline and eventual extinction of the species. These include competition with
wild dogs introduced by European settlers, loss of habitat along with the
disappearance of prey species, and a distemper-like disease which may also have
affected the thylacine.
There was only one successful
attempt to breed a thylacine in captivity, at Melbourne Zoo in 1899. This was
despite the large numbers that went through some zoos, particularly London Zoo
and Tasmania’s Hobart Zoo. The famous naturalist John Gould foresaw the
thylacine’s demise when he published his Mammals of Australia between 1848 and 1863,
writing, ‘The numbers of this singular animal will speedily diminish,
extermination will have its full . way, and it will then, like the wolf of
England and Scotland, be recorded as an animal of the past.’
However, there seems to have
been little public pressure to preserve the thylacine, nor was much concern
expressed by scientists at the decline of this species in the decades that
followed. A notable exception was T.T. Flynn, Professor of Biology at the
University of Tasmania. In 1914, he was sufficiently concerned about the
scarcity of the thylacine to suggest that some should be captured and placed on
a small island. But it was not until 1929, with the species on the very edge of
extinction, that Tasmania’s Animals and Birds Protection Board passed a motion
protecting thylacines only for the month of December, which was thought to be
their prime breeding season. The last known wild thylacine to be killed was
shot by a farmer in the north-east of Tasmania in 1930, leaving just captive
specimens. Official protection of the species by the Tasmanian government was
introduced in July 193′, 59 days before the last known individual died in
Hobart Zoo on 7th September, 1936.
There have been numerous
expeditions and searches for the thylacine over the years, none of which has
produced definitive evidence that thylacines still exist. The species was
declared extinct by the Tasmanian government in 1986.
Questions 1-5
Complete the notes below.
Choose
ONE WORD ONLY from the passage for each answer.
The thylacine
Appearance and behaviour
·
Looked rather like a dog
·
Had a series of stripes along its body and tail
·
Ate an entirely 1 ……………… diet
·
Probably depended mainly on 2 ………………. when hunting
·
Young spent the first months of life inside its mother’s 3 …………………..
Decline and extinction
·
Last evidence in mainland Australia is a 3100-year-old 4 ………………
·
Probably went extinct in mainland Australia due to animals known
as dingoes
·
Reduction in 5 ………………. and
available sources of food were partly responsible for the decline in Tasmania
Questions
6-13
Do the following
statements agree with the information given in the Reading Passage? In boxes
6-13 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
6. Significant numbers of
thylacines were killed by humans from the 1830s onwards.
7. Several thylacines were
born in zoos during the late 1800s.
8. John Gould’s prediction
about thylacine surprised some biologists.
9. In the early 1900s, many
scientists became worried about the possible extinction of the thylacine.
10. T. T. Flynn’s proposal to
rehome captive thylacines on an island proved to be impractical.
11. There were still
reasonable numbers of thylacines in existence when a piece of legislation
protecting the species during their breeding season was passed.
12. From 1930 to 1936, the
only known living thylacines were all in captivity.
13. Attempts to find living
thylacine’ are now rarely made.
ANSWERS:
1.
2. Scent
3. Pouch
4. Fossil
5. Habitat
6. True
7. False
8. Not given
9. False
10. Not given
11. False
12. True
13. Not given
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