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All Common Core: 8th Grade English Language Arts Resources
Adapted from “Introduced Species That Have Become Pests” in Our Vanishing Wild Life, Its Extermination and Protection by William Temple Hornaday (1913)
The man who successfully introduces into a new habitat any species of living thing assumes a very grave responsibility. Every introduced species is doubtful gravel until panned out. The enormous losses that have been inflicted upon the world through the perpetuation of follies with wild animals and plants would, if added together, be enough to purchase a principality. The most aggravating feature of these follies in transplantation is that never yet have they been made severely punishable. We are just as careless and easygoing on this point as we were about the government of Yellowstone Park in the days when Howell and other poachers destroyed our first national bison herd. Even though Howell was caught red-handed, skinning seven Park bison cows, he could not be punished for it, because there was no penalty prescribed by any law. Today, there is a way in which any revengeful person could inflict enormous damage on the entire South, at no cost to himself, involve those states in enormous losses and the expenditure of vast sums of money, yet go absolutely unpunished!
The gypsy moth is a case in point. This winged calamity was imported near Boston by a French entomologist, Mr. Leopold Trouvelot, in 1868 or 69. The scientist did not purposely set the pest free. He was endeavoring with live specimens to find a moth that would produce a cocoon of commercial value to America, and a sudden gust of wind blew his living and breeding specimens of the gypsy moth out of his study through an open window. The moth itself is not bad to look at, but its larvae is a great, overgrown brute with an appetite like a hog. Immediately Mr. Trouvelot sought to recover his specimens. When he failed to find them all, he notified the State authorities of the accident. Every effort was made to recover all the specimens, but enough escaped to produce progeny that soon became a scourge to the trees of Massachusetts. The method of the big, nasty-looking mottled-brown caterpillar was very simple. It devoured the entire foliage of every tree that grew in its sphere of influence.
The gypsy moth spread with alarming rapidity and persistence. In time, the state of Massachusetts was forced to begin a relentless war upon it, by poisonous sprays and by fire. It was awful! Up to this date (1912) the New England states and the United States Government service have expended in fighting this pest about $7,680,000!
The spread of this pest has been slowed, but the gypsy moth never will be wholly stamped out. Today it exists in Rhode Island, Connecticut, and New Hampshire, and it is due to reach New York at an early date. It is steadily spreading in three directions from Boston, its original point of departure, and when it strikes the State of New York, we, too, will begin to pay dearly for the Trouvelot experiment.
In which of the following sentences does the author offer the strongest evidence that combating invasive species can be very expensive?
"The spread of this pest has been slowed, but the gypsy moth never will be wholly stamped out."
"Today, there is a way in which any revengeful person could inflict enormous damage on the entire South, at no cost to himself, involve those states in enormous losses and the expenditure of vast sums of money, yet go absolutely unpunished!"
"Up to this date (1912) the New England states and the United States Government service have expended in fighting this pest about $7,680,000!"
"The enormous losses that have been inflicted upon the world through the perpetuation of follies with wild animals and plants would, if added together, be enough to purchase a principality."
"In time, the state of Massachusetts was forced to begin a relentless war upon it, by poisonous sprays and by fire."
In which of the following sentences does the author offer the strongest evidence that combating invasive species can be very expensive?
"The spread of this pest has been slowed, but the gypsy moth never will be wholly stamped out."
"Today, there is a way in which any revengeful person could inflict enormous damage on the entire South, at no cost to himself, involve those states in enormous losses and the expenditure of vast sums of money, yet go absolutely unpunished!"
"The enormous losses that have been inflicted upon the world through the perpetuation of follies with wild animals and plants would, if added together, be enough to purchase a principality."
"In time, the state of Massachusetts was forced to begin a relentless war upon it, by poisonous sprays and by fire."
"Up to this date (1912) the New England states and the United States Government service have expended in fighting this pest about $7,680,000!"
The strongest evidence about the expensive nature fighting invasive species will need to in some way implicate or directly mention the cost of fighting the species. Let's consider each answer choice:
"The spread of this pest has been slowed, but the gypsy moth never will be wholly stamped out." - This sentence has nothing to do with the cost of fighting the gypsy moth's advancement; it just states that it is difficult to keep from advancing further.
"In time, the state of Massachusetts was forced to begin a relentless war upon it, by poisonous sprays and by fire." - This sentence tells us the methods that Massachusetts has used to combat the gypsy moth, but it doesn't tell us anything about how expensive these methods are to use.
"The enormous losses that have been inflicted upon the world through the perpetuation of follies with wild animals and plants would, if added together, be enough to purchase a principality." - Now we're getting somewhere: this sentence considers a hypothetical scenario that estimates the total amount of money spent fighting invasive species the world over. The author says that it would be "enough to purchase a principality." That's a lot of money! While this statement is grand it its claim, it's also an estimate and hypothetical. It's the author's claim, and it might not relate to the actual state of things. There might be better evidence in the passage, so let's look at the remaining answer choices.
"Today, there is a way in which any revengeful person could inflict enormous damage on the entire South, at no cost to himself, involve those states in enormous losses and the expenditure of vast sums of money, yet go absolutely unpunished!" - This sentence also uses a hypothetical scenario to play up the cost involved in fighting an invasive species. The author states that by introducing a nonnative, destructive organism to the environment of the Southern states, could "at no cost to himself, involve those states in enormous losses and the expenditure of vast sums of money." Again, this is conjecture, and while it's a reasonable claim, it doesn't have any actual real-world data supporting it.
"Up to this date (1912) the New England states and the United States Government service have expended in fighting this pest about $7,680,000!" - This is the correct answer. In this sentence, the author provides a distinct amount of money that the U.S. government and New England states have spent so far fighting the spread of the gypsy moth. Keep in mind that over seven and a half million dollars is a lot of money now, but it was worth even more in 1912 due to inflation since then. At any rate, we can tell that the author considers it to be a large sum because of the way he ends the sentence with an exclamation point to convey that this information is somehow shocking or exorbitant. This sentence provides the best evidence that fighting invasive species is expensive because it provides the actual total cost of fighting one invasive species. The other answer choices are based in the author's claims and conjectures, but this one is based in a quantitative fact.
Adapted from “Feathers of Sea Birds and Wild Fowl for Bedding” from The Utility of Birds by Edward Forbush (ed. 1922)
In the colder countries of the world, the feathers and down of waterfowl have been in great demand for centuries. These materials have been used as filling for beds and pillows. Such feathers are perfect insulators of heat, and beds, pillows, or coverlets filled with them represent the acme of comfort and durability.
The early settlers of New England saved for such purposes the feathers and down from the thousands of wild-fowl which they killed, but as the population of people increased, the quantity of feathers furnished in this manner became insufficient, and the people sought a larger supply in the vast colonies of ducks and geese along the Labrador coast.
The manner in which the feathers and down were obtained, unlike the method practiced in Iceland, did not tend to conserve and protect the source of supply. In Iceland, the people have continued to receive for many years a considerable income by collecting eider down (the small, fluffy feathers of eider ducks), but there they do not “kill the goose that lays the golden eggs.” Ducks line their nests with down plucked from their own breasts and that of the eider is particularly valuable for bedding. In Iceland, these birds are so carefully protected that they have become as tame and unsuspicious as domestic fowls In North America. Where they are constantly hunted they often conceal their nests in the midst of weeds or bushes, but in Iceland, they make their nests and deposit their eggs in holes dug for them in the sod. A supply of the ducks is maintained so that the people derive from them an annual income.
In North America, quite a different policy was pursued. The demand for feathers became so great in the New England colonies during the middle of the eighteenth century that vessels were sent to Labrador for the express purpose of securing the feathers and down of wild fowl. Eider down having become valuable and these ducks being in the habit of congregating by thousands on barren islands of the Labrador coast, the birds became the victims of the ships’ crews. As the ducks molt all their primary feathers at once in July or August and are then quite incapable of flight and the young birds are unable to fly until well grown, the hunters were able to surround the helpless birds, drive them together, and kill them with clubs. Otis says that millions of wildfowl were thus destroyed and that in a few years their haunts were so broken up by this wholesale slaughter and their numbers were so diminished that feather voyages became unprofitable and were given up.
This practice, followed by the almost continual egging, clubbing, shooting, etc. by Labrador fishermen, may have been a chief factor in the extinction of the Labrador duck. No doubt had the eider duck been restricted in its breeding range to the islands of Labrador, it also would have been exterminated long ago.
In which of the following sentences does the author provide the strongest evidence about why a large amount of feathers were able to be obtained on Labrador specifically?
"The demand for feathers became so great in the New England colonies during the middle of the eighteenth century that vessels were sent to Labrador for the express purpose of securing the feathers and down of wild fowl."
"This practice, followed by the almost continual egging, clubbing, shooting, etc. by Labrador fishermen, may have been a chief factor in the extinction of the Labrador duck."
"As the ducks molt all their primary feathers at once in July or August and are then quite incapable of flight and the young birds are unable to fly until well grown, the hunters were able to surround the helpless birds, drive them together, and kill them with clubs."
"In the colder countries of the world, the feathers and down of waterfowl have been in great demand for centuries."
"The early settlers of New England saved for such purposes the feathers and down from the thousands of wild-fowl which they killed, but as the population of people increased, the quantity of feathers furnished in this manner became insufficient, and the people sought a larger supply in the vast colonies of ducks and geese along the Labrador coast."
In which of the following sentences does the author provide the strongest evidence about why a large amount of feathers were able to be obtained on Labrador specifically?
"The demand for feathers became so great in the New England colonies during the middle of the eighteenth century that vessels were sent to Labrador for the express purpose of securing the feathers and down of wild fowl."
"This practice, followed by the almost continual egging, clubbing, shooting, etc. by Labrador fishermen, may have been a chief factor in the extinction of the Labrador duck."
"In the colder countries of the world, the feathers and down of waterfowl have been in great demand for centuries."
"The early settlers of New England saved for such purposes the feathers and down from the thousands of wild-fowl which they killed, but as the population of people increased, the quantity of feathers furnished in this manner became insufficient, and the people sought a larger supply in the vast colonies of ducks and geese along the Labrador coast."
"As the ducks molt all their primary feathers at once in July or August and are then quite incapable of flight and the young birds are unable to fly until well grown, the hunters were able to surround the helpless birds, drive them together, and kill them with clubs."
Let's consider each of the answer choices individually to figure out which one functions as the best evidence for the question's particular claim.
"In the colder countries of the world, the feathers and down of waterfowl have been in great demand for centuries." - This statement is too general to be the correct answer. It has nothing to do with Labrador specifically, which is specified in the claim.
"This practice, followed by the almost continual egging, clubbing, shooting, etc. by Labrador fishermen, may have been a chief factor in the extinction of the Labrador duck." - By "this practice," the author is referring to the North American method of collecting duck feathers used during the Labrador voyages. This has to do with Labrador specifically, but doesn't tell us anything about why a large amount of feathers were able to be collected, just that the method contributed to the extinction of the Labrador duck.
"The early settlers of New England saved for such purposes the feathers and down from the thousands of wild-fowl which they killed, but as the population of people increased, the quantity of feathers furnished in this manner became insufficient, and the people sought a larger supply in the vast colonies of ducks and geese along the Labrador coast." - This sentence suggests that the Labrador voyages were put together to meet a growing demand for feathers. This implicitly tells us that the Labrador voyages were designed to collect a great deal of feathers, but this particular sentence doesn't tell us about how this was accomplished.
"The demand for feathers became so great in the New England colonies during the middle of the eighteenth century that vessels were sent to Labrador for the express purpose of securing the feathers and down of wild fowl." - Similarly to the last answer choice, this tells us that the Labrador feather voyages were put together to collect lots of feathers, but doesn't mention how this was done.
"As the ducks molt all their primary feathers at once in July or August and are then quite incapable of flight and the young birds are unable to fly until well grown, the hunters were able to surround the helpless birds, drive them together, and kill them with clubs." - This is the correct answer. The information the author provides about the molting cycle of Labrador ducks explains why the hunters were able to kill them so easily for their feathers, and thus collect a great deal of feathers.
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