Marine mammals exhibit their ingenuity - Dolphins use 'tools' to help hunt for food : Đề thi thật IELTS READING (IELTS Reading Recent Actual Test)

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Bên cạnh PHÂN TÍCH ĐỀ THI THẬT TASK 2 (dạng advantages & disadvantages) Some students work while studying. Discuss the advantages and disadvantages of this trend and give your opinion?NGÀY 04/8/2020 IELTS WRITING GENERAL MÁY TÍNH (kèm bài được sửa hs đi thi), IELTS TUTOR cũng cung cấp Marine mammals exhibit their ingenuity - Dolphins use 'tools' to help hunt for food : Đề thi thật IELTS READING (IELTS Reading Recent Actual Test)

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II. Marine mammals exhibit their ingenuity - Dolphins use 'tools' to help hunt for food : Đề thi thật IELTS READING (IELTS Reading Recent Actual Test)

Marine mammals exhibit their ingenuity - Dolphins use 'tools' to help hunt for food

In the deep, clear channels of Australia's Shark Bay, bottlenose dolphins have discovered tools, raising questions about the origins of intelligent behavior, the nature of learning, and the birth of technology. There, dolphins in one extended family routinely use sponges to protect their noses as they forage for fish hidden in the abrasive seafloor sand, according to Georgetown University scientists.

As far as the researchers can tell, a single dolphin may have invented the technique relatively recently and taught it to her offspring. The simple innovation dramatically changed their behavior, hunting habits and social life, the researchers found. Those that adopted it became loners who spend much more time hunting than others, and dive more deeply in search of prey. The sponging dolphins teach the technique to all their young, but only the females seem to grasp the idea. 'It is indisputably tool use,' says primate anthropologist Craig Stanford at the University of Southern California, an authority on animal cognition and behavior. For those seeking a glimpse of our own beginnings, the dolphins of Shark Bay offer a hint of the inventive impulse that occurred when our earliest ancestors first shaped destiny by fashioning implements with their hands.

Tool use of any sort among wild animals is rare, difficult to document reliably, and controversial. The line between instinct, ingenuity and intelligence is easily blurred by wishful thinking, experts caution. Field observations often give rise to scholarly disputes. Even so, 10 primate species of monkeys and apes, along with 30 species of birds, are thought to use sticks, rocks or leaves as tools.

In the first in-depth analysis of this natural dolphin behavior, marine biologist and psychologist Dr Janet Mann at Georgetown University and her colleagues found that the dolphins of Shark Bay use their makeshift hunting masks more often than any other species uses tools, except human beings.

The curious hunting habit was first observed by a local fisherman who reported to marine biologists that he had seen a dolphin with an odd growth on its nose. Monitoring its movements through the bay's unusually clear waters, researchers soon discovered that the dolphin was actually balancing a conical basket sponge on its nose.>> Form đăng kí giải đề thi thật IELTS 4 kĩ năng kèm bài giải bộ đề 100 đề PART 2 IELTS SPEAKING quý đang thi (update hàng tuần) từ IELTS TUTOR

At first, it was not evident what the dolphin was doing with a sponge. Observing from a small boat, Dr Mann and her colleagues eventually identified 41 dolphins who regularly used sponges to hunt, cataloging 1,295 dives in which they surfaced with sponges on their snouts. Researchers were startled to realize that the dolphins of Shark Bay employed one living creature as a tool to help hunt another.

Not any basket sponge would do, the researchers soon learned. The dolphins might search for 10 minutes to locate one with the right conical shape to cap their nose, tear it free of its mooring, and then carry it to a preferred hunting ground along channels between eight meters and 13 meters deep. 'You can see that they are scattering the sand gently as they go along." says Dr Mann. "When they startle a fish out of the sand they immediately drop the sponge and go after it.

'They return to retrieve the sponge and pick up the hunt again, repeating the pattern. They really use these sponges as a foraging tool,' says dolphin biologist Maddalena Bearzi, president of the Ocean Conservation Society of Los Angeles. They discovered it could create an advantage in their foraging technique, and they pass it from generation to generation.' However, among the hundreds of dolphins living in this bay, only a few dozen use sponges to keep from scraping their noses, and that offered researchers an opportunity to compare creatures that use tools to others of the same species that do not.

Although these dolphins all appear to be related, researchers at the University of New South Wales suggest that nurture, not nature, is the reason these dolphins use tools, ruling out genetic explanations for the behavior. Instead, they are convinced that the use of sponges is passed from one generation to the next through imitation. Among bottlenose dolphins, mothers nurse their young for up to eight years, ample time for calves to absorb their mother's hunting tricks by observation. This is an example of culture among these animals," says Dr Bearzi. This is part of the reason it is so important.'

So far, almost all of the dolphin 32 MS spergens here proved to be forals The 79926 sex difference is really striking, Dr Mann says. "I don't know of another species where it is so dramatic. Of the spong offspring, only the daughters could be seen still sponging once they reached maturity. The sons tried it but almost always abandoned it. Male dolphins rarely play a role in child-rearing and tend to fish in packs.

For Dr Mann, the discovery that dolphins, too, are tool users adds an unexpected dimension to the history of innovation, shedding new light on animal intelligence. Clever mimics and fast learners, dolphins have unusually large brains four times the size of a chimpanzee's and second only to humans in relative size. 'It speaks to this whole issue of creativity and learning and brain size,' she says. The number one question that drives me and others is: Why do dolphins have such big brains? What are they doing down there in the water that requires them to be so smart?"

Questions 27-30

Do the following statements agree with the claims of the writer in Reading Passage 3?

In boxes 27-30 on your answer sheet, write

Yes if the statement agrees with the claims of the writer

No if the statement contradicts the claims of the writer

Not given if it is impossible to say what the writer thinks about this

27 Researchers believe that the use of sponges for hunting may have originated with one female dolphin's experimentation.

28 Research into tool use by dolphins can help us understand the origins of use of tools by humans

29 There is general agreement amongst researchers on the relationship of tool use amongst animals and animal intelligence.

30 Dr Mann's analysis of dolphin behaviour has been criticised by some other scientists,

Questions 31-35

Choose the correct letter, A, B, C or D.

Write the correct letter in boxes 31-35 on your answer sheet.

31 Some bottlenose dolphins in Shark Bay use sponges

A to attract fish.

B to avoid getting hurt.

C to supplement their diet.

D as a form of decoration.

32 The use of sponges by bottlenose dolphins results in their

A living longer

B attracting more mates.

C becoming more isolated.

D becoming more aggressive.

33 The Shark Bay fisherman mentioned in the passage

A provided an explanation for the dolphins' hunting habits.

В made numerous observations of the dolphins in Shark Bay.

C notified the media about dolphins balancing sponges on their noses.

Ꭰ thought the sponge was permanently attached to the dolphin's nose.>> IELTS TUTOR hướng dẫn PHÂN TÍCH ĐỀ THI 30/5/2020 IELTS WRITING TASK 2 (kèm bài sửa HS đạt 6.5)

34 The dolphins sometimes take some time to find a sponge because

A some sponges are too heavy.

B sponges are quite rare in Shark Bay.

C they are only satisfied with sponges that fit well.

D they have individual preferences for types of sponges.

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