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Ants Could Teach Ants - IELTS Reading Answers & Explanations

From IELTS Recent Actual Test 4 Academic Reading Test 5 · Part 1 · Questions 1–13

Reading Passage

You should spend about 20 minutes on Questions 1-13, which are based on Reading Passage 1 below.

Ants Could Teach Ants

The ants are tiny and usually nest between rocks in the south coast of England. Transformed into research subjects at the University of Bristol, they raced along a tabletop foraging for food — and then, remarkably, returned to guide others. Time and again, followers trailed behind leaders, darting this way and that along the route, presumably to memorise landmarks. Once a follower got its bearings, it tapped the leader with its antennae, prompting the lesson to literally proceed to the next step. The ants were only looking for food, but the researchers said the careful way the leaders led followers — thereby turning them into leaders in their own right — marked the Temnothorax albipennis ant as the very first example of a non-human animal exhibiting teaching behaviour.

“Tandem running is an example of teaching, to our knowledge the first in a non-human animal, that involves bidirectional feedback between teacher and pupil,” remarks Nigel Franks, professor of animal behaviour and ecology, whose paper on the ant educators was published last week in the journal Nature.

No sooner was the paper published, of course, than another educator questioned it. Marc Hauser, a psychologist and biologist and one of the scientists who came up with the definition of teaching, said it was unclear whether the ants had learned a new skill or merely acquired new information.

Later, Franks took a further study and found that there were even races between leaders. With the guidance of leaders, ants could find food faster. But the help comes at a cost for the leader, who normally would have reached the food about four times faster if not hampered by a follower. This means the hypothesis that the leaders deliberately slowed down in order to pass the skills on to the followers seems potentially valid. His ideas were advocated by the students who carried out the video project with him.

Opposing views still arose, however. Hauser noted that mere communication of information is commonplace in the animal world. Consider a species, for example, that uses alarm calls to warn fellow members about the presence of a predator. Sounding the alarm can be costly, because the animal may draw the attention of the predator to itself. But it allows others to flee to safety. “Would you call this teaching?” wrote Hauser. “The caller incurs a cost. The naive animals gain a benefit and new knowledge that better enables them to learn about the predator’s location than if the caller had not called. This happens throughout the animal kingdom, but we don’t call it teaching, even though it is clearly transfer of information.”

Tim Caro, a zoologist, presented two cases of animal communication. He found that cheetah mothers that take their cubs along on hunts gradually allow their cubs to do more of the hunting — going, for example, from killing a gazelle and allowing young cubs to eat to merely tripping the gazelle and letting the cubs finish it off. At one level, such behaviour might be called teaching — except the mother was not really teaching the cubs to hunt but merely facilitating various stages of learning. In another instance, birds watching other birds using a stick to locate food such as insects and so on, are observed to do the same thing themselves while finding food later.

Psychologists study animal behaviour in part to understand the evolutionary roots of human behaviour, Hauser said. The challenge in understanding whether other animals truly teach one another, he added, is that human teaching involves a “theory of mind” — teachers are aware that students don’t know something. He questioned whether Franks’s leader ants really knew that the follower ants were ignorant. Could they simply have been following an instinctive rule to proceed when the followers tapped them on the legs or abdomen? And did leaders that led the way to food — only to find that it had been removed by the experimenter — incur the wrath of followers? That, Hauser said, would suggest that the follower ant actually knew the leader was more knowledgeable and not merely following an instinctive routine itself.

The controversy went on, and for a good reason. The occurrence of teaching in ants, if proven to be true, indicates that teaching can evolve in animals with tiny brains. It is probably the value of information in social animals that determines when teaching will evolve, rather than the constraints of brain size.

Bennett Galef Jr., a psychologist who studies animal behaviour and social learning at McMaster University in Canada, maintained that ants were unlikely to have a “theory of mind” — meaning that leaders and followers may well have been following instinctive routines that were not based on an understanding of what was happening in another ant’s brain. He warned that scientists may be barking up the wrong tree when they look not only for examples of humanlike behaviour among other animals but humanlike thinking that underlies such behaviour. Animals may behave in ways similar to humans without a similar cognitive system, he said, so the behaviour is not necessarily a good guide into how humans came to think the way they do.

Questions

Questions 1–5 Matching Features

Look at the following statements and the list of people in the box below.

Match each statement with the correct person, A, B, C or D.

NB You may use any letter more than once.

A. Nigel Franks

B. Marc Hauser

C. Tim Caro

D. Bennett Galef Jr.

1 Animals could use objects to locate food.
2 Ants show two-way, interactive teaching behaviours.
3 It is risky to say ants can teach other ants like human beings do.
4 Ant leadership makes finding food faster.
5 Communication between ants is not entirely teaching.

Questions 6–9 Multiple Choice (Four Answers)

Choose FOUR letters, A-H.

6 7 8 9 Which FOUR of the following behaviours of animals are mentioned in the passage?
  1. touch each other with antenna
  2. alert others when there is danger
  3. escape from predators
  4. protect the young
  5. hunt food for the young
  6. fight with each other
  7. use tools like twigs
  8. feed on a variety of foods

Questions 10–13 Yes / No / Not Given

Do the following statements agree with the claims of the writer in Reading Passage 1?

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

10 Ants' tandem running involves only one-way communication.
11 Franks's theory got many supporters immediately after publicity.
12 Ants' teaching behaviour is the same as that of human.
13 Cheetah share hunting gains to younger ones.

Answers & Explanations Summary

# Answer Evidence Explanation
Q1 C In another instance, birds watching other birds using a stick to locate food such as insects and so on, are observed to do the same thing themselves while finding food later Excerpt/Passage Explanation:
The passage explains that Tim Caro talked about birds. These birds watched other birds use a stick to find food, like bugs. Then, the birds learned to use a stick themselves to find food later.
Answer Explanation:
The answer means that Tim Caro said that animals can use things, like tools, to find their food.
Reason For Correctness:
The correct answer is Tim Caro because the passage states that he presented cases of animal communication, including an example where 'birds watching other birds using a stick to locate food such as insects and so on, are observed to do the same thing themselves while finding food later.' This directly supports the idea that animals use 'objects' (like a stick) to find 'food'.
Q2 A “Tandem running is an example of teaching, to our knowledge the first in a non-human animal, that involves bidirectional feedback between teacher and pupil,” remarks Nigel Franks, professor of animal behaviour and ecology, whose paper on the ant educators was published last week in the journal Nature Excerpt/Passage Explanation:
The passage states that Nigel Franks, a professor, described how ants teach each other. He said their way of running together, called 'tandem running,' is a type of teaching where both the teacher and the student ants communicate back and forth with each other. This means they learn and interact in a 'two-way' manner.
Answer Explanation:
The answer is A, which means Nigel Franks.
Reason For Correctness:
The correct answer is Nigel Franks because he states that the ants' 'tandem running' is a form of teaching that involves 'bidirectional feedback between teacher and pupil.' This phrase 'bidirectional feedback' means that there is a 'two-way' or 'interactive' exchange between the ants, supporting the idea that the ants exhibit 'two-way, interactive teaching behaviours'.
Q3 D He warned that scientists may be barking up the wrong tree when they look not only for examples of humanlike behaviour among other animals but humanlike thinking that underlies such behaviour Excerpt/Passage Explanation:
The passage says that Dr. Galef Jr. gave a warning. He said that scientists might be making a big mistake if they try to find not only actions that look like human actions in animals, but also human-like thoughts that cause those actions. He means we should be careful not to think animals have the same thoughts as humans.
Answer Explanation:
The answer means that Dr. Bennett Galef Jr. thinks it is not a good idea or is dangerous to say that ants teach other ants in the same way that people teach each other.
Reason For Correctness:
The correct answer is D, Bennett Galef Jr., because he talks about the danger of comparing animal behavior to human behavior. He warns that animals might act like humans but not think like humans. He states that looking for 'humanlike thinking' in animals could be a mistake, suggesting it's risky to assume ants teach 'like human beings do' without a similar 'cognitive system' or 'theory of mind'.
Q4 A Later, Franks took a further study and found that there were even races between leaders. With the guidance of leaders, ants could find food faster Excerpt/Passage Explanation:
The passage says that later, Franks did another study. He learned that when ants followed leaders, they were able to find food more quickly.
Answer Explanation:
The answer is A, which means Nigel Franks. He is the person who said that ants can find food faster with leaders.
Reason For Correctness:
The correct answer is Nigel Franks because the passage states that he conducted a study where he discovered that ants could find food more quickly when they had leaders to guide them. This directly supports the idea that 'Ant leadership makes finding food faster'. The passage uses the key phrase 'With the guidance of leaders, ants could find food faster' and connects it to Franks' further study.
Q5 B “Would you call this teaching?” wrote Hauser. “The caller incurs a cost. The naive animals gain a benefit and new knowledge that better enables them to learn about the predator’s location than if the caller had not called. This happens throughout the animal kingdom, but we don’t call it teaching, even though it is clearly transfer of information.” Excerpt/Passage Explanation:
The passage explains that Marc Hauser questioned if certain animal interactions, like alarm calls where information is transferred and there's a cost and benefit, should be called 'teaching.' He pointed out that sharing information is common in animals, but we usually don't call it 'teaching,' even when knowledge is passed on.
Answer Explanation:
The answer is B, which stands for Marc Hauser. He thought that how ants communicate might not be true 'teaching.'
Reason For Correctness:
The correct answer is Marc Hauser because he argued that just sharing information or communicating between animals, even if it has a cost, is not always the same as 'teaching.' He gives an example of alarm calls in animals: even though the animal making the call takes a risk (incurs a cost) and other animals get new knowledge (gain a benefit), we don't call this 'teaching.' He believed that for true teaching, animals should learn a new skill, not just get new information. He specifically states that 'mere communication of information is commonplace in the animal world' and distinguishes this from teaching.
Q6
Q7
Q8
Q9 A / B / E / G Once a follower got its bearings, it tapped the leader with its antennae, prompting the lesson to literally proceed to the next step
Consider a species, for example, that uses alarm calls to warn fellow members about the presence of a predator
He found that cheetah mothers that take their cubs along on hunts gradually allow their cubs to do more of the hunting — going, for example, from killing a gazelle and allowing young cubs to eat to merely tripping the gazelle and letting the cubs finish it off
In another instance, birds watching other birds using a stick to locate food such as insects and so on, are observed to do the same thing themselves while finding food later
Excerpt/Passage Explanation:
The passage says that a follower ant touches a leader ant with its antennae to continue a lesson. It also gives an example of an animal that makes a loud sound to warn other animals when a dangerous predator is near. The text describes mother cheetahs hunting and killing an animal so their babies can eat. Lastly, it mentions that some birds use a stick to help them find food.
Answer Explanation:
The answer lists four actions that animals do, which are mentioned in the reading. These are: ants touching with their antennae, some animals warning others about danger, cheetah mothers hunting for their young, and birds using sticks as tools.
Reason For Correctness:
The correct answer identifies four specific animal behaviors described in the text. The passage mentions ants tapping each other with their 'antennae' as part of teaching. It gives an example of a species using 'alarm calls to warn' others of a 'predator', which means alerting them to danger. It also describes how cheetah mothers 'hunt' by 'killing a gazelle and allowing young cubs to eat'. Finally, it talks about birds 'using a stick to locate food', which is an example of using tools.
Q10 NO “Tandem running is an example of teaching, to our knowledge the first in a non-human animal, that involves bidirectional feedback between teacher and pupil,” remarks Nigel Franks, professor of animal behaviour and ecology Excerpt/Passage Explanation:
The passage explains that 'tandem running' — when ants lead others to food — is like teaching. It says this teaching has 'bidirectional feedback' between the ant that teaches (leader) and the ant that learns (follower). 'Bidirectional feedback' means both the leader and the follower communicate with each other, not just one talks to the other.
Answer Explanation:
The answer is 'NO'. This means the statement, 'Ants' tandem running involves only one-way communication,' is not true based on the information in the passage. Instead, the passage says it involves communication in two directions.
Reason For Correctness:
The correct answer is NO because the passage clearly states that ant 'tandem running' includes 'bidirectional feedback'. 'Bidirectional' means going in two directions, like a conversation where both people talk and listen. This contradicts the idea of 'only one-way communication', which would mean information flows in just a single direction. The passage highlights that followers tap leaders, which makes the lesson continue, showing communication from follower to leader as well as leader to follower.
Q11 NOT GIVEN No sooner was the paper published, of course, than another educator questioned it Excerpt/Passage Explanation:
The passage says that right after Franks's study was made public, another expert immediately doubted it and asked questions. This shows that his idea faced challenges right away.
Answer Explanation:
The answer, "NOT GIVEN," means that the passage does not tell us enough information to know if many people supported Franks's idea right after it became public. We cannot say if it's true or false based on the text.
Reason For Correctness:
The correct answer is "NOT GIVEN" because the passage mentions that Franks's paper was immediately questioned by another scientist, Marc Hauser. It states, "No sooner was the paper published, of course, than another educator questioned it." This shows immediate challenge and debate, not widespread support. While the passage later notes that Franks's students advocated for his *later* ideas, it does not provide information about whether his *original* theory received 'many supporters' immediately after its publicity. Therefore, we cannot confirm or deny the statement.
Q12 NOT GIVEN The challenge in understanding whether other animals truly teach one another, he added, is that human teaching involves a "theory of mind" — teachers are aware that students don’t know something. He questioned whether Franks’s leader ants really knew that the follower ants were ignorant Excerpt/Passage Explanation:
The passage explains that human teaching means teachers know that their students lack knowledge. It then questions if the ants acting as leaders actually understood that the other ants (followers) did not know something.
Answer Explanation:
The answer means that the passage does not tell us if ants teach in the same way as humans do. The text does not give enough information to say 'yes' or 'no' to this idea.
Reason For Correctness:
The correct answer is 'NOT GIVEN' because the passage talks about what human teaching involves, like knowing that a student doesn't know something. It also questions whether ants have this kind of understanding ('theory of mind'). However, the passage never directly says if the *behavior* of ants when teaching is the same as human teaching behavior or not. It discusses the differences in how they might think or why they do what they do, but not if the actions themselves are identical.
Q13 YES He found that cheetah mothers that take their cubs along on hunts gradually allow their cubs to do more of the hunting — going, for example, from killing a gazelle and allowing young cubs to eat to merely tripping the gazelle and letting the cubs finish it off Excerpt/Passage Explanation:
The passage says that cheetah mothers take their baby cheetahs (cubs) with them when they hunt. They then let the young cubs eat the animal they caught, or they let the cubs kill the animal after the mother has already hurt it. This means the young cheetahs get the food from the hunt.
Answer Explanation:
The answer, 'YES', means the writer claims that cheetahs share what they catch when hunting with their young ones.
Reason For Correctness:
The correct answer is YES because the passage states that cheetah mothers, when they hunt with their cubs, 'allow young cubs to eat' the prey. This directly supports the idea that cheetahs 'share hunting gains' (the food they catch) with their younger ones (cubs). The passage also mentions the mother letting the cubs 'finish it off' after she trips the prey, which further shows the cubs benefiting from the mother's hunt.

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