Communicating In Colour - IELTS Reading Answers & Explanations
From IELTS Trainer 1 Academic Reading Test 6 · 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.
Communicating in Colour
There are more than 160 known species of chameleons. The main distribution is in Africa and Madagascar, and other tropical regions, although some species are also found in parts of southern Europe and Asia. There are introduced populations in Hawaii and probably in California and Florida too.
New species are still discovered quite frequently. Dr Andrew Marshall, a conservationist from York University, was surveying monkeys in Tanzania, when he stumbled across a twig snake in the Magombera forest which, frightened, coughed up a chameleon and fled. Though a colleague persuaded him not to touch it because of the risk from venom, Marshall suspected it might be a new species, and took a photograph to send to colleagues, who confirmed his suspicions. Kinyongia magomberae, literally "the chameleon from Magombera", is the result, and the fact it was not easy to identify is precisely what made it unique. The most remarkable feature of chameleons is their ability to change colour, an ability rivalled only by cuttlefish and octopi in the animal kingdom. Because of this, colour is not the best thing for telling chameleons apart and different species are usually identified based on the patterning and shape of the head, and the arrangement of scales. In this case it was the bulge of scales on the chameleon's nose.
Chameleons are able to use colour for both communication and camouflage by switching from bright, showy colours to the exact colour of a twig within seconds. They show an extraordinary range of colours, from nearly black to bright blues, oranges, pinks and greens, even several at once. A popular misconception is that chameleons can match whatever background they are placed on, whether a chequered red and yellow shirt or a Smartie* box. But each species has a characteristic set of cells containing pigment distributed over their bodies in a specific pattern, which determines the range of colours and patterns they can show. To the great disappointment of many children, placing a chameleon on a Smartie box generally results in a stressed, confused, dark grey or mottled chameleon.
Chameleons are visual animals with excellent eyesight, and they communicate with colour. When two male dwarf chameleons encounter each other, each shows its brightest colours. They puff out their throats and present themselves side-on with their bodies flattened to appear as large as possible and to show off their colours. This enables them to assess each other from a distance. If one is clearly superior, the other quickly changes to submissive colouration, which is usually a dull combination of greys or browns. If the opponents are closely matched and both maintain their bright colours, the contest can escalate to physical fighting and jaw-locking, each trying to push each other along the branch in a contest of strength. Eventually, the loser will signal his defeat with submissive colouration.
Females also have aggressive displays used to repel male attempts at courtship. When courting a female, males display the same bright colours that they use during contests. Most of the time, females are unreceptive and aggressively reject males by displaying a contrasting light and dark colour pattern, with their mouths open and moving their bodies rapidly from side to side. If the male continues to court a female, she often chases and bites him until he retreats. The range of colour change during female displays, although impressive, is not as great as that shown by males.
Many people assume that colour change evolved to enable chameleons to match a greater variety of backgrounds in their environment. If this was the case, then the ability of chameleons to change colour should be associated with the range of background colours in the chameleon's habitat, but there is no evidence for such a pattern. For example, forest habitats might have a greater range of brown and green background colours than grasslands, so forest-dwelling species might be expected to have greater powers of colour change. Instead, the males whose display colours are the most eye-catching show the greatest colour change. Their displays are composed of colours that contrast highly with each other as well as with the background vegetation. This suggests that the species that evolved the most impressive capacities for colour change did so to enable them to intimidate rivals or attract mates rather than to facilitate camouflage.
How do we know that chameleon display colours are eye-catching to another chameleon – or, for that matter, to a predatory bird? Getting a view from the perspective of chameleons or their bird predators requires information on the chameleon's or bird's visual system and an understanding of how their brains might process visual information. This is because the perceived colour of an object depends as much on the brain's wiring as on the physical properties of the object itself. Luckily, recent scientific advances have made it possible to obtain such measurements in the field, and information on visual systems of a variety of animals is becoming increasingly available.
The spectacular diversity of colours and ornaments in nature has inspired biologists for centuries. But if we want to understand the function and evolution of animal colour patterns, we need to know how they are perceived by the animals themselves – or their predators. After all, camouflage and conspicuousness are in the eye of the beholder.
*Smarties™ are sugar-coated chocolates in a range of bright colours.
Questions
Questions 1–4 Short Answers
Answer the questions below.
Choose NO MORE THAN THREE WORDS from the passage for each answer.
Questions 5–13 True / False / Not Given
Do the following statements agree with the information given in Reading Passage 1?
TRUE if the statement agrees with the information
FALSE if the statement contradicts the information
NOT GIVEN if there is no information on this
Answers & Explanations Summary
| # | Answer | Evidence | Explanation |
|---|---|---|---|
| Q1 | tropical | The main distribution is in Africa and Madagascar, and other tropical regions | Excerpt/Passage Explanation: The passage says that most of these animals are spread across Africa, Madagascar, and other areas with a hot, wet climate. Answer Explanation: The answer means a type of weather or place that is very hot and wet. Reason For Correctness: The correct answer is found in the first paragraph, which explains where chameleons live. It mentions that their ‘main distribution’ (meaning where most of them are found) is in Africa, Madagascar, and ‘other tropical regions’. In English, the word ‘tropical’ describes the hot and humid climate of these areas. |
| Q2 | a twig snake / a snake / twig snake / snake | Dr Andrew Marshall, a conservationist from York University, was surveying monkeys in Tanzania, when he stumbled across a twig snake in the Magombera forest which, frightened, coughed up a chameleon and fled | Excerpt/Passage Explanation: The passage describes an event where a researcher found a twig snake that spit out a chameleon, leading to the discovery of a new type of chameleon. Answer Explanation: The answer is a specific type of snake referred to as a twig snake. Reason For Correctness: The correct answer is the twig snake because the passage explains that a scientist named Dr. Andrew Marshall found this snake while working in a forest. The snake was scared and coughed up (spit out) a chameleon. Scientists later confirmed that this chameleon was a "new species," meaning it was previously undiscovered. Since the snake had the chameleon in its body, it is the animal that caught the new species. |
| Q3 | the Magombera forest / Magombera forest / the Magombera / Magombera | Dr Andrew Marshall, a conservationist from York University, was surveying monkeys in Tanzania, when he stumbled across a twig snake in the Magombera forest which, frightened, coughed up a chameleon and fled Kinyongia magomberae, literally "the chameleon from Magombera", is the result |
Excerpt/Passage Explanation: The passage tells us that the lizard was discovered in the Magombera forest and that its official name means 'the chameleon from Magombera'. Answer Explanation: The answer means that the new kind of chameleon was given a name based on the forest where it was found. Reason For Correctness: The correct answer is the Magombera forest because the text describes how a scientist found the animal in a place called the Magombera forest. It then explains that the new name for this animal means the lizard from that specific location or woods. This shows the name comes from the area where it was caught. |
| Q4 | the nose / nose | In this case it was the bulge of scales on the chameleon's nose | Excerpt/Passage Explanation: The passage explains that for this particular species, the special feature used to recognize it was the group of scales on its nose. Answer Explanation: The answer is the part of the face that sticks out. Reason For Correctness: The correct answer is extracted from the section describing how the new species, Kinyongia magomberae, was identified. The passage mentions that since color is not reliable for identifying chameleons, scientists look at patterns on the head or scales. For this specific species, a unique bump or 'bulge' of scales on its nose was the key physical feature that set it apart. |
| Q5 | TRUE | The most remarkable feature of chameleons is their ability to change colour, an ability rivalled only by cuttlefish and octopi in the animal kingdom | Excerpt/Passage Explanation: The passage explains that changing color is a very special skill of chameleons, and only cuttlefish and octopi are as talented at it as they are. Answer Explanation: The answer TRUE means that there are very few animals in the world that are as good at changing color as cuttlefish are. Reason For Correctness: The correct answer is TRUE because the passage states that the chameleon's talent for changing color is 'rivalled only' by two other creatures: cuttlefish and octopi. In English, if something is 'rivalled only' by a few things, it means those are the only others that are just as good. This confirms that there are not many ('few') creatures with this effective ability. |
| Q6 | FALSE | A popular misconception is that chameleons can match whatever background they are placed on, whether a chequered red and yellow shirt or a Smartie* box | Excerpt/Passage Explanation: The passage says it is a common but wrong idea that a chameleon can change its own look to match the background it is on, like a shirt with a pattern or a colorful box. Answer Explanation: The answer means that chameleons do not copy the patterns of things they sit on, even if the pattern only has two colors. Reason For Correctness: The correct answer is FALSE because the text states it is a mistake to think chameleons can copy any background pattern. It mentions a "chequered" (patterned like a board) shirt with two colors (red and yellow) as an example of what people wrongly believe they can mimic. Instead of copying what they see, chameleons have their own fixed range of colors and patterns they can show based on their own cells. A "misconception" is something people think is true, but it is actually false. |
| Q7 | FALSE | To the great disappointment of many children, placing a chameleon on a Smartie box generally results in a stressed, confused, dark grey or mottled chameleon | Excerpt/Passage Explanation: The passage says that if you put a chameleon on a box with many colours, the animal feels bad (stressed) and does not know what to do (confused). It does not have fun changing its skin colour. Answer Explanation: The answer is FALSE because the text says that chameleons feel stressed and confused when someone tries to make them show many new colours. Reason For Correctness: The correct answer is FALSE because the passage explains that placing a chameleon on a colourful background, like a box of Smarties, does not make it happy. Instead, the animal becomes "stressed" and "confused," and it usually turns a dark or dull colour rather than enjoying the process of trying out new colours. The word "stressed" is a keyword showing that the experience is negative for the animal. |
| Q8 | FALSE | This suggests that the species that evolved the most impressive capacities for colour change did so to enable them to intimidate rivals or attract mates rather than to facilitate camouflage | Excerpt/Passage Explanation: The passage explains that these animals developed the amazing ability to change their colors so they could frighten away other males they are fighting with or to find a girlfriend, not just to hide in the environment. Answer Explanation: The answer is FALSE because the text indicates that the ability to change color is the primary tool used by male chameleons to scare off or deal with their competitors, rather than just their size. Reason For Correctness: The correct answer is FALSE because the passage explains that the most advanced color-changing skills in chameleons were developed specifically to intimidate rivals (frighten competitors) or attract mates. While males do puff themselves up to look bigger, the text emphasizes that they use their brightest colors to assess each other from a distance. The determination of who is superior is linked to these display colors and the subsequent change to submissive (dull) colors by the loser, showing that color is the key factor in their competition. |
| Q9 | NOT GIVEN | Eventually, the loser will signal his defeat with submissive colouration | Excerpt/Passage Explanation: The passage says that the male who loses a fight changes his skin color to show he is defeated. However, it does not say if he hides in the tree branches or moves away. Answer Explanation: The answer means that the text does not say whether the losing male chameleon goes to hide in the tree branches after a fight. Reason For Correctness: The correct answer is NOT GIVEN because the text only tells us that the loser shows he has given up by changing his skin to a 'submissive colouration,' which is a dull color. The passage does not give any information about what the loser does with his body or if he goes to hide in the trees after the contest is over. |
| Q10 | TRUE | Most of the time, females are unreceptive and aggressively reject males by displaying a contrasting light and dark colour pattern, with their mouths open and moving their bodies rapidly from side to side | Excerpt/Passage Explanation: The passage says that female chameleons show they do not want a male by using special colors and by moving their bodies back and forth quickly. Answer Explanation: The answer is TRUE. This means female chameleons use their body colors and their movements to tell male chameleons to leave them alone. Reason For Correctness: The correct answer is TRUE because the text explains that female chameleons use 'aggressive displays' to stop males from trying to mate with them. These displays involve changing to a specific 'colour pattern' and 'moving their bodies rapidly from side to side.' This shows they are using both color and movement to push the males away. |
| Q11 | TRUE | Many people assume that colour change evolved to enable chameleons to match a greater variety of backgrounds in their environment. If this was the case, then the ability of chameleons to change colour should be associated with the range of background colours in the chameleon's habitat, but there is no evidence for such a pattern | Excerpt/Passage Explanation: The passage explains that while many people think chameleons change color to blend in with their surroundings, there is actually no scientific proof that this is the reason they have this ability. Answer Explanation: The answer means that the common belief about why chameleons change color is actually incorrect according to scientific findings. Reason For Correctness: The correct answer is TRUE because the passage explains that although most people believe chameleons change color to hide from enemies (camouflage), scientists found no evidence to support this idea. Instead, the passage states that the best color changers do it to talk to other chameleons, such as to scare away rivals or attract a mate. Therefore, the popular 'camouflage' theory is presented as wrong. |
| Q12 | NOT GIVEN | For example, forest habitats might have a greater range of brown and green background colours than grasslands, so forest-dwelling species might be expected to have greater powers of colour change | Excerpt/Passage Explanation: The passage mentions forest and grassland habitats to talk about the different colors found there. However, it does not mention the number of predators in these areas. Answer Explanation: The answer is NOT GIVEN because the passage does not tell us how many predators live in different places like grasslands. Reason For Correctness: The correct answer is NOT GIVEN because while the text mentions grasslands and predators, it never compares the number of predators in different habitats. It discusses grasslands only to compare background colors and how they might affect chameleon color changes, but it provides no data on the amount of animals that hunt chameleons in those areas. |
| Q13 | FALSE | Luckily, recent scientific advances have made it possible to obtain such measurements in the field, and information on visual systems of a variety of animals is becoming increasingly available | Excerpt/Passage Explanation: The passage explains that new technology lets scientists take measurements in nature ('in the field'). This means they do not need to take the animals away from their natural homes to study their eyesight. Answer Explanation: The answer is FALSE because researchers can now take measurements of animal vision while the animals are still in their natural homes. Reason For Correctness: The correct answer is FALSE because the passage explains that new scientific methods let researchers study how animals see while staying in the animals' natural environment. In science, the phrase 'in the field' means working in nature rather than in an office or a laboratory. Because these tests can happen 'in the field,' it is not true that scientists must remove the animals from their habitat to collect data. |
