The Secret Of Staying Young - IELTS Reading Answers & Explanations
From Cambridge IELTS 14 Academic Reading Test 4 · Part 1 · Questions 1–13
Reading Passage
The secret of staying young
Pheidole dentata, a native ant of the south-eastern U.S., isn’t immortal. But scientists have found that it doesn’t seem to show any signs of aging. Old worker ants can do everything just as well as the youngsters, and their brains appear just as sharp. ‘We get a picture that these ants really don’t decline,’ says Ysabel Giraldo, who studies the ants for her doctoral thesis at Boston University.
Such age-defying feats are rare in the animal kingdom. Naked mole rats can live for almost 30 years and stay fit for nearly their entire lives. They can still reproduce even when old, and they never get cancer. But the vast majority of animals deteriorate with age just like people do. Like the naked mole rat, ants are social creatures that usually live in highly organised colonies. ‘It’s this social complexity that makes P. dentata useful for studying aging in people,’ says Giraldo, now at the California Institute of Technology. Humans are also highly social, a trait that has been connected to healthier aging. By contrast, most animal studies of aging use mice, worms or fruit flies, which all lead much more isolated lives.
In the lab, P. dentata worker ants typically live for around 140 days. Giraldo focused on ants at four age ranges: 20 to 22 days, 45 to 47 days, 95 to 97 days and 120 to 122 days. Unlike all previous studies, which only estimated how old the ants were, her work tracked the ants from the time the pupae became adults, so she knew their exact ages. Then she put them through a range of tests.
Giraldo watched how well the ants took care of the young of the colony, recording how often each ant attended to, carried and fed them. She compared how well 20-day-old and 95-day-old ants followed the telltale scent that the insects usually leave to mark a trail to food. She tested how ants responded to light and also measured how active they were by counting how often ants in a small dish walked across a line. And she experimented with how ants react to live prey: a tethered fruit fly. Giraldo expected the older ants to perform poorly in all these tasks. But the elderly insects were all good caretakers and trail-followers – the 95-day-old ants could track the scent even longer than their younger counterparts. They all responded do light well, and the older ants were more active. And when it came to reacting to prey, the older ants attacked the poor fruit fly just as aggressively as the young ones did, flaring their mandibles or pulling at the fly’s legs.
Then Giraldo compared the brains of 20-day-old and 95-day-ole ants, identifying any cells that were close to death. She saw no major differences with age, nor was there any difference in the location of the dying cells, showing that age didn’t seem to affect specific brain functions. Ants and other insects have structures in their brains called mushroom bodies, which are important for processing information, learning and memory. She also wanted to see if aging affects the density of synaptic complexes within these structures – regions where neurons come together. Again, the answer was no. what was more, the old ants didn’t experience any drop in the levels of either serotonin or dopamine – brain chemicals whose decline often coincides with aging. In humans, for example, a decrease in serotonin has been linked to Alzheimer’s disease.
‘This is the first time anyone has looked at both behavioral and neural changes in these ants so thoroughly,’ says Giraldo, who recently published the findings in the Proceeding of the Royal Society B. Scientists have looked at some similar aspects in bees, but the results of recent bee studies were mixed – some studies showed age-related declines, which biologists call senescence, and others didn’t. ‘For now, the study raises more questions than it answers,’ Giraldo says, ‘including how P. dentata stays in such good shape.’
Also, if the ants don’t deteriorate with age, why do they die at all? Out in the wild, the ants probably don’t live for a full 140 days thanks to predators, disease and just being in an environment that’s much harsher than the comforts of the lab. ‘The lucky ants that do live into old age may suffer a steep decline just before dying,’ Giraldo says, but she can’t say for sure because her study wasn’t designed to follow an ant’s final moments.
‘It will be important to extend these findings to other species of social insects,’ says Gene E. Robinson, an entomologist at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. This ant might be unique, or it might represent a broader pattern among other social bugs with possible clues to the science of aging in larger animals. Either way, it seems that for these ants, age really doesn’t matter.
Questions
Questions 1–8 Note Completion
Complete the notes below.
Choose ONE WORD ONLY from the passage for each answer.
Write your answer in boxes on your answer sheet.
Ysabel Giraldo’s research
Focused on a total of 1 different age groups of ants, analyzing
Behaviour:
- how well ants looked after their 2
- their ability to locate 3 using a scent trail
- the effect that 4 had on them
- how 5. They attacked prey
Brains:
- comparison between age and the 6 of dying cells in the brains of ants
- condition of synaptic complexes (areas in which 7 meet) in the brain’s ‘mushroom bodies’
- level of two 8 in the brain associated with ageing
Questions 9–13 True / False / Not Given
Do the following statements agree with the information give in the Reading Passage?
In boxes 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
Answers & Explanations Summary
| # | Answer | Evidence | Explanation |
|---|---|---|---|
| Q1 | four / 4 | Giraldo focused on ants at four age ranges | Excerpt/Passage Explanation: The passage mentions that Giraldo focused on ants belonging to four different age ranges. Answer Explanation: The answer 'four' refers to the number of age groups of ants studied in Ysabel Giraldo's research. Reason For Correctness: The correct answer matches the information given in the passage, which stated that the research focused on ants at four distinct age ranges. Therefore, 'four' is the appropriate answer in this context. |
| Q2 | young | Giraldo watched how well the ants took care of the young of the colony | Excerpt/Passage Explanation: The passage talks about how well the ants take care of the young in their colony. Answer Explanation: The answer 'young' refers to the young ants in the colony. Reason For Correctness: The correct answer is 'young' because the excerpt specifically mentions Ysabel Giraldo watching how well the ants took care of the young in the colony, indicating a focus on the young age group of ants in her research. |
| Q3 | food | followed the telltale scent that the insects usually leave to mark a trail to food | Excerpt/Passage Explanation: The passage talks about ants following a scent trail to find food. Answer Explanation: The answer refers to the ants' primary source of sustenance. Reason For Correctness: The correct answer is 'food' because the excerpt mentions the ants looking for food by following a scent trail, indicating that food is an essential element being analyzed in Ysabel Giraldo's research related to the behavior of ants. |
| Q4 | light | She tested how ants responded to light | Excerpt/Passage Explanation: The passage was about how Ysabel Giraldo studied how ants react to light. Answer Explanation: The answer involves the concept of light. Reason For Correctness: The correct answer is 'light' because the excerpt mentions that the research focused on how ants responded to light, which aligns perfectly with the answer provided. |
| Q5 | aggressively | the older ants attacked the poor fruit fly just as aggressively as the young ones did | Excerpt/Passage Explanation: The passage shows that the older ants attacked the fruit fly with the same level of aggression as the younger ants did. Answer Explanation: The answer indicates that the ants attacked the fruit fly forcefully or with a lot of energy. Reason For Correctness: The answer is correct because it accurately describes how the ants behaved in the situation provided in the passage. They attacked the fruit fly aggressively, which means they did so with a lot of force and intensity. |
| Q6 | location | She saw no major differences with age, nor was there any difference in the location of the dying cells | Excerpt/Passage Explanation: The passage talks about the researcher finding no significant differences in the location of dying cells in ants' brains as they age. Answer Explanation: The answer refers to the specific focus on the position or place of certain things. Reason For Correctness: The correct answer 'location' matches because it directly corresponds to the concept of the position or whereabouts of dying cells in the brains of ants as mentioned in the excerpt. |
| Q7 | neurons | She also wanted to see if aging affects the density of synaptic complexes within these structures – regions where neurons come together | Excerpt/Passage Explanation: The passage is talking about a research study on ants. The researcher, Ysabel Giraldo, wanted to see how aging affects the parts of ants' brains where different brain cells meet and work together. Answer Explanation: The answer is 'neurons'. Neurons are the tiny cells in the brain that send and receive messages. Reason For Correctness: The correct answer is 'neurons' because in the passage, it says 'regions where neurons come together'. This means that neurons are the tiny brain cells that meet and work together in the brain's 'mushroom bodies'. |
| Q8 | chemicals | the old ants didn’t experience any drop in the levels of either serotonin or dopamine – brain chemicals whose decline often coincides with aging. | Excerpt/Passage Explanation: The passage is talking about old ants. It says that even though they are old, they still have the same amount of two important brain chemicals called serotonin and dopamine. These chemicals are important for how ants think and behave. Answer Explanation: The answer is 'chemicals'. This refers to the brain chemicals serotonin and dopamine mentioned in the passage. Reason For Correctness: The correct answer is 'chemicals' because the passage specifically mentions serotonin and dopamine, which are brain chemicals, and how they are related to aging in ants. |
| Q9 | FALSE | Naked mole rats can live for almost 30 years and stay fit for nearly their entire lives | Excerpt/Passage Explanation: The passage says naked mole rats can live for almost 30 years and stay fit for nearly their entire lives. Answer Explanation: The answer is saying that Pheidole dentata ants are not the only animals remaining active for almost their whole lives. Reason For Correctness: The correct answer is FALSE because the passage mentions naked mole rats, not Pheidole dentata ants, and states that they can stay fit for nearly their entire lives. This indicates that Pheidole dentata ants are not the only animals known to remain active for almost their whole lives, making the statement contradictory. |
| Q10 | TRUE | Unlike all previous studies, which only estimated how old the ants were, her work tracked the ants from the time the pupae became adults, so she knew their exact ages | Excerpt/Passage Explanation: The passage talks about how Ysabel Giraldo's study was different from previous ones because she used precise data to track the exact ages of the ants. Answer Explanation: The answer indicates that Ysabel Giraldo was indeed the first person to study Pheidole dentata ants using precise age data, which means the statement agrees with the information provided in the passage. Reason For Correctness: The correct answer is TRUE because the passage clearly states that unlike previous studies that estimated ant ages, Ysabel Giraldo's work involved tracking the ants from pupae to adults to know their exact ages. |
| Q11 | FALSE | Giraldo expected the older ants to perform poorly in all these tasks. But the elderly insects were all good caretakers and trail-followers | Excerpt/Passage Explanation: The passage says that Giraldo thought older ants would not perform well, but they actually did well in taking care and following trails. Answer Explanation: The answer means that the ants did not behave as Giraldo had predicted. Reason For Correctness: The correct answer is FALSE because Giraldo initially thought the older ants would perform poorly, but in reality, they were good caretakers and trail-followers. So, the ants did not behave as she had predicted, making the statement false. |
| Q12 | NOT GIVEN | the results of recent bee studies were mixed – some studies showed age-related declines, which biologists call senescence, and others didn’t. | Excerpt/Passage Explanation: The passage talks about recent studies on bees. Some studies found age-related declines in bees, while others did not. Answer Explanation: The answer implies that there is no specific information given in the passage about the methods of measuring age-related decline in recent bee studies. Reason For Correctness: The correct answer is 'NOT GIVEN' because the passage does not mention anything about the specific methods used to measure age-related decline in recent bee studies, making it impossible to determine if the statements use different methods or not. |
| Q13 | TRUE | Out in the wild, the ants probably don’t live for a full 140 days thanks to predators, disease and just being in an environment that’s much harsher than the comforts of the lab | Excerpt/Passage Explanation: The passage is saying that in the wild, ants may not live as long due to various challenges like predators and disease. Answer Explanation: The answer states that Pheidole dentata ants kept in lab conditions live longer lives, which means they may live longer in a lab compared to in the wild. Reason For Correctness: The correct answer is TRUE because the passage contrasts the harsh conditions of the wild, where ants may not live as long, with the more favorable conditions of a lab environment where the ants could live longer. |
