37. The author directly states that which of the following features of the barn owl is the most visually striking?
Your Answer is
Correct Answer is C
Explanation
Located at lines 46-48 (the first sentence of the fourth paragraph)
Passage IV
NATURAL SCIENCE: This passage is adapted from the article "The Hearing of the Barn Owl" by Eric I. Knudsen (©1981 by Scientific American, Inc.).
For the barn owl life depends on hearing. A nocturnal hunter, the bird must be able to find field mice solely by the rustling and squeaking sounds they make as they traverse runways in snow or grass. Like predators that hunt on the ground, the barn owl must be able to locate its prey quickly and precisely in the horizontal plane. Since the bird hunts from the air, it must also be able to determine its angle of elevation above the animal it is hunting. The owl has solved this problem very successfully: it can locate sounds in azimuth (the horizontal dimension) and elevation (the vertical dimension) better than any other animal whose hearing has been tested.
What accounts for this acuity? The answer lies in the owl's ability to utilize subtle differences between the sound in its left ear and that in its right. The ears are generally at slightly different distances from the source of a sound, so that sound waves reach them at slightly different times. The barn owl is particularly sensitive to these minute differences, exploiting them to determine the azimuth of the sound. In addition the sound is perceived as being somewhat louder by the ear that is closer to the source, and this difference offers further clues to horizontal location. For the barn owl the difference in loudness also helps to specify elevation because of an unusual asymmetry in the owl's ears. The right ear and its opening are directed slightly upward; the left ear and its opening are directed downward. For this reason the right ear is more sensitive to sounds from above and the left ear to sounds from below.
These differences in timing and loudness provide enough information for the bird to accurately locate sounds both horizontally and vertically. To be of service to the owl, however, the information must be organized and interpreted. Much of the processing is accomplished in brain centers near the beginning of the auditory pathway. From these centers nerve impulses travel to a network of neurons in the midbrain that are arranged in the form of a map of space. Each neuron in this network is excited only by sounds from one small region of space. From this structure impulses are relayed to the higher brain centers. The selection of sensory cues and their transformation into a map of space is what enables the barn owl to locate its prey in total darkness with deadly accuracy.
The most visually striking anatomical feature of the barn owl, and the one that plays the most important role in its location of prey, is the face. The skull is relatively narrow and small and the face is large and round, made up primarily of layers of stiff, dense feathers arrayed in tightly packed rows. The feathered structure, called the facial ruff, forms a surface that is a very efficient reflector of high-frequency sounds.
Two troughs run through the ruff from the forehead to the lower jaw, each about two centimeters wide and nine centimeters long. The troughs are similar in shape to the fleshy exterior of the human ear, and they serve the same purpose: to collect high-frequency sounds from a large volume of space and funnel them into the ear canals. The troughs join below the beak. The ear openings themselves are hidden under the preaural flaps: two flaps of skin that project to the side next to the eyes. The entire elaborate facial structure is hidden under a layer of particularly fine feathers that are acoustically transparent.
The barn owl is capable of locating the source of a sound within a range of one to two degrees in both azimuth and elevation; one degree is about the width of a little finger at arm's length. Surprisingly, until the barn owl was tested, man was the species with the greatest known ability to locate the source of a sound; human beings are about as accurate as the owl in azimuth but are three times worse in elevation.
The sensitivity of the barn owl’s hearing is shown both by its capacity to locate distant sounds and by its ability to orient its talons for the final strike. When the owl swoops down on a mouse, even in a completely dark experimental chamber, it quickly aligns its talons with the body axis of the mouse. This behavior is not accidental. When the mouse turns and runs in a different direction, the owl realigns its talons accordingly. This behavior clearly increases the probability of a successful strike; it also implies that the owl not only identifies the location of the sound source with extreme accuracy but also detects subtle changes in the origin of the sound from which it infers the direction of movement of the prey.
37. The author directly states that which of the following features of the barn owl is the most visually striking?
Your Answer is
Correct Answer is C
Explanation
Located at lines 46-48 (the first sentence of the fourth paragraph)