Read the passage given below carefully and answer the questions that follow:
- Overpowering prey is a challenge for creatures that do not have limbs. Some species like Russell’s viper inject poison. Some others opt for an alternative non-chemical method rat snakes, for instance, catch and push their prey against the ground, while pythons use their muscle power to crush their prey to death. But snakes can’t be neatly divided into poisonous and non-poisonous categories.
- Even species listed as non-poisonous aren’t completely free of poison. The common Sand Boa, for instance, produces secretions particularly poisonous to birds. So the species doesn’t take any chance—it crushes its prey and injects poison as an extra step
- Do vipers need poison powerful enough to kill hundreds of rats with just one drop? After all, they eat only one or two at a time.
- While hunting animals try their worst to kill most efficiently, their prey use any trick to avoid becoming a meal, such as developing immunity to poison. For instance, Californian ground squirrels are resistant to Northern Pacific rattlesnake poison.
- Competition with prey is not the only thing driving snakes to evolve more and more deadly poison. Snakes also struggle to avoid becoming prey themselves.
- Some snake killers have partial immunity to poison. Famously, mongooses are highly resistant to cobra posion and with their speed and agility, kill snakes fearlessly. It would be the death of cobras as a species if they didn’t evolve a more deadly poison to stop mongooses.
- Poison has another important role. It’s an extreme meat softener, specific enzymes break up the insides of the prey. Normally, a reptile depends on the sun’s warm rays to aid digestion.
- But I wonder if we cannot use venom in our favour. In remote parts of India, local hospitality often involves leather-tough meat. I chew and chew until may jaw ache. If I spit it out or refuse, our hosts would be offended, I swallow like a python stuffing a deer down its throat and hope I don’t choke. If only I had poison.
Question 2.1.
Read the questions given below and answer any four in 30-40 words each.
[2 × 4 = 8]
- Russell viper and rat snake have different methods to attack prey. How?
- How does Sand Boa kill its prey?
- There is a constant tussle between the hunting animal and its prey. Why?
- What makes mongoose a snake predator?
- What difficulty does the writer face when he is entertained in the remote parts of India?
Question 2.2
On the basis of your reading of the above passage fill in any two of the following blanks. [1×2 = 2]
(i) Overpowering ____ is a challenge for creatures that do not have limbs.
(a) a killer
(b) humans
(c) a python
(d) prey
(ii) Poison meat.
(a) enhance taste of
(b) hardens
(c) softens
(d) breaks down
(iii) Californian squirrels are rattlesnake poison.
(a) afraid of
(b) helpless against
(c) resistant to
(d) indifferent to
Question 2.3
Find words from the passage which mean the same as: (any two) [1 × 2 = 2]
(a) Another (para 1)
(b) Liquid substances released from glands (para 2)
(c) Particular (para 7)
Answer
Short Answer
Question 2.1.
- Russells viper injects poison whereas rattle snakes catch and push their prey against the ground.
- Sand Boa produces secretions particularly poisonous to birds. It crushes its prey and injects poison as an extra step.
- The hunting animals try their worst to kill their prey most efficiently but their prey use any trick to avoid becoming a meal.
- Mongooses are highly resistant to cobra poison, with their speed and agility, they kill snakes fearlessly, making them a good snake predator.
- When entertained in the remote parts of India, the writer finds it difficult to chew leather-tough meat which he swallows down his/her throat like a python.
Question 2.2
- prey
- softens
- resistant to
Question 2.3
- alternative
- secreation
- specific