Question:medium

Forest fires feed on decades-long accumulations of debris and leap from the tops of young trees into the branches of mature trees. Fires that jump from treetop to treetop can be devastating. In old-growth forests, however, the shade of mature trees keeps thickets of small trees from sprouting, and the lower branches of mature trees are too high to catch the flames. This paragraph best supports the statement that

Show Hint

In "Critical Reasoning" or "Inference" questions, focus on the causal link. Here, the link is: Mature Shade $\rightarrow$ No Small Trees $\rightarrow$ No "Ladder" $\rightarrow$ No Treetop Fire. If a link in this chain is broken, the forest's natural resistance disappears.
Updated On: Apr 1, 2026
  • (A) Forest fires are more dangerous in forests with many small trees.
  • (B) Old-growth forests are less likely to experience devastating fires.
  • (C) Young trees are the main cause of forest fires.
  • (D) Mature trees prevent forest fires from occurring.
  • (E) Accumulated debris alone determines the intensity of forest fires.
Show Solution

The Correct Option is B

Solution and Explanation

Was this answer helpful?
0

Top Questions on Reading Comprehension