Unseen passage to assess comprehension – Ncert- Class 11/12
Unseen passage – 1
Read the passage caefully and answer the question:-
(1)That large animals require luxuriant vegetation has been a general assumption which has passed from one
work to another; but I do not hesitate to say that it is completely false, and that it has vitiated the reasoning
of geologists on some points of great interest in the ancient history of the world. The prejudice has probably
been derived from India, and the Indian islands, where troops of elephants, noble forests, and impenetrable
jungles, are associated together in everyone’s mind. If, however, we refer to any work of travels through the
southern parts of Africa, we shall find allusions in almost every page either to the desert character of the
country, or to the numbers of large animals inhabiting it. The same thing is rendered evident by the many
engravings which have been published of various parts of the interior.
(2) Dr. Andrew Smith, who has lately succeeded in passing the Tropic of Capricorn, informs me that, taking
into consideration the whole of the southern part of Africa, there can be no doubt of its being a sterile
country. On the southern coasts there are some fine forests, but with these exceptions, the traveler may
pass for days together through open plains, covered by a poor and scanty vegetation. Now, if we look at
the animals inhabiting these wide plains, we shall find their numbers extraordinarily great, and their bulk
immense.
(3) It may be supposed that although the species are numerous, the individuals of each kind are few. By the
kindness of Dr. Smith, I am enabled to show that the case is very different. He informs me, that in lat. 24’,
in one day’s march with the bullock-wagons, he saw, without wandering to any great distance on either
side, between one hundred and one hundred and fifty rhinoceroses – the same day he saw several herds of
giraffes, amounting together to nearly a hundred.
(4) At the distance of a little more than one hour’s march from their place of encampment on the previous
night, his party actually killed at one spot eight hippopotamuses, and saw many more. In this same river
there were likewise crocodiles. Of course it was a case quite extraordinary, to see so many great animals
crowded together, but it evidently proves that they must exist in great numbers. Dr. Smith describes the
country passed through that day, as ‘being thinly covered with grass, and bushes about four feet high, and
still more thinly with mimosa-trees.’
(5) Besides these large animals, anyone the least acquainted with the natural history of the Cape has read of the
herds of antelopes, which can be compared only with the flocks of migratory birds. The numbers indeed
of the lion, panther, and hyena, and the multitude of birds of prey, plainly speak of the abundance of the smaller quadrupeds: one evening seven lions were counted at the same time prowling round Dr. Smith’s encampment. As this able naturalist remarked to me, the carnage each day in Southern Africa must indeed be terrific! I confess it is truly surprising how such a number of animals can find support in a country
producing so little food.
(6) The larger quadrupeds no doubt roam over wide tracts in search of it; and their food chiefly consists of
underwood, which probably contains much nutriment in a small bulk. Dr. Smith also informs me that the
vegetation has a rapid growth; no sooner is a part consumed, than its place is supplied by a fresh stock. There
can be no doubt, however, that our ideas respecting the apparent amount of food necessary for the support
of large quadrupeds are much exaggerated. The belief that where large quadrupeds exist, the vegetation must
necessarily be luxuriant, is more remarkable, because the converse is far from true.
(7) Mr. Burchell observed to me that when entering Brazil, nothing struck him more forcibly than the splendour
of the South American vegetation contrasted with that of South Africa, together with the absence of all
large quadrupeds. In his travels, he has suggested that the comparison of the respective weights (if there
were sufficient data) of an equal number of the largest herbivorous quadrupeds of each country would be
extremely curious. If we take on the one side, the elephants, hippopotamus, giraffe, bos caffer, elan, five
species of rhinoceros; and on the American side, two tapirs, the guanaco, three deer, the vicuna, peccari,
capybara (after which we must choose from the monkeys to complete the number), and then place these
two groups alongside each other it is not easy to conceive ranks more disproportionate in size.
(8) After the above facts, we are compelled to conclude, against anterior probability that among the mammalia
there exists no close relation between the bulk of the species, and the quantity of the vegetation, in the
countries which they inhabit.

