7th grade help please
The night air is filled with a strange whistling that seems to come from everywhere at once. The warm breeze carries the sound through the Caribbean island of Trinidad. It is a loud, persistent sound sometimes compared to ocean waves breaking on the sand. This is the call of a tiny tree frog living in the leaves of the tropical rainforest canopy. The frog has sandy brown skin with one thin, dark brown stripe running across its upper back and tan underbelly. No bigger than an adult human's thumb, the little frog makes a surprisingly loud call. The males are responsible for the noise. It is how they attract the female frogs. The Trinidad tree frogs begin singing shortly after sunset and get more vocal after a rain. They call throughout the rainy season, creating a lovely background sound for tourists visiting the island. The sound is easy to recognize but the frogs are so little they are hard to find. Many Trinidad visitors have spent the better part of an evening trying to track down the source of the sound only to give up in frustration. Most people do not suspect they are looking for such a small animal. People who spend more time on the island come to know the familiar evening voices and begin to notice differences among individual frog songs. Each little frog may have a slightly different pitch or a difference in rhythm. Individual frogs also stay in the same place night after night. That makes identifying a specific frog easier. This also works out well for the female frog trying to find her perfect mate. Thousands of tiny frogs calling out to each other create a lovely tropical music. And for any visitor, the musical sounds of Trinidad's charming tree frogs are a favorite memory. 7. Which statement is the best summary of the passage? The calls of tree frogs are hard to identify because the frogs live in the rainforest canopy. Tree frogs live on tropical islands and are one reason people visit the islands. Male and female frogs have different calls to help them find mates. Small tree frogs of Trinidad make very loud distinctive calls that visitors notice and enjoy.
HELP!!! anyone please
@SydtheKid913
@BeautifulNightmare please help me nobody is helping
I don't think it's C because that doesn't seem like the main topic of the passage
I also do not believe it is A since the article is about more than just the fact that the calls are hard to identify
I think that D is the best summary it cannot be B because the article is not about tourists and has D has a broader perspective.
hope I helped :)
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