"Was the Dodo Destinated to Die

Out?"
by Hanneke Meijer
In order to really understand the extinction of the dodo, we need to look beyond the humans, to the suite of non-native species that followed closely behind in their footsteps and set into motion an ecological disaster that resulted in the dodo's swan song. The ubiquitous ship-rats, the pigs, goats and Rusa deer brought along as food, and the macaques brought along as pets from Southeast Asia; these were the species that, once set loose in the island's pristine ecosystem, wreaked havoc on its members who had since long lost their defenses against predators. Dodo chicks and eggs were eaten, nests destroyed, and vegetation disturbed. As a flightless, ground-nesting bird, the dodo never stood a chance.
Eventually, all that remained was the image of a gluttonous, clumsy bird, destined for extinction....

by Hanneke Meijer to answer the question.
Which syntax choice does the writer make in the passage?
(1 point)
using mostly imperative sentences
limiting punctuation to emphasize different ideas
varying transitional words to show relationships
• using mostly simple sentences

1 answer

The writer's syntax choice in the passage involves varying transitional words to show relationships. The text uses a range of connectors and phrasing to explain the cause-and-effect relationships between the introduction of non-native species and the dodo's eventual extinction.