Free ACT prep · Updated for the May 2026 ACT format Take a full-length test →
Science · Data Representation

Metabolic-Rate Table — Question 13

Hard Science Data Representation
Study Description and Data Table

A team of biologists measured the metabolic rate (in arbitrary units) of three closely related freshwater fish species at five different water temperatures, ranging from 20°C to 40°C. Each measurement was repeated three times and the mean is reported in Table 1.

Background: Metabolic rate generally rises with temperature in cold-blooded animals because biochemical reactions proceed more quickly at higher temperatures. The three species in this experiment inhabit overlapping but distinct natural temperature ranges; Species A is found in the coldest waters, Species C in the warmest.

Table 1. Metabolic rate at varying temperature:

Temp (°C)Species ASpecies BSpecies C
2033.54
253.43.94.4
303.84.34.8
354.24.75.2
404.65.15.6

Question

According to Table 1, which species had the highest metabolic rate at 40°C?

Answer choices

  1. Species B
  2. Species C
  3. All three species had equal metabolic rates
  4. Species A

B Correct answer: B) Species C

Read Table 1 at 40°C: Species A = 4.6, Species B = 5.1, Species C = 5.6. The highest value is for Species C.

On Science questions, the data table or graph is the answer key. Outside biology or chemistry knowledge is rarely needed; everything you need is in front of you.

When a question asks about a single species or a single condition, isolate just that row or column before answering. Looking at the whole table at once is the most common error.

The underlying rule

Data Representation questions reward direct table-reading. The "trick" is just to look up the value carefully — most errors come from grabbing the wrong row or column.

Why each wrong answer is wrong

  • A) Species B: This option misreads the table — typically by grabbing the wrong row, the wrong column, or the wrong arithmetic operation.
  • C) All three species had equal metabolic rates: This option misreads the table — typically by grabbing the wrong row, the wrong column, or the wrong arithmetic operation.
  • D) Species A: This option misreads the table — typically by grabbing the wrong row, the wrong column, or the wrong arithmetic operation.

Study tip

Treat ACT Science as graph-and-table reading, not biology trivia. The skills are essentially the same as reading a stock chart or a sports box score under time pressure.