There are three dogs in the backyard. They like apples, blueberries, and bonnies. The first dog, which likes apples, eats 3 times as many apples as the number of blueberries eaten by the second dog that likes blueberries. The dog that likes blueberries eats 3/4 times as many blueberries as the number of bonnies eaten by the third dog. If the dog that likes bonnies ate 60 of them, calculate the total number of fruits eaten by the three dogs? Let's think first. Chain of thought:
The dog that likes blueberries ate 3 / 4 * 60 = 45 blueberries, 3 / 4 as many blueberries as the number of bonnies eaten by the third dog. The total number of fruits eaten by the dog that likes bonnies and the one that like blueberries is 45 + 60 = 105. The first dog that likes apples ate 3 * 45 = 135 apples which are 3 times as many blueberries as the number eaten by the dog that likes blueberries. In total, the three dogs ate 105 + 135 = 240 fruits.
Therefore, the answer is 240.