Reading Comprehension
Passage Breakdown
Fish farming has grown fast because ocean fish numbers are falling and farms now provide about a quarter of the fish people eat. Some people think farms will ease pressure on wild fisheries, but the passage says there is little evidence of that. Intensive farms can pollute water, spread disease, let nonnative fish escape, and damage habitat, all of which can hurt wild stocks. Many farmed fish also need large amounts of wild-caught fish as feed—on average about 1.9 kg of wild fish to produce 1 kg of farmed fish, and up to 5 kg for species like salmon—so farming can still reduce wild populations. Farmed fish could lower prices and replace some wild fish, but demand for wild-caught types keeps fishing high, so farming might help in some ways and harm in others.
Logic Breakdown
Find the passage's general evaluative principle about adopting new food-production methods: the passage is cautious—adopt methods only if they do not produce a net reduction in the relevant food supply. Match the option that expresses that principle.
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage11.The views put forward in the passage conform most closely to which one of the following principles governing new methods of food production?
Correct Answer
C
Choice C is correct. The passage repeatedly warns that fish farming can both help and harm wild fish supplies and therefore should not be adopted if it ultimately reduces the net amount of that food. Support: "There is, however, little if any evidence that fish farming will restore ocean fishery stocks" and "the complexity of production systems leads to an underlying paradox: fish farming is a possible solution, but also a potential contributing factor, to the continued decline of ocean fishery stocks worldwide." The passage gives concrete evidence that farming can reduce total fish availability ("For the ten species of fish most commonly farmed, an average of 1.9 kilograms of wild fish is required for every kilogram of fish produced...only three—catfish, milkfish, and carp—require less fish input than is eventually harvested"; farming some carnivores "requires up to 5 kilograms of wild fish for every kilogram of fish produced"). These statements support the principle that new methods should not be used if they will ultimately result in a net decrease in the food of the type produced.
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