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
Approach: Find where the passage links pollution to the intensity of fish farming and use those lines to choose the option that claims pollution is less likely without intensive methods. Relevant sentences from the passage: In the first place, the more intensive forms of fish farming, oriented toward high-volume production, threaten the sustainability of ocean fisheries through water pollution and ecological disruption. Intensive fish farming usually involves the enclosure of fish in a secure system; population densities are typically high, resulting in the generation of large amounts of waste and increased potential for the spread of pathogens.
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage14.The author of the passage would be most likely to agree with which one of the following statements regarding pollution caused by fish farming?
Correct Answer
C
The passage explicitly states that the more intensive forms of fish farming 'threaten the sustainability of ocean fisheries through water pollution and ecological disruption' and that intensive farms produce 'large amounts of waste and increased potential for the spread of pathogens.' These statements imply that if enterprises do not pursue intensive (high-density, high-volume) methods, the kinds of pollution described are less likely to occur, so C matches the author's view.
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