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Re: Humans get Lyme disease from infected ticks. Ticks get infected by [#permalink]
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Humans get Lyme disease from infected ticks. Ticks get infected by feeding on animals with Lyme disease, but the ease of transmission from host animal to tick varies. With most species of host animal, transmission of Lyme disease to ticks is extremely rare, but white-footed mice are an exception, readily passing Lyme disease to ticks. And white-footed mouse populations greatly expand, becoming the main food source for ticks, in areas where biodiversity is in decline.

The information in the passage most strongly supports which of the following?

Question type: Inference

Task at hand: What must be a 100% true given the information presented in the argument.

A. In areas where many humans are infected with Lyme disease, the proportion of ticks infected with Lyme disease is especially high. We can’t definitely infer this. If many humans in a particular area are infected with Lyme disease, we can infer that infected ticks are present. But we cannot necessarily infer that the proportion of ticks are higher or lower than normal.

B. Very few animals that live in areas where there are no white-footed mice are infected with Lyme disease. This argument only tells us of one case of animals transmitting Lyme disease to ticks. It doesn’t mean it’s the only case. The argument says that with most species of host animal, transmission of Lyme disease to ticks is extremely rare, which clearly means that in at least 40% of the cases, it is possible.

C. Humans are less at risk of contracting Lyme disease in areas where biodiversity is high. When biodiversity is high, the white-footed mouse populations increases. Because of this, humans are less at risk of contracting Lyme disease.

D. Ticks feed on white-footed mice only when other host species are not available to them. We can’t infer anything about the choices available to ticks.

E. The greater the biodiversity of an area, the more likely any given host animal in that area is to pass Lyme disease to ticks. As per the premise, it is the opposite. When the biodiversity is high, the risk is low.

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Re: Humans get Lyme disease from infected ticks. Ticks get infected by [#permalink]
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Humans get Lyme disease from infected ticks. Ticks get infected by feeding on animals with Lyme disease, but the ease of transmission from host animal to tick varies. With most species of host animal, transmission of Lyme disease to ticks is extremely rare, but white-footed mice are an exception, readily passing Lyme disease to ticks. And white-footed mouse populations greatly expand, becoming the main food source for ticks, in areas where biodiversity is in decline.
The information in the passage most strongly supports which of the following?
(A) In areas where many humans are infected with Lyme disease, the proportion of ticks infected with Lyme disease is especially high.
(B) Very few animals that live in areas where there are no white-footed mice are infected with Lyme disease.
(C) Humans are less at risk of contracting Lyme disease in areas where biodiversity is high.
(D) Ticks feed on white-footed mice only when other host species are not available to them.
(E) The greater the biodiversity of an area, the more likely any given host animal in that area is to pass Lyme disease to ticks.


Stem: the passage most strongly supports

(A) Assumption which is not strongly supported. Doesn't really matter whether the proportion of infected ticks is low or high.
(B) Talks about the amount of infected animals in a given area. The passage talks about infected humans and transmission of the disease.
(C) Supported by the text
(D) Feeding patterns of ticks. Not strongly emphasized on by the passage.
(E) Higher biodiversity = easier transmission of disease to ticks. This isn't supported at all, in fact, the opposite is presented in the passage.
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Re: Humans get Lyme disease from infected ticks. Ticks get infected by [#permalink]
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Answered correctly. :) :) :) :) :)

(A) In areas where many humans are infected with Lyme disease, the proportion of ticks infected with Lyme disease is especially high.
(B) Very few animals that live in areas where there are no white-footed mice are infected with Lyme disease.
(C) Humans are less at risk of contracting Lyme disease in areas where biodiversity is high.- Supports the premise in the text. In the text, it says that especially white-footed mice transmit the disease promptly to the ticks. And white-footed mice populations increase causes decline in biodiversity. If biodiversity is high, white-footed mice would not increase in population. This would reduce the potential risk of infection.

(D) Ticks feed on white-footed mice only when other host species are not available to them.
(E) The greater the biodiversity of an area, the more likely any given host animal in that area is to pass Lyme disease to ticks.
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Re: Humans get Lyme disease from infected ticks. Ticks get infected by [#permalink]
Hi Experts GMATNinja VeritasPrepKarishma

Can you please help to understand last line of the argument. Although I got to OA with a pinch of guess, I want to validate my understanding.

Argument:
(I)T ___ (LD) ____> Humans
T____(LD)____> feeding on animals

How easily the LD gets transmitted varies on animals on which ticks feed.
Typically the transmission is easier if host animal is WF mice.

Now I got stuck in last sentence seeing the word- bio-diversity.

Is my understanding correct:
bio-diversity means large variations of species living in a particular area. As per argument, if the bio-diversity is less then WF mice will grow more and also since the main source of tick is WF mice it is more likely that more humans will be affected. Exactly this is what I can infer from option (C)
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adkikani wrote:
Hi Experts GMATNinja VeritasPrepKarishma

Can you please help to understand last line of the argument. Although I got to OA with a pinch of guess, I want to validate my understanding.

Argument:
(I)T ___ (LD) ____> Humans
T____(LD)____> feeding on animals

How easily the LD gets transmitted varies on animals on which ticks feed.
Typically the transmission is easier if host animal is WF mice.

Now I got stuck in last sentence seeing the word- bio-diversity.

Is my understanding correct:
bio-diversity means large variations of species living in a particular area. As per argument, if the bio-diversity is less then WF mice will grow more and also since the main source of tick is WF mice it is more likely that more humans will be affected. Exactly this is what I can infer from option (C)


Yes, you are right. Note that the main source of infected ticks is WF mice. With more infected ticks, the probability of humans getting lyme disease increases. Hence (C) works.

Premises:
Humans get LD from infected ticks.
Ticks get LD from infected animals, mainly from mice.
Mice population increases when bio-diversity is low.

We are looking for an inference.

(A) In areas where many humans are infected with Lyme disease, the proportion of ticks infected with Lyme disease is especially high.
What factors decide how likely are humans to get LD, we don't know. Of course, if there are more infected ticks, humans will be more likely to get LD. But in areas where many humans are infected, there could be other causes too such as warm and humid climate or culture of hunting in forests etc.

(B) Very few animals that live in areas where there are no white-footed mice are infected with Lyme disease.
We don't know how many animals have LD. We just know that mice pass it on to ticks easily.

(C) Humans are less at risk of contracting Lyme disease in areas where biodiversity is high.
If biodiversity is high, mice population will not be very high and hence probability of infected ticks would be lower. This would mean that probability of humans getting infected will be lower.
Correct.

(D) Ticks feed on white-looted mice only when other host species are not available to them.
This is not true. We don't know about the feeding habits of ticks. We just know that it is easy to pass LD from mice to ticks.

(E) The greater the biodiversity of an area, the more likely any given host animal in that area is to pass Lyme disease to ticks.
No. This is not true. The greater the bio-diversity, lower will be the chances of any given host animal to pass LD to ticks.

Answer (C)
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Re: Humans get Lyme disease from infected ticks. Ticks get infected by [#permalink]
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Humans get Lyme disease from infected ticks. Ticks get infected by feeding on animals with Lyme disease, but the ease of transmission from host animal to tick varies. With most species of host animal, transmission of Lyme disease to ticks is extremely rare, but white-footed mice are an exception, readily passing Lyme disease to ticks. And white-footed mouse populations greatly expand, becoming the main food source for ticks, in areas where biodiversity is in decline.

The information in the passage most strongly supports which of the following?

(A) In areas where many humans are infected with Lyme disease, the proportion of ticks infected with Lyme disease is especially high.
(B) Very few animals that live in areas where there are no white-footed mice are infected with Lyme disease.
(C) Humans are less at risk of contracting Lyme disease in areas where biodiversity is high.
(D) Ticks feed on white-footed mice only when other host species are not available to them.
(E) The greater the biodiversity of an area, the more likely any given host animal in that area is to pass Lyme disease to ticks.


Type: Inference (the information in the passage supports the answer)
Boil It Down: Mouse to tick easy, thrives when mouse populations expand
Goal: Find the option that HAS TO BE TRUE.
Analysis: This is a classic Inference question, so we need to take the facts given in the prompt and find the option that has to be true.

We can’t infer that in areas where many humans are infected with Lyme disease that the proportion of ticks infected with the disease is especially high. If there happened to be significantly more ticks in areas where humans are infected with Lyme disease, then perhaps a small percentage ticks actually carry the disease. There’s no way to conclude whether the proportion of ticks infected with the disease is higher than normal, normal, or below normal. It could actually be any of the three, from the basis of the information in the passage.

Read what this option is saying carefully. Just because there are no white-footed mice in a given area, can we conclude that very few animals that live in that area are infected with Lyme disease? This prompt just tells us that the transmission of Lyme disease to ticks by way of the white-footed mouse is essentially AN exception, but that doesn’t mean that it’s the only exception. There could be other exceptions. We have another clue that the transmission of Lyme disease to tick is not the ONLY way to transmit the disease to ticks. The prompt says: with MOST host species the transmission process is extremely rare. What does the word “most” mean? Over 50%. That literal interpretation could open up a vast array of ways for animals to get infected other than by means of the white-footed mouse. All in, there is no way for B to be inferred. There is no way to know for sure that Very few animals that live in areas where there are no white-footed mice are infected with Lyme disease.

Yes. Humans are less at risk of contracting Lyme disease in areas where biodiversity is high [than in areas where biodiversity is low]. Yes this has to be 100% true. Another way to look at this is we know that the risk of contracting Lyme disease is higher in areas where biodiversity is low, so then going back down the scale, the risk would be lower in areas where biodiversity is high.

We have absolutely no idea about the feeding preferences of ticks. Maybe ticks like plenty of other host species. Gone.

A 180 option. Generally, the greater the biodiversity, the lower the risk.



B is incorrect not for the reason you have given, but because the passage doesn't talk about how other animals get Lyme Disease or even how white mice get Lyme Disease. Rather, the passage talks about the ease with which infected host animals pass on Lyme Disease to ticks. The presence of white mice does not affect the infection of other animals. Rather, it affects the infection of humans.
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Re: Humans get Lyme disease from infected ticks. Ticks get infected by [#permalink]
why is this an inference question and not a strengthen question? EMPOWERgmatMax
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MelP wrote:
why is this an inference question and not a strengthen question? EMPOWERgmatMax


Hi MelP,

Happy to help! This type of Inference question is very frequently confused as a Strengthen question---that confusion will almost certainly cost the test-taker the point.

Here's the scoop:

If the OPTION supports the PROMPT, it's a Strengthen question. The right option makes the prompt stronger.

If the PROMPT supports the OPTION, it's an Inference question. The prompt provides information that enables us to confirm one of the options.
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WillGetIt wrote:
Humans get Lyme disease from infected ticks. Ticks get infected by feeding on animals with Lyme disease, but the ease of transmission from host animal to tick varies. With most species of host animal, transmission of Lyme disease to ticks is extremely rare, but white-footed mice are an exception, readily passing Lyme disease to ticks. And white-footed mouse populations greatly expand, becoming the main food source for ticks, in areas where biodiversity is in decline.

The information in the passage most strongly supports which of the following?


(A) In areas where many humans are infected with Lyme disease, the proportion of ticks infected with Lyme disease is especially high.

(B) Very few animals that live in areas where there are no white-footed mice are infected with Lyme disease.

(C) Humans are less at risk of contracting Lyme disease in areas where biodiversity is high.

(D) Ticks feed on white-looted mice only when other host species are not available to them.

(E) The greater the biodiversity of an area, the more likely any given host animal in that area is to pass Lyme disease to ticks.



White-footed mouse populations greatly expand, becoming the main food source for ticks, in areas where biodiversity is in decline.
Decreased biodiversity CAUSES white-footed mice to become main food source for ticks.

White-footed mice are an exception, readily passing Lyme disease to ticks.
white-footed mice CAUSE ticks infected with Lyme disease.

Humans get Lyme disease from infected ticks.
Ticks infected with Lyme disease CAUSE humans to get Lyme disease.


Combining all parts, we get:
Decreased biodiversity CAUSES white-footed mice to become main food source for ticks, which CAUSES ticks to get infected with Lyme disease, which CAUSES humans to get Lyme disease.

Or, we might write: Decreased biodiversity CAUSES humans to get Lyme disease.

What does all of this mean?
Well, if we can PREVENT low biodiversity, then humans will be less likely to get Lyme disease.

This is pretty much the same as answer choice C

Answer: C

Cheers,
Brent
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Re: Humans get Lyme disease from infected ticks. Ticks get infected by [#permalink]
GMATPrepNow wrote:
WillGetIt wrote:
Humans get Lyme disease from infected ticks. Ticks get infected by feeding on animals with Lyme disease, but the ease of transmission from host animal to tick varies. With most species of host animal, transmission of Lyme disease to ticks is extremely rare, but white-footed mice are an exception, readily passing Lyme disease to ticks. And white-footed mouse populations greatly expand, becoming the main food source for ticks, in areas where biodiversity is in decline.

The information in the passage most strongly supports which of the following?


(A) In areas where many humans are infected with Lyme disease, the proportion of ticks infected with Lyme disease is especially high.

(B) Very few animals that live in areas where there are no white-footed mice are infected with Lyme disease.

(C) Humans are less at risk of contracting Lyme disease in areas where biodiversity is high.

(D) Ticks feed on white-looted mice only when other host species are not available to them.

(E) The greater the biodiversity of an area, the more likely any given host animal in that area is to pass Lyme disease to ticks.



White-footed mouse populations greatly expand, becoming the main food source for ticks, in areas where biodiversity is in decline.
Decreased biodiversity CAUSES white-footed mice to become main food source for ticks.

White-footed mice are an exception, readily passing Lyme disease to ticks.
white-footed mice CAUSE ticks infected with Lyme disease.

Humans get Lyme disease from infected ticks.
Ticks infected with Lyme disease CAUSE humans to get Lyme disease.


Combining all parts, we get:
Decreased biodiversity CAUSES white-footed mice to become main food source for ticks, which CAUSES ticks to get infected with Lyme disease, which CAUSES humans to get Lyme disease.

Or, we might write: Decreased biodiversity CAUSES humans to get Lyme disease.

What does all of this mean?
Well, if we can PREVENT low biodiversity, then humans will be less likely to get Lyme disease.

This is pretty much the same as answer choice C

Answer: C

Cheers,
Brent


Isn't the underlying assumption here that all White Footed (WF) mice suffer from Lyme Disease (LD)? I mean we don't know what %age of WF mice have LD in a given area. If we ignore this assumption, we may not be sure of the OA. Kindly clarify GMATPrepNow VeritasKarishma GMATNinja EMPOWERgmatVerbal
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akshaygundeti wrote:
GMATPrepNow wrote:
WillGetIt wrote:
Humans get Lyme disease from infected ticks. Ticks get infected by feeding on animals with Lyme disease, but the ease of transmission from host animal to tick varies. With most species of host animal, transmission of Lyme disease to ticks is extremely rare, but white-footed mice are an exception, readily passing Lyme disease to ticks. And white-footed mouse populations greatly expand, becoming the main food source for ticks, in areas where biodiversity is in decline.

The information in the passage most strongly supports which of the following?


(A) In areas where many humans are infected with Lyme disease, the proportion of ticks infected with Lyme disease is especially high.

(B) Very few animals that live in areas where there are no white-footed mice are infected with Lyme disease.

(C) Humans are less at risk of contracting Lyme disease in areas where biodiversity is high.

(D) Ticks feed on white-looted mice only when other host species are not available to them.

(E) The greater the biodiversity of an area, the more likely any given host animal in that area is to pass Lyme disease to ticks.



White-footed mouse populations greatly expand, becoming the main food source for ticks, in areas where biodiversity is in decline.
Decreased biodiversity CAUSES white-footed mice to become main food source for ticks.

White-footed mice are an exception, readily passing Lyme disease to ticks.
white-footed mice CAUSE ticks infected with Lyme disease.

Humans get Lyme disease from infected ticks.
Ticks infected with Lyme disease CAUSE humans to get Lyme disease.


Combining all parts, we get:
Decreased biodiversity CAUSES white-footed mice to become main food source for ticks, which CAUSES ticks to get infected with Lyme disease, which CAUSES humans to get Lyme disease.

Or, we might write: Decreased biodiversity CAUSES humans to get Lyme disease.

What does all of this mean?
Well, if we can PREVENT low biodiversity, then humans will be less likely to get Lyme disease.

This is pretty much the same as answer choice C

Answer: C

Cheers,
Brent


Isn't the underlying assumption here that all White Footed (WF) mice suffer from Lyme Disease (LD)? I mean we don't know what %age of WF mice have LD in a given area. If we ignore this assumption, we may not be sure of the OA. Kindly clarify GMATPrepNow VeritasKarishma GMATNinja EMPOWERgmatVerbal


Note the last line of the argument:
And white-footed mouse populations greatly expand, becoming the main food source for ticks, in areas where biodiversity is in decline.

The white footed mice become the main food source for ticks when their population expands. So most ticks will feed on white footed mice. Most other animals do not pass on LD to ticks. So when there are many other food sources, not many ticks will be infected with LD. But when white footed mice are the main food source, many more ticks will be infected. We don't need to know the exact percentages. We just need to know when the risk is higher and when it is lower. When white footed mice are the main food source, the risk increases.
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Re: Humans get Lyme disease from infected ticks. Ticks get infected by [#permalink]
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The correct answer - option C.

Analysis

1. Humans get Lyme Disease (LD) from infected ticks
2. Ticks get infected by feeding on animals with LD
3. Rate of transfer of LD to ticks is low for most animals
4. Exception to the above is - white footed mice (readily pass LD to ticks)
5. Where Biodiversity is in decline, white footed mouse populations expand.

Question: The information give supports which of the following. This is an inference question. Not a strengthen question - A strengthen question would be more on the lines of "which of the following statements support <some claim made in the argument>?".

Here, we need to find what can logically be inferred based on the given information (i.e. supported by the given information).

Combining Statements 1,2,4 and 5, we can infer that -

in areas of low biodiversity,
-> White mouse population will be less (as compared to places of high biodiversity)
-> As a result, number of infected ticks is likely to be higher
-> Number of humans getting LP from infected ticks is likely to be higher

Let us look at the options.

(A) In areas where many humans are infected with Lyme disease, the proportion of ticks infected with Lyme disease is especially high.
Not necessarily true. It may be so that the proportion of ticks with LD is not particularly high, but the Number of humans infected/tick is actually high (i.e. small proportion of infectious ticks passing LD to multiple humans, rather than a large number of infectious ticks).

(B) Very few animals that live in areas where there are no white-footed mice are infected with Lyme disease.
Out of scope. we cannot infer that very few other animals are infected with LD in areas where no WF mice exist. We only know that transmission to ticks, from other host animals is rare - this does not imply that other animals do not exist which do not have LD

(C) Humans are less at risk of contracting Lyme disease in areas where biodiversity is high.
Correct. If Biodiversity is high, the WF mouse population will be less, which means lesser likelihood of infected ticks, and therefore lesser likelihood/risk of humans getting LD. This is as per our pre-thinking.

(D) Ticks feed on white-looted mice only when other host species are not available to them.
No information in the passage to make such an inference. Ticks may feed on WF mice even if other species are available.

(E) The greater the biodiversity of an area, the more likely any given host animal in that area is to pass Lyme disease to ticks.
We only know that greater the biodiversity, lesser is the population of WF mice. Which means the probability of ticks getting infected with LD will reduce (as the WF mice numbers reduce). This option goes in the opposite direction.

Hope this helps.
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Re: Humans get Lyme disease from infected ticks. Ticks get infected by [#permalink]
"And white-footed mouse populations greatly expand, becoming the main food source for ticks, in areas where biodiversity is in decline."

Using this statement, wouldn't statement D become more likely to be true? Since this is a support question.

For "C" to be true, we have to assume that fewer infected ticks would mean fewer infected people. But one tick could infect many, right? It can be a possibility.
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Radyah

There's no real support for D. All we know about the choice of mice as a food source is that ticks use them a lot when diversity is low. Perhaps there's not much other choice. But that doesn't mean that they don't use them at all when diversity is high, or that diversity needs to reach ZERO for them to feed on mice. As a parallel, think about a cheap food option like fast food or ramen cups. That might become your main food source if money is tight, but that doesn't mean you only eat those things when you have no other choice. You might be rolling in cash and still enjoy the occasional cheap snack. So we really have no idea how reluctant ticks are to feed on mice. D is not supported.

C, on the other hand, is just about RELATIVE risk. Sure, in theory one tick might infect more than one person (although if you've ever had a tick on you, I bet you killed it!), but it's still safe to say that if a greater number of ticks are infected, then humans are more likely to encounter an infected tick. With fewer infected ticks, the risk is lower than it would otherwise be, and that's all we need.
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Re: Humans get Lyme disease from infected ticks. Ticks get infected by [#permalink]
I see no one addressing one fact in this passage. A high biodiversity might still be in decline. Now, originally, I thought that this meant that C might not be true, but on further contemplation I thought of the following.
If the passage had said that "White mouse populations are high(instead of expand) in places where biodiversity is in decline then we surely would not have been able to arrive at C as the correct answer. (right?) But the passage uses "expand" instead of "high". And so in places with high biodiversity, even though the biodiversity may be declining and the white population may be consequently expanding, this white mouse population would still be relatively lower than places with low biodiversity where the decline has presumably already happened earlier and so white mouse populations are higher. So in such high biodiversity places, even though the risk of humans contracting LD may be increasing, this risk is still lower than other areas.

But then, I thought of a second issue. Sure the passage says, that white mouse populations expand when biodiversity is declining. But surely an increase/decrease in white mouse populations is NOT dependent soley on decline/ increase in biodiversity. There could be a ton of other factors (predators, prey etc etc...) contributing to this. So since this is a "MUST BE TRUE" question (in Powerscore CR Bible lingo) can we be sure of option C. Does option C always happen when the passage is true.

The only counter-argument I can think of this is that Ceteris Paribus, a higher bio-diversity might translate to a lower risk but I'm not entirely convinced.

Would really appreciate thoughts from experts! (GMATNinja, KarishmaB, MartyMurray, ChiranjeevSingh, AjiteshArun, @HaileyCusimano) Thanks!!
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Hi PReciSioN,

I like this question, and it's part of my CR Respawn course (starts at 24:55).


PReciSioN wrote:
So since this is a "MUST BE TRUE" question (in Powerscore CR Bible lingo) can we be sure of option C.

This isn't one of those must be true questions ("The information in the passage most strongly supports which of the following?"), so we don't have to be as strict in terms of what the correct option can say/do.
PReciSioN wrote:
I see no one addressing one fact in this passage. A high biodiversity might still be in decline.

Good point. We definitely address this at some point in the discussion in the session I linked to above. The important thing to keep in mind is that (a) "biodiversity is in decline" is less likely in areas where biodiversity is high and (b) such areas would be better placed to handle a decline in biodiversity than other areas.

Originally posted by AjiteshArun on 01 Feb 2024, 21:47.
Last edited by AjiteshArun on 05 Feb 2024, 04:51, edited 1 time in total.
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AjiteshArun wrote:
Hi PReciSioN,

I like this question, and it's part of my CR Respawn course (starts at 24:55).



PReciSioN wrote:
So since this is a "MUST BE TRUE" question (in Powerscore CR Bible lingo) can we be sure of option C.

This isn't one of those must be true questions ("The information in the passage most strongly supports which of the following?"), so we don't have to be as strict in terms of what the correct option can say/do.
PReciSioN wrote:
I see no one addressing one fact in this passage. A high biodiversity might still be in decline.

Good point. We definitely address this at some point in the discussion in the session I linked to above. The important thing to keep in mind is that (a) "biodiversity is in decline" is less likely in areas where biodiversity is high and (b) such areas would be better placed to handle a decline in biodiversity than other areas.


Hi Ajitesh,

Thanks for your response! I went over your course video too and found it helpful! So I infer from the video (pun intended haha), that in the "MUST BE TRUE" category of questions, only the questions which explicitly mention - "MUST BE TRUE" are the water-tight questions and questions like "most strongly support" leave some wiggle room.
Do questions like "which of the following can be properly concluded/ inferred" etc also leave some wiggle room?
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