A developer wants to develop a tract of scrub forest where scrub jays now nest. Since the scrub jay is a protected species, the developer must ensure that developing the tract will not harm the jays. To meet this requirement, the developer has proposed purchasing a tract of nearby scrub forest that would remain undeveloped. Since that tract is already inhabited by scrub jays, clearly it has suitable habitat for the birds that development will displace. This question is a Plan question, and like many Plan questions, does not have a directly stated conclusion. Rather, it has an implied conclusion, which is basically that the plan will work. So, we can say that the implied conclusion is the following:
Purchasing a tract that would remain undeveloped will serve to ensure that developing a tract of scrub forest where scrub jays now nest will not harm the jays.The support for the conclusion is the following:
Since that tract is already inhabited by scrub jays, clearly it has suitable habitat for the birds that development will displace.We see that the developer has reasoned that, since the area that would remain undeveloped has suitable habitat for jays, keeping that area undeveloped will serve to provide habitat for the displaced jays, which will therefore not be harmed by the development of the tract of scub forest where they now nest.
In order for the developer’s plan for meeting the requirement to succeed, which of the following must be true?This question is an Assumption Plan question, and the correct answer will state something that must be true for the plan to work. In other words, it will state an assumption on which the developer's reasoning depends.
A. The proposed development will not destroy all of the suitable scrub jay nesting sites on the land that is to be developed.This choice provides an additional reason to believe the jays will not be harmed by the development. After all, if, in addition to the developer leaving an area with suitable habitat undeveloped, some nesting sites will remain on the land that is to be developed, then there is more reason to believe that the jays will be OK.
At the same time, we aren't looking for a choice that simply gives us more reason to believe the jays will be unharmed. We're looking for a choice that states something on which the success of the plan depends, and success of the plan does not depend on this choice being true.
After all, the idea of the plan is that the displaced jays will have nesting sites to use in the area that will remain undeveloped. So, theoretically, they won't need nesting sites in the developed area because they'll have new ones in the undeveloped area.
So, the plan could work even if what this choice says is not true.
Eliminate.
B. Scrub jays whose nests are destroyed typically become disoriented and unable to forage for food.Rather than state an assumption on which the reasoning depends, this choice weakens the case for believing the plan will succeed.
After all, if this choice is true, then development of the jays' current nesting area could cause them to become disoriented and unable to forage for food. If it does, then the jays could starve, in which case, developing the area would harm the jays even though the developer would leave undeveloped an area with habitat suitable for jays.
Eliminate.
C. The tract that the developer plans to leave undeveloped is not suitable for development.This choice doesn't have to be true for the plan to work.
After all, regardless of whether that tract is suitable for development, the developer plans to purchase it and leave it undeveloped. So, even if it is suitable for development, it will remain undeveloped under the plan and thus, theoretically, provide habitat for the displaced jays.
Eliminate.
D. The tract that the developer plans to leave undeveloped is the only suitable habitat for scrub jays that is near the land that the developer plans to develop.This choice doesn't have to be true for the plan to work.
After all, if this choice is not true, then the tract that would remain undeveloped is not the only suitable habitat for jays near the land to be developed. In that case there are other areas where the displaced jays could nest. The presence of those other areas could only benefit the displaced jays.
Thus, this choice not being true would be an additional reason to believe that the jays would not be harmed by the development of the land where they currently nest. So, the negation of this choice helps, rather than works against, the success of the plan.
Eliminate.
E. The scrub jay population in the tract that the developer plans to leave undeveloped is small enough that there is room for additional jays to nest there.Let's think about what would happen if this choice is not true.
If this choice is not true, then there is no room for additional jays to nest on the tract that the developer plans to leave undeveloped. In that case, leaving it undeveloped will not help the displaced jays because, even though the area has habitat suitable for jays, none of that habitat is available. In that case, the plan won't work because leaving the land undeveloped won't keep the displaced jays from being be harmed by the development.
In short, if this choice is not true, then the fact that there is suitable habitat in the area that would remain undeveloped doesn't mean the plan will succeed.
So, for the plan to work, this choice must be true.
Keep.
Correct answer: E