In parts of the Caribbean, the manatee, an endangered marine mammal, has long been hunted for
its meat. Having noted the manatee hunters’ expert knowledge of manatees’ habits, local
conservationists are encouraging the hunters to stop hunting and instead to take tourists on boat
rides to see manatees. Tourist interest is high, so the plan has promise of achieving the twin goals of
giving the former hunters a good income and helping ensure the manatees’ survival.
Which of the following, if true, raises the most serious doubt about the plan’s chance of success?
By taking the tourists on excursions into manatee habitats instead of hunting the manatees, hunters can continue to make good income but not harm the manatees.A. Many tourists who visit these parts of the Caribbean are uninterested in manatees and would
not be willing to pay what the former manatee hunters would have to charge for boat rides
to see manatees.
We're told that tourist interest is high.B. Recovery of the species would enable some hunting to continue without putting the
manatees’ survival in jeopardy again.
This doesn't address whether tours do more or less harm compared to hunting.C. In areas where manatees have traditionally been hunted for food, local people could easily
replace the manatee meat in their diets with other foods obtained from the sea.
This doesn't address the relative damage of tours to hunting.D. There would not be enough former manatee hunters to act as guides for all the tourists who
want to see manatees.
This doesn't affect the argument that tours do less damage than hunting.E. To maintain their current income, manatee hunters who switched to guiding tourists would
have to use far larger boats and make many more trips into the manatees’ fragile habitat
than they currently do.
If the tours damage the habitat the hunters are doing equal or greater damage to manatees.