- Wed Mar 02, 2022 5:19 pm
#94017
Hi Silver,
I know it looks like it at first glance, but answer choice (C) is actual not repetitive.
The stimulus tells us that the water around Shooter's Island is very still, and that there are a lot of juvenile waterbirds there. The author then uses those facts to conclude that it must be the case that this area is a nursery for the juveniles. The language would seem to indicate that the waterbirds seek out the waters around Shooter's Island specifically for the purpose of raising their young. But that still leaves a question--why there? Why would the waterbirds choose that particular area?
Answer choice (C) provides us with a possible answer to that question. If waterbirds always try to find still waters when they are looking for a place to use as a nursery, and we already know that the water around Shooter's Island is still water, the conclusion makes a lot more sense.
Now remember, this is a strengthen question, not a justify the conclusion. The answer choice doesn't have to prove the conclusion 100%, it just has to make it more likely to be true. So it's not a problem that answer choice (C) doesn't explain why they chose Shooter's Island and not another island with still water. Maybe this island was in a prime location? Maybe it was just random? Maybe it had the calmest water of anywhere else? It doesn't matter! We don't have to explain why they didn't choose any of the other islands, just provide a reason why it makes sense that they chose this one. Answer choice (C) does that by saying that Shooter's Island had certain characteristics that waterbirds seek out when looking for a nursery for their young.
Now answer choice (D) might explain why Shooter's Island is better than the other islands, but that's not an issue here! The conclusion doesn't say that Shooter's Island is the "best" place to put a nursery, just that the waterbirds chose it for that purpose.
Remember, without answer choice (C), based purely on the premises, we have no reason to believe that still waters are best for nurseries. That logically makes sense, but I know nothing about waterbirds and what they are looking for when it comes to raising their young! Answer choice (D) alone, without (C), doesn't necessarily help the argument. Ok, the water on the other islands is rougher, so what? Your reasoning would make total sense IF there was a premise that said what (C) does (that still water is best for nurseries), but there isn't. Without that fact we have no way of knowing whether answer choice (D) is helpful, hurtful, or has no effect on the argument.
I hope that helps!
Beth