- Tue Feb 19, 2019 4:41 pm
#62771
The answer to a Resolve the Paradox question must address BOTH sides of the paradox, ameliakate. In the case of answer C, what do the habits of the wolves tell us about the declining population of moose in the first region? One might even think that the increase in deer would give the wolves there more opportunity to eat deer rather than moose, and the moose population might be expected to grow rather than decrease!
Aside from answer C's failure to address what's happening in the first region, the issue in the stimulus that must be addressed in the answer is that in one place, more deer has caused fewer moose, and in the other place more deer has NOT caused fewer moose. We know why the moose are declining in the first region - it's because of the parasites carried by the deer. What we need is an answer that tells us why that same effect is not present in the second region. Why aren't the moose there affected by the deer-borne parasite? That's the "paradox", if you can call it that, that needs to be addressed. Wolves in that region also eating rabbits and squirrels and elk doesn't explain why the moose aren't declining from the same parasite.
Be sure to address both sides of the paradox, and explain why both things can be simultaneously true and make sense. That's the kind of active resolution we need!
Adam M. Tyson
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