- Wed May 31, 2017 2:49 pm
#35556
Hi, Karunyavgopal,
Good question, and good job narrowing the answers down to two possibilities. Perhaps the best way to respond to your question would be to focus on the process you should use when faced with this particular task. Note the question asks you to account for the increase in the rate of population decline. When you first read about the population decline in the stimulus, what was your reaction? When I read that the population actually ended up declining after the species were listed as endangered, I was surprised! I would have expected the population to increase, so what could account for the observed population decrease?
That's the question task here. We are looking for an explanation of the population decrease. "How could it be possible that when we listed the animals as endangered, their population declined even faster?"
You can use a similar question to answer most Resolve the Paradox questions: "How is it possible that these two seemingly incongruous events could both happen?"
We might be able to come up with a good prephrase, but even if we don't, just knowing what the two phenomena are is often enough to get you to the right answer.
Consider again answer choices (A) and (D). Note that (A) talks about the process of being listed as endangered taking years, but pay close attention to what the events are. We are curious why the population declined after the species was listed as endangered. Thus, what happened before the species was listed as endangered or while the process was ongoing is not this issue here.
Now consider answer choice (D). What if endangered animals are more attractive to poachers and collectors? Could this information explain why it is that the rate of population decline decreases after the animal is listed as endangered? Yes! This is it. This information explains the unexpected event and answers our question.
I hope this helps!