Reading ComprehensionDifficulty: Hard

PT156 S1 P1 Q7 Explanation

Heirloom Crops

A free, expert breakdown of this official LSAT Reading Comprehension question.

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Passage

Because most agricultural practices in North America produce row after row of only a few, genetically identical, varieties of crops, the continent's food system rests precariously on a rapidly eroding genetic base, increasingly susceptible to pests and disease. As a possible solution, agricultural researchers, development experts, and policy makers are searching for for economic reasons, they are not always suited to preserving a diverse pool of crop genetics.

A recent study describes how generations of indigenous farmers relied on their understanding of practical genetics to develop hundreds of varieties of each indigenous plant cultivated. For example, long aware of the technique referred to now as hybridization, indigenous farmers frequently used the pollen from one variety of corn to fertilize another are less dependent on intensive irrigation systems because they have been selectively bred for particular environments.

Many of these heirloom varieties are preserved in household seed stocks by indigenous farmers who obtain seeds through long-standing family, community, and regional exchange networks; similarly, knowledge of the required development and cultivation methods has been maintained through the centuries by intergenerational exchanges within an oral tradition. Over the past century, however, the conservation of diverse crop genetics, thus bolstering the long-term sustainability of the continent's agricultural systems.

What this question is testing

Author Opinion

Your task

Pin down exactly what the question asks about the passage — a detail, the author's view, the structure, or the main point — before looking at the choices.

Common trap

Answers that restate a true detail from the passage but don't answer the specific question being asked.

Winning move

Anticipate the answer in your own words from the passage, then find the choice that matches that prediction.

Reading along? Open the full official question in LawHub — we show a fragment here and keep the reasoning in our own words.

The question
7.

The author would be most likely to agree with which one of the following statements about the crop geneticists mentioned in the second-to-last sentence

Answer choices

  1. Correct57% picked this

    They have been too willing to further intense efforts to maximize the

    Why this is right

    The tone of this is somewhat scolding ("too willing"), which feels like a bit of a stretch from the passage's more descriptive tone. But if we think about that pair of ideas ... they've only recently recognized X as valuable + previously they've thought about and researched only Y, which is a method that seeks to maximize land's output. It's reasonable, as a mind-reader (which is tolerable on this type of question), that this author would think these crop geneticists have been too focused on one thing and have overlooked something valuable. We like that it pulls from our Support Window: - they've only recently recognized that heirloom knowledge is valuable. - prior to this, their thinking and research was almost exclusively methods that weren't from North America. - these non-North American methods they were considering are designed to maximize the land's output, but aren't as well designed for preserving genetic diversity among crops.

    Skill tested: Author Opinion · how this choice captures the passage's function is the move to repeat next time.

  2. Not in Support Window: small farmers9% picked this

    They are focused on maximizing crop production at the expense of

    The first half of this works, since we know these geneticists have been solely using methods that are fixated on maximizing production. But we were never told they were in an antagonistic relationship with small farmers. Presumably, if you're a small farmer, these crop geneticists would try to tell you how to maximize your land's output.

  3. Too Strong: no interest8% picked this

    They have not demonstrated any interest in diversifying the crop

    We have support for the idea that because of what they've been focusing on, they have done things at the expense of genetic diversity: "Given [these methods], they are not always suited to preserving a diverse pool of crop genetics". But the fact that diversity has sometimes been sacrificed in the name of better productivity doesn't mean we can say that they have zero interest in diversifying the genetic pool. Also, this is more or less contradicted by the first few sentences of the passage. The growing concern about a lack of crop diversity is what is motivating these crop geneticists to start caring about heirloom.s

  4. Opposite17% picked this

    They are interested in heirloom crop varieties because they help maximize

    The passage is suggesting that because they've been fixated on maximizing crop yields, they have ignored heirloom crop varieties until now. So the passage is offering the opposite association, even if it's possible that heirloom varieties sometimes would maximize yield. The first few sentences of the passage don't draw an explicit causal association , but they suggest that the growing concern about a lack of crop diversity is what is motivating these crop geneticists to start caring about heirlooms.

  5. Too Strong: continue to ignore8% picked this

    They continue to ignore heirloom crop varieties in favor of

    The passage is telling us that only recently have they gotten into heirlooms and started trying to learn more about it. But they have gotten into heirlooms and started trying to learn more about them. So they don't seem to be ignoring heirlooms anymore.

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