This question doesn't give the GMAT vibe. It must be from the part of the LSAT universe which is not relevant for GMATers.
Between B, C, and D
B. There is no mention of the food value of carnivores or herbivores in the stimulus - This is clearly out ofscope
C. This is utterly nonsense from the GMAT exam prep perspective - because external knowledge about chickens and Tuna is required - Chickens are omnivores, but Tunas arecarnivores , so if humans shift their diet from C (Omnivores) to T (Carnivores) they will save plant resources (Which the chickens consume) - Meh, the logic is correct but at whatcost.
D. There is no mention of the ratio of meat to the plants in a herbivore - even if there is a supposed correlation between the two, it need not be the same magnitude for every animal on the planet. Ex. Elephants vs goats - both are herbivores with great differences in their diets. Also, newborn herbivore babies will have high meat to plant ratio because they would mostly be feeding
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Between B, C, and D
B. There is no mention of the food value of carnivores or herbivores in the stimulus - This is clearly out ofscope
C. This is utterly nonsense from the GMAT exam prep perspective - because external knowledge about chickens and Tuna is required - Chickens are omnivores, but Tunas arecarnivores , so if humans shift their diet from C (Omnivores) to T (Carnivores) they will save plant resources (Which the chickens consume) - Meh, the logic is correct but at whatcost.
D. There is no mention of the ratio of meat to the plants in a herbivore - even if there is a supposed correlation between the two, it need not be the same magnitude for every animal on the planet. Ex. Elephants vs goats - both are herbivores with great differences in their diets. Also, newborn herbivore babies will have high meat to plant ratio because they would mostly be feeding
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Statistics : Posted by 8Harshitsharma • on 14 Jul 2022, 01:06 • Replies 5 • Views 3015



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