UPSC Prelims 2012·CSAT·Reading Comprehension·Passage Comprehension

Read the following passages and answer the items that follow passage. Your answer to these items should be based on the passage only. Chemical pesticides lose their role in sustainable agriculture if the pests evolve resistance. The evolution of pesticide resistance is simply natural selection in action. It is almost certain to occur when vast numbers of a genetically variable population are killed. One or a few individuals may be unusually resistant (perhaps because they possess an enzyme that can detoxify the pesticide). If the pesticide is applied repeatedly, each successive generation of the pest will contain a larger proportion of resistant individuals. Pests typically have a high intrinsic rate of rreproduction, and so few individual in one generation may give rise to hundreds or thousands in the next, and resistance spreads very rapidly in a population. This problem was often ignored in the past, even though the first case of DDT (dichlorodiphenyltrichloroethane) resistance was reported early as 1946. There is exponential increase in the numbers of vertebrates that have evolved resistance and in the number of pesticides against which resistance has evolved. Resistance has been recorded in every family of arthropod pests (including dipterans such as mosquitoes and house flies, as well as beetles, moths, wasps, fleas, Lice and mites) as well as well as in weeds and plant pathogens, Take the Alabama leaf- worm, a moth pest of cotton, as an example. It has developed resistance in one or more regions of the world to aldrin, DDT, dieldrin, endrin, lindane and toxaphene. If chemical pesticides brought nothing but, problem- if their use was intrinsically and acutely unsustainable then they would already have fallen out of widespread use. This has not happened. Instead, their rate of production has increased rapidly. The ratio of cost of benefit for the individual agricultural producer has remained in favour of pesticide use. In the USA insecticides have been estimated to benefit the agricultural products to the tune of around 5 forever l spent. Moreover, in many poorer countries, the prospect of imminent mass starvation, or of an epidemic diseases, are so frightening that the social and health cost of using pesticides have to be ignored. In general the use of pesticides is justified by objective measures such as lives saved, economic efficiency of food production and total food produced. In these very fundamental senses, their use may be described as sustainable. In practice, sustainability depends on continually developing new pesticides that keep at least one step ahead of the pests pesticides that are less persistent, biodegradable and more accurately targeted at the pests. What does the passage imply? 1. Alternative options to chemical pesticides should be promoted. 2. Too much use of chemicals is not good for the ecosystem. 3. There is no scope for the improvement-of pesticides and making their use sustainable

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  1. AOnly 1
  2. BOnly 2
  3. CBoth 2 and 3
  4. DBoth 1 and 2Correct

Explanation

Statement 1: "Alternative options to chemical pesticides should be promoted." The passage begins by stating, "Chemical pesticides lose their role in sustainable agriculture if the pests evolve resistance." It then elaborates on how resistance *does* evolve, making current pesticide use unsustainable. If a method loses its role in sustainable agriculture, it logically implies that other, more sustainable options (which could include alternatives) should be considered or promoted to achieve sustainability. While the passage also discusses improving existing pesticides, the initial problem statement about unsustainability opens the door for considering alternatives. So, this statement is implied. Statement 2: "Too much use of chemicals is not good for the ecosystem." The passage explicitly links the evolution of resistance to the repeated and widespread application of pesticides: "It is almost certain to occur when vast numbers of a genetically variable population are killed. If the pesticide is applied repeatedly, each successive generation of the pest will contain a larger proportion of resistant individuals." This demonstrates that extensive ("too much") use leads to a negative outcome (resistance, making agriculture unsustainable). The passage also mentions "social and health cost of using pesticides" that are ignored in poorer countries, further suggesting negative impacts beyond just pest resistance. Thus, this statement is strongly implied. Statement 3: "There is no scope for the improvement-of pesticides and making their use sustainable." This statement is directly contradicted by the last sentence of the passage: "In practice, sustainability depends on continually developing new pesticides that keep at least one step ahead of the pests pesticides that are less persistent, biodegradable and more accurately targeted at the pests." This clearly indicates that there *is* scope for improvement and making pesticide use sustainable. Therefore, statement 3 is false. Since statements 1 and 2 are implied, and statement 3 is false, the correct option is D. The final answer is D
Reading Comprehension: Read the following passages and answer the items that follow passage. Your answer to these items should be based on the

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