Writing & Language
In recent years, several urban US airports have converted some of the unused land past their runways to provide habitats for honeybees. While airports may seem unlikely locations for beekeeping, many of them, in fact, have the potential to offer ideal conditions for an apiary (a group of beehives). The Lambert-St. Louis International Airport, for instance, hosts an apiary on a 400-square-foot area of land just north of one of its runways. This area is rich in Dutch clover, a preferred food source for honeybees. The honeybees may thrive there in part because they aren't exposed to the agricultural pesticides suspected of contributing to Colony Collapse Disorder. Though unorthodox, airport-based honeybee habitats can help to ensure that local regions have healthy populations of honeybees.
The writer is considering deleting the underlined sentence. Should the sentence be kept or deleted?
A.Kept, because it provides support for the paragraph's claim about airports being able to offer suitable habitats for honeybees.
B.Kept, because it acknowledges a counterargument to the paragraph's claim about the benefits of apiaries.
C.Deleted, because it blurs the paragraph's focus on airport apiaries by introducing an irrelevant detail about Colony Collapse Disorder.
D.Deleted, because it disrupts the logical sequence of steps outlined in the paragraph's explanation of how to set up an airport apiary.