根据下列内容,回答196-200题。 If the population of the earth goes on increasing at its present rate, there will eventually notbe enough resources left to sustain life on the planet. By the middle of the 21st century, if presenttrends continue, we will have used up all the oil that drives our cars, for example. Even if scien-tists develop new ways of feeding the human race, the crowded conditions on earth will make itnecessary for us to look for open space somewhere else. But none of the other planets in our solarsystem are capable of supporting life at present. One possible solution to the problem, however, has recently been suggested by an American scientist, Professor Carl Sagan. Sagan believes that before the earth's resources are completely exhausted it will be possible tochange the atmosphere of Venus and so create a new world almost as large as earth itself. The dif-ficulty is that Venus is much hotter than the earth and there is only a tiny amount of water there. Sagan proposes that algae organisms, which can live in extremely hot or cold atmospheres andat the same time produce oxygen, should be bred in conditions similar to those on Venus. As soonas this has been done, the algae will be placed in small rockets. Spaceships will then fly to Venusand fire the rockets into the atmosphere. In a fairly short time, the algae will break down the car-bon dioxide into oxygen and carbon. When the algae have done their work, the atmosphere will become cooler, but before mancan set foot on Venus it will be necessary for the oxygen to produce rain. The surface of the planetwill still be too hot for men to land on it but the rain will eventually fall and in a few years some-thing like earth will be reproduced on Venus. In the long run, the most difficult problem caused by population growth on earth willprobably be the lack of __________.
A.food B.oil C.space D.resources