Natural Resources
Natural Resources
Natural Resources
Answers:
1. b) coal
2. a) Exhaustible energy sources in limited quantity
3. a) water
4. c) Biomass energy
5. c) trees
6. b) hydropower
7. c) biological species
8. b) coal, natural gas and oil
9. c) tidal energy
10. d) fresh water
(d) excess formation of CO2 by combustion and animal respiration. (1988, 89)
Answer and Explanation:
1. (a): Acid rain refers to the precipitation with a pH of less than 5. It is a mixture of H2SO4 and
HNO3, the ratio of the two acids vary depending on the relative quantities of sulphur oxides
and nitrogen oxides present in the atmosphere. These oxides are mainly produced by
combustion of fossil fuels, smelters, industries, power plants, automobile exhausts etc.
(a) hydrocarbon
2. (b): The common gaseous pollutants are oxides of carbon (CO and CO2), oxides of nitrogen
(NO and NO2) oxides of sulphur (SO2 and SO3), all these together contribute 90% of the global
air pollution. Out of all these CO2 is not a pollutant normally, the green plants, by
photosynthesis balance the CO2 and O2 ratios in the air to a great extent, whereas others like
carbon monoxide, NO2 etc are poisonous gases.
(a) plankton
(b) nekton
(d) benthos.
3. (a): Planktons are passively floating in upper water, nektons are actively swimming while
benthos lead sedentary life upon the sea bottom. Planktons are producers and are present in
large number.
4. (b): Competition is rivalry for obtaining the same resource. Competition of light, nutrients
and space is most severe between closely related organisms growing in the same area/niche,
due to overproduction of population in the same area/niche.
(a) mutualism/symbiosis
(b) commensalism
(c) amensalism
5. (a): Mutualism is an association between individuals of two species, both of which are
benefitted but cannot live separately under natural conditions e.g. instances of mutualism exist
between animals and plants and also in between plants e.g. lichens. Ammensalism is an
interaction in which one species causes harm to another spices with its toxic secretion often
without gaining any benefit from the interaction. Commensalism is the relationship between
individuals of two species of which one is benefitted and the other is almost unaffected i.e.;
neither benefitted nor harmed.
6. (c): An ecosystem may be defined as a structural and functional unit of the biosphere
comprising living organisms and their non-living environment that interact by means of food
chains and chemical cycles resulting in energy flow, biotic diversity and material cycling to form
a stable, self supporting system.
The organisms in an ecosystem are classified into 3 main categories-producers, consumers and
decomposers. The consumers utilize materials and energy stored by the producers.
Decomposers obtain their food molecules from the organic materials of dead producers and
consumers. In a true ecosystem, producers are more than consumers (herbivores and
carnivores).
(b) carbon
(c) nitrogen
(d) potassium.
7. (a): The behaviour of energy in ecosystem can be termed energy flow due to unidirectional
flow of energy, Flow of energy is only in one direction i.e., from solar radiation —> producers —
> heribivorous —> carnivores. This energy cannot pass in the reverse direction. There is
decrease in the content and flow of energy with rise j in tropic level.
8. (c): The mean global temperature rise by 2° – 6°c and the concentration of carbon dioxide
increases in the troposphere upto 600 ppm. Hence, the surface of the earth becomes warm
which causes global warming. The phenomenon is similar to that of green house in which the
glass enclosed atmosphere gets heated up due to its insulation from the rest of the
environment. Hence, global warming is also known as green house effect and the gases
responsible for it are called green house gases e.g CH4, CO2 etc.
9. Soil conservation is
9. (d): Soil conservation is to conserve fertile soil from the losses like heavy rainfall, drainage,
high wind, flood, draught etc. Soil is the top cover of the earth in which plants can grow. The
rotation of crops, contour ploughing and use of proper fertilizers help in maintaining the
fertility of soil. Plantation of trees, controlled grazing of grasslands, reforestation, prevention of
forests fires will protect the erosion of top soil. The regulation of water resources to prevent
flood will help not only in soil conservation but also supply an adequate water supply in the
period of drought.
(a) symbiosis
(b) parasitism
(c) commenalism
(d) protocooperation.
10. (a): Algae and fungi in a lichen show symbiotic relationship. Fungi give support to the algae,
give protection and help in absorption of water while algae provide food to fungi which is
achlorophyllous. No one is harmed but both are benefitted by each other.
(c) methane
(d) fluorocarbon.
11. (d): Aerosols are chlorofluoro-hydrocarbon compounds released into air with force in the
form of vapour. Main source of aerosols is the emission of jet planes, where fluorocarbons are
used. These chlorofluorocarbons deplete the ozone layer in the higher atmosphere. These CFC’s
have produced a hole in the ozone layer.
12. (a): In Bhopal, the killer gas methyl isocyanate (MIC) was leaked into air from a chemical
plant (Union Carbide) killing more than 2,000 people, many of the people are still suffering from
various diseases and defects of eye.
(d) rainfall.
13. (d): Deforestation is the conversion of forested areas to non-forest land use such as arable
land, pasture, urban use, logged area, or wasteland. Generally, the removal or destruction of
significant areas of forest cover has resulted in a degraded environment with reduced
biodiversity. Deforestation results from removal of trees without sufficient reforestation, and
results in declines in habitat and biodiversity, wood for fuel and industrial use, and quality of
life. Due to deforestation, transpiration will be decreased, air temperature will be increased and
water content will be decreased hence rainfall decreases.
14. (b): Pyramid of number in a grassland/tree ecosystem is always upright. It shows the
number of individual organisms at each level. In grassland, the producers, which are mainly
grasses, are always maximum in number. This number then shows a decrease towards apex,
primary consumers are lesser in number than the grasses; the secondary consumers are lesser
in number than the primary consumers. Finally, the top consumers are least in number. Thus,
the pyramid becomes upright.
(c) effluents
15. (a): Domestic waste constitutes biodegradable pollution. These are also called non-
conservative pollutants. These are decomposed chemically or by activity of microorganisms into
harmless products and are recycled back into the atmosphere.
16. (d): SO2 and NO when present in large quantities dissolved in water vapour form sulphuric
acid and nitric acid which dissolve in rain water resulting in acid rain (H2SO4) and (HNO3) which
in turn causes great damage to forests and vegetation.
17. (b): Conventional energy resources are those energy resources which are in common use,
e.g. animal power, fuel wood, fossil fuel and hydroelectric energy. These conventional energy
resources are non-renewable resources.
(a) biomass
(b) coal
(c) petroleum
(d) kerosene.
Most commonly, biomass refers to plant matter grown for use as biofuel, but it also includes
plant or animal matter used for production of fibres, chemicals or heat. Biomass may also
include biodegradable wastes that can be burnt as fuel. Renewable resources of energy include
biomass energy and some forms of inexhaustible energy like solar energy, hydropower, wind
power, tidal energy, wave energy, geothermal energy, etc. Coal, petroleum and kerosene are
non-renewable resources of energy.
19. Homeostasis is
19. (b): The ability to maintain a steady state within constantly changing environment is
essential for the survival of living systems. The maintenance of a constant internal environment
is called homeostasis.
20. (c): Deep black soil is productive due to high proportion of clay and humus. The organic
matter present in the soil is contributed by the death and decay of living organisms. These are
the richest in nutrients and therefore these soils are the most fertile.
21. (d): The spaces between the soil particles may be occupied by water or air. The rain water
fills all the pore spaces as it moves downward under the influence of gravity however very small
pore spaces serve as capillaries allowing the water to move against the pull of gravity, this is
called capillary water and is available to the roots.
Some water forms an extremely thin, tightly held film around the soil particles; it is termed as
hygroscopic water. Some water vapour is there in the soil pore spaces. The downward moving
water is called gravitational water.
22. Which one is true?
(a) commensalism when none of the interacting populations affect each other
22. (b): When the interactions is useful to both the populations it is called symbiosis. Symbiosis
means living together. It is beneficial co-action between two or more different species in which
one or both species are benefitted and neither species is harmed.
23. Food chain in which microorganisms breakdown the food formed by primary producers is
23. (b): The dead organic matter of plant or animal is called as detritus. While a part of it
remains on the soil surface as litter, the other part enters the soil. Many animals such as
protozoan’s, nematodes, insects etc. depend on detritus and hence they are called as
detrivores. Even the human beings are detrivores when they eat cooked food. From detritus,
the chain proceeds to detrivores, then to carnivores and finally to top carnivores.
(a) mercury
(b) cadmium
(c) lead
(d) copper.
25. (c): Lead is the most hazardous metal pollutants of automobile exhausts. Its effects are lead
poisoning, anaemia, kidney disease and convulsions. It also affects central nervous system and
distorts the red blood corpuscles.
26. (d): Soil fertility is the characteristic of soil that supports abundant plant life. In particular
the term is used to describe agricultural and garden soil.
27. Petroleum is a
(b) renewable
(c) non-renewable
28. (d): Metals and minerals are both renewable and non-renewable resources. Non renewable
due to very long recycling in case of metals and some minerals but renewable due to shorter
recycling in case of biogenetic nutrients.
29. (d): Soil fertility is the characteristic of soil that supports abundant plant life. In particular
the term is used to describe agricultural and garden soil. During intensive agriculture most of
the nutrients and minerals are exhausted from the soil so fertility decreases.
(c) renewable
(d) non-renewable.
30. (c): Water is a natural resource which get replenished, recycled or reproduced and should
not used beyond its renewability. It is a major renewabk inorganic resource which is an
essential component of living beings, a habitat for several organisms, determine of vegetation
and climate, floods and droughts, requite; for drinking, bathing, washing, cooling, constructor
worth disposal of sewage and industrial effluents irrigation eel.
31. (b): River water deposit alluvial soil. Alluvial soils are transported by water.
32. A fertile agricultural soil appears deep coloured at the surface as compared to soil one
metre down. The reason for colour of top soil is
32. (b): A fertile agricultural soil appears deep coloured at the surface as compared to soil one
metre down. The reason for colour of top soil is rich in organic matter. The mineral component
constitutes some 50-60% of soil. It is present in the form of particles of different sizes.
(a) texture
33. (a): Soil particles determines its textures. These particles enclose living spaces in between
them call pore space. In coarse textured soils, the pore space is wide but pore frequency is low.
But in fine textured soil, the pore space is narrow but pore frequency is high.
(a) fluorides
(d) ozone.
34. (d): Ozone is generated in the lower atmosphere during the formation of photochemical
smog when nitrogen dioxide splits to produce reactive oxygen atoms which combine with
molecular oxygen. Oxygen molecules split under ultraviolet radiations to produce oxygen atoms
which combine with molecular oxygen to form ozone. It is this gas which forms the protective
ozone umbrella in the stratosphere and shield life from biocidal high energy radiations. It can
also damage DNA molecules and cause carcinogenesis.
35. American water plant that has become a troublesome water weed in India
35. (b): Eichhornia crassipes or water hyacinth (American water plant) has become the most
serious weed in many tropical, warm and temperate freshwater habitats worldwide including
India. It has the highest growth rate of any saltwater, freshwater or terrestrial vascular
macrophvte and can be labelled as an “ecosystem engineer” or an invasive habitat modifier.
In slow-moving to still water bodies it is especially problematic as it forms dense monospecific
mats that lower dissolved oxygen levels in the water, alter river hydrology and increase organic
sediment. These mats displace native aquatic plant and animal communities; drastically alter
the ecosystem and puts native habitats and wildlife at risk. Furthermore, water hyacinth may
interfere with the use of a water-body for cultural, social or commercial purposes causing
substantial economic hardship and putting livelihoods at risk.
(a) ecology
(b) ecosystem
(c) phytogeography
(d) ethology.
36. (a): Ecology is the branch of science which deals it the study of inter relationship between
organisms their environment. The scope of ecology is very vast as it treats the organisms at the
level of population, community and ecosystem. Ethology is the study of evolution any
significant behaviour of people in their natural surroundings. Phytogeography is the branch of
biogeography that is concerned with the geographic distribution of plant species.
37. The sum total of the populations of the same kind of organisms constitute
(a) colony
(b) genus
(c) community
(d) species.
37. (d): The sum total of the populations of the same kind of organisms constitute species. A
species is a group of individuals of same kind of phenotypic characters and can interbreed.
(a) clay
(b) loam
(c) sandy
(d) gravel.
38. (b): Soil best suited for plant growth is loam. Loam soils have sand, silt and clay in a specific
proportion. The soil contains 20% clay, 40% silt and 40% sand. They have good nutritive status
aeration and hydration.
(a) colony
(b) mutualism
(c) commensalism
(d) ammensalism.
39. (b): Mutualism is a type of association where both the partners are benefitted. This is
permanent and t obligatory association involving a physiological inter- dependence e.g. in
lichens.
40. (c): Pyramid of number is an ecological pyramid which employs the number of individuals
per unit area at various trophic levels sequence wise with producers at the base and various
consumers at successively higher levels. Pyramid of number assumes different shapes in
different ecosystems, individuals in a trophic level.
The pyramid of number in pond ecosystem is also upright. In forest ecosystem the pyramid of
number is inter mediate. Here the number of primary consumers is more than producers as
well as top consumers. In parasitic food chain the pyramid of number is inverted.
(b) inverted
(c) upright
41. (c): Pyramid of number in a pond ecosystem is always upright, showing the number of
individual organisms at each level. In a pond, the producers, which are mainly phytoplanktons,
are always maximum in number. This number then shows a decrease towards apex, primary
consumers are lesser in number than the grasses; the secondary consumers are lesser in
number than the primary consumers. Finally, the top consumers are least in number. Thus, the
pyramid becomes upright.
42. Which among the following is likely to have the highest levels of D.D.T. depositions in its
body?
(b) phytoplankton
(c) eel
(d) crab.
Higher the trophic level higher will be the accumulation of organic compound. Hence sea gull is
likely to have the highest level of DDT deposition in its body.
43. Which one of the following gases contributes maximum to the green house effect’ on the
earth?
(c) Freon
(d) methane.
43. (a): Due to excessive combustion activity, the content of CO2 in the atmosphere has been
steadily rising. CO2 is opaque to infra-red waves. Therefore, it allows the sunlight to fall on
earth but checks the loss of heat during night. As carbon dioxide accumulates in the
atmosphere it absorbs more and more of the reflected infrared radiation.
This could cause an increase in temperature referred to as the green house effect. Methane
also causes green house effect but comparatively lesser than CO2. Chlorofluorocarbons and
Freon cause depletion of ozone layers. Depletion of ozone layer leads to increase in incidence
of skin cancer due to increased penetration of sun’s harmful rays.
(a) phytoplankton
(b) zooplankton
(c) benthos
(d) plankton.
44. (b): Trophic level is a step or division of food chain which is characterized by the method of
obtaining its food. The two fundamental trophic levels are producers and consumers. Producers
belong to the first trophic level. In a lake the producers are mainly some rooted or floating
plants and phytoplanktons.
Primary consumers form the second trophic level. They feed on living plants or plant parts. The
primary consumers are zooplanktons.
45. Sounds above what level are considered hazardous noise pollution?
(a) above 80 dB
(b) above 30 dB
45. (d): Noise level are expressed on a logarithmic scale of decibels. The baseline noise levels in
the community vary around 40 dB. International standards prescribe a maximum of 50 dB for
day and 40 dB for night time in a residential area. Noise over 115 dB is regarded as highly
avoidable. The World Health Organization (WHO) recommends an industrial noise limit of 75
dB.
(a) osteosclerosis
46. (d): Mercury gets changed to water soluble dim ethyl mercury which undergoes
biomagnifications.
Eating poisoned animals causes deformity known as minamata disease (first reported in 1952
due to eating of fish captured from Hg-contaminated Minamata Bay of Japan) which is
characterised by diarrhoea, hemolysis, impairment of various senses, numbness of lips, tongue,
limbs, deafness, blurring of vision, mental derangement, meningitis and death.
47. When huge amount of sewage is dumped into a river, its B.O.D. will
(c) increase
(d) decrease.
47. (c): BOD is biochemical oxygen demand which is the oxygen in mg required for 5 days in 1
litre of water at 20°C for the micro-organisms to metabolize organic waste. Due to dumping of
huge amount of sewage, the oxygen levels are depleted, which are reflected in terms of BOD
values of water. With dumping of wastes number of microbes also increases tremendously and
these also consume most of the oxygen, so BOD of the river will increase.
48. If we completely remove the decomposers from an ecosystem, its functioning will be
adversely affected, because
48. (a): Decomposers are aprotrophs which decompose the organic remains by secreting
extracellular digestive enzymes. They are also known as mineralisers as they release minerals
trapped in organic remains. So in the absence of microorganisms the flow of mineral will stop.
(a) detritivores
(b) herbivores
(c) carnivores
(d) omnivores.
49. (b): Consumers are heterotrophs, mostly animals which feed on other organisms.
Herbivores feed on producers. This is because the herbivores obtain their food directly from
plants. The carnivores which feed on herbivores are called as primary carnivores or second
order consumers. The animals which feed on primary carnivores are called secondary
carnivores. Omnivores eact both plants and animals therefore they are called third order
consumers. Detrivores or scavengers are animals which feed on dead bodies of other
organisms.
50. (d): Niche is specific part of habitat occupied by individuals of a species which is
circumsribed by its range of tolerance, range of movement, microclimate, type of food and its
availability, shelter, type of predator, and timing of activity. A habitat has several ecological
niches and supports a number of species. An ecological niche is used by a single species. Two or
more species cannot use the same niche despite having a mutualistic association. The
abundances of a species population within its habitat is called niche density.
(a) oxygen
(b) hydrogen
(c) chlorine
(d) sulphur-dioxide.
51. (d): The Taj Mahal is built with white marble and is threatened by environmental pollution,
especially due to sulphur dioxide. Sulphur dioxide is produced during combustion of fossil fuels,
refining of petroleum and smelting of sulphur containing ores. Threat to Taj Mahal from
Mathura refinery is due to pollutant gases composing SO2, H2S and nitrogen oxides. They
would convert CaCO, (marble) into calcium sulphate and calcium nitrate.
52. In Minamata Bay Japan the animals which remained free from minamata disease, are
(a) dogs
(b) cats
(c) pigs
(d) rabbits.
52. (d): Minamata disease is caused because of eating of poisoned animals which contain water
soluble dimethyl mercury which undergoes biomagnification. Thus animals which feed on
marine animals (especially fish) and plants suffered from this disease, rabbits remained free
from this disease because they feed on terrestrial plants.
54. The toxic effect of carbon monoxide is due to its greater affinity for haemoglobin as
compared to oxygen approximately by
(c) 2 times
(d) 20 times.
54. (a): Carbon monoxide but are gaseous cycle is produced due to incomplete combustion,
metallurgical operations and naturally by plants as well as animals. Carbon monoxide has 200
times more affinity within haemoglobin as compared to oxygen. Cabon monoxide combines
with haemoglobin of blood and forms a stable compound called carboxyhaemoglobin. At 50
ppm, CO converts 7.5% of haemoglobin into carboxy-haemoglobin within 8 hours. It impairs
oxygen transport resulting in headache, decreased vision, and cardiovascular malfunction and
asphyxial.
(a) phosphorus-32
(b) strontium-90
(c) caesium-137
(d) iodine-131.
Answer and Explanation:
55. (b): Strontium-90 is a long lived radionuclide. It tends to cycle like calcium.lt causes bone
cancer, blood and tissue degeneration.
(a) mountain
(b) ocean
(c) forest
(d) desert.
56. (b): Of all the ecosystems, ocean is the largest and most stable ecosystem. Aquatic life is
protected from vigorous climates and weather that are climatic conditions, problem of water
supply, food, fire and artificial forces such as industrialization, farming and grazing are lacking in
the oceans. The sea is continuous and not separated as land and freshwater habitats.
57. (b): When succession begins on an area which has not been previously being occupied by a
community e.g. a new exposed rock area, sand dunes, new islands, deltas, shore or recent lava
flow, it is known as primary succession. The first group of organisms (plants or animals) which
become established in such an area is termed the pioneer community.
58. A dental disease characterized by mottling of teeth is due to the presence of certain
chemical element in drinking water. Which of the following is that element?
(a) fluorine
(b) boron
(c) mercury
(d) chlorine.
58. (a): Flourides are given out during refining of materials. Flourides cause flourosis. It is a
disease which is defined by mottling of teeth, abnormal bones that are liable to fracture
because fluorine replaces Ca2+ and makes the bones brittle. Flouride pollution is a serious
problem in many districts of Rajasthan, where excess of flouride in water adversely affects the
health of man. Many villagers have aged prematurely or became hunch backs.
(a) over-grazing
(b) tourism
59. (a): Desertification means a process of spread of desert that occurs due to degradation of
environment, cutting of trees, soil erosion etc. It can be natural or manmade. The main causes
for desertification are over cultivation of poor soils, over grazing by animals, excessive cutting
of fuel wood and inappropriate irrigation practises resulting in salinization. Among them
overgrazing is the most important factor as it causes maximum effect.
60. (d): Streaming body is a secondary aquatic adaption. It is found in animals that live
permanently in water but most of them are amphibious in nature. The stream lined body
consists of compression of head, body and tail into a curved stream lined form.
There is no protruberance over the body so that the animal can move easily through water.
Parasitism is a relationship between two organisms of different species in which one organism
called parasite obtains its food directly from another living organism called host.
61. The closely related morphologically similar sympatric populations, but reproductively
isolated, are designated as
(a) clones
(c) clines
(d) denies.
61. (c): Clones are populations of genetically similar cells of individuals. Such a population is
obtained either by mitosis or by asexual reproduction by parthenogenesis from a single plant.
Clines are a morphological or genetic gradation of a species in a geographical area. Demes are a
group of individuals which are capable of interbreeding. Siblings are the off springs of same
male and female parents.
62. (c): Green house effect is warming effect found in green house by allowing solar radiations
to pass in but preventing long range heat radiations to pass out. The gases which are
transparent to solar radiation but retain and partially reflect back long wave heat radiations are
called green house gases.
Recently the concentration of green house gases has started rising resulting in enhanced green
house effect that is thus increasing the mean global temperature. It is called global warming.
The various greenhouse gases are C02 (warming 60%), CH4 (effect 20%), chloroflourocarbons or
CFCs (1.4%) and nitrous oxide (N20, 6%). Others of minor significance are water vapours and
ozone.
63. (c): Benthoic organisms are attached or rest on the bottom sediments. Benthic animal may
be divided into filter feeders, e.g. clams and deposit feeders e.g. snails.
64. Which country has the greatest contribution for the whole formation in ozone layer?
(a) Russia
(b) Japan
(c) USA
(d) Germany.
64. (c): Depletion in the concentration of ozone over a restricted area as spring time decline
over Antartica is called ozone hole. Depletion of ozone is due to action of sunlight over
pollutants which release chemicals (e.g., chlorine) that destroy ozone. The major are
chloroflouroarbons (14% of total depletion), nitrogen oxides (3.5% deplection sulphur dioxide,
halon, carbon tetrachloride, methyl chloroform, chlorine, etc. Major contributor of these gases
is USA.
65. (a): Niche is specific part of habitat occupied by individuals of a species which is
circumscribed by its range of tolerance, range of movement, microclimate, type of food and its
availability, shelter, type of predator, and timing of activity.
A habitat has several ecological niches and supports a number of species. An ecological niche is
used by a single species. Two or more species cannot use the same niche despite having a
mutualistic association.
66. The two great industrial tragedies namely, MIC and Chernobyl tragedies respectively
occurred where and at which time?
66. (a): The Bhopal gas tragedy occurred on 3rd Dec. 1984 in which methyl isocyanate gas was
released from a fertilizer manufacturing plant of Union Carbide causing death of approximately
2500 persons. Chernobyl disaster occurred on April 26, 1986, from an explosion at the
chernobvl power station which released a huge radioactive cloud into the atmosphere in
Ukrain.
67. The 10% energy transfer law of food chain was given by
(a) Lindemann
(b) Tansley
(c) Stanley
(d) Weismann.
67. (a): Energy flow in an ecosystem is always unidirectional. Only 10% of the gross productivity
of producers is entrapped by herbivores for their body building. Herbivores are eaten by
carnivores. Only 10% of the herbivore productivity is utilized for raising productivity of primary
carnivores. The rest is consumed in ingestion, respiration, maintance of body heat and other
activities. Higher carnivores similarly are able to retain only 10% of energy present in primary
carnivores. This is called the 10% law. It was given by Lindemann in 1942.
68. The most common indicator organism that represents polluted water is
(a) C.vibrio
(c) E.coli
(d) P.typhi.
68. (c): E. coli is the most common indicator of water pollution. It naturally occurs in the
intestines of human beings and animals. They are commonly found in sewage and if E. coli is
detected in water then it indicates fecal contamination. So if E. coli are detected in drinking
water it indicates a serious health risk and that water-should not be used for drinking.
69. In coming years, skin related disorders will be more common due to
69. (b): Ozone layer or shield is present in stratosphere. It functions as a shield against strong
UV radiations. Protection from UV radiations is proportional to thickness of ozone layer.
Depletion in the concentration of ozone over a restricted area as spring time decline over
Antartica is called ozone hole. Thinning of ozone layer increases the amount of UV-B radiations
reaching the earth.
It would increase occurrence of cataract, skin cancers, herpes, dimming of eye sight, photo
burning, deficient functioning of immune system.
(a) rhizomes
(b) seeds
(c) bulbs
(d) corms.
70. (b): Therophytes are those plants that survive the winter as a seed and complete their life
cycle between the spring and autumn.
71. (d): Man and biosphere programme is an international biological programme of UNESCO
(United Nations Educational Scientific and Cultural Organisation) which was started in 1971 but
was introduced in India in 1986. MAB has studied human environment, impact of human
interference and pollution on biotic and a biotic environments and conservation strategies for
the present as well as future.
(a) Europe
(b) Africa
(c) India
(d) Antarctica.
72. (d): Depletion in the concentration of ozone over a restricted area as spring time decline
over Antartica is called ozone hole. An ozone hole was discovered over Antartica by Faman et
al, 1985. It is quite large (23 million square km in 1992 and 28.3 million square km in 2000). A
small ozone hole also occurs over North Pole, it was discovered in 1990. Thinning of ozone
shield has also been reported elsewhere (e.g., 8% between 30° – 50° N).
73. Which of the following ecosystem has the highest gross primary productivity?
(a) mangroves
(b) rain forest
(c) grassland
73. (b): Gross primary productivity is the total rate of photosynthesis, including the organic
matter used up in | respiration during the measurement period.
Tropical evergreen/rain forests occur over equatorial/ subequatorial regions with abundant
warmth and rainfall (200-350 cm/yr) almost throughout the year. The forests are impenetrable
(= jungle) with maximum diversity, e.g., 200 types of trees in one hectare, 70-80% of all insects
80 85% of all birds. Productivity is maximum here, 12000 kcal/m2/yr.
74. (b): Phosphate is an important compound of fertilizer which are added to crop fields and
then are passed down to water bodies during rains through run off. It is also present in sewage
that is dumped into the water body. This nutrient brings about dense growth of water plants
especially the algae and cause algal bloom. This algal bloom leads to oxygen depletion in water
bodies and causes death of aquatic life.
(a) insects
(b) microorganisms
(c) man
(d) animals.
76. In desert grasslands, which type of animals are relatively more abundant?
(a) aquatic
(b) fossorial
(c) diurnal
(d) arboreal.
76. (b): In deserts animals prefer to live under the earth’s surface. Such animals are called
fossorial. The animal residing either permanently or for most of life inside the burrows or under
the earth surface are known as burrowing or fossorial animals and their mode of existence is
described as subterranean or underground.
(a) O2 layer
(b) O3 layer
77. (b): Depletion of ozone is due to action of sunlight over pollutants which release chemicals
(e.g., chlorine) that destroy ozone. Ozone depleting substances react with ozone present in the
stratosphere and destroy the same. The major ODS are chloroflourocabons (14% of total
depletion), nitrogen oxides (3.5% depletion sulphur dioxide, halon, carbon tetrachloride, methyl
chloroform, chlorine, etc. Many of these are being released by jets flying in the stratosphere
and rockets being fired into space.
78. Which one of the following organisms is used as indicator of water quality?
(a) Azospirilluni
(b) Escherichia
(c) Biggiata
(d) Chlorella.
79. If there was no C02 in the earth’s atmosphere, the temperature of earth’s surface would be
79. (d): Carbon dioxide is one of the important green house gas. It allows the shorter
wavelength of infra red radiations to pass through it but does not allow these radiations to
leave the earth’s atmosphere. This results in warming of the atmosphere. If the amount of CO2
decreases then there will not be any increase in temperature.
80. Plants such as Prosopis, Acacia and Capparis represent examples of tropical
80. (d): Tropical shrubs or thorn forests are found in places where moisture conditions are
intermediate between desert and savanna on one hand and seasonal or rain forests on the
other hand. Acacia and Prosopis is non-succulent perennial plants and Capparis is a prophetic
shrub.
82. How carbon monoxide, emitted by automobiles, prevents transport of oxygen in the body
tissues?
83. In a terrestrial ecosystem such as forest, maximum energy is in which trophic level?
(a) T3
(b) T4
(c) T1
(d) T2
83. (c): Each successive level of nourishment as represented by the links of the food chain is
known as a trophic level. The plant producers within an ecosystem constitute the first trophic
level, the herbivores form the second trophic level, and the carnivores represent third level.
Additional links in the main food chain and inside chains such as those formed by parasites
constitute further trophic levels. In a terrestrial ecosystem maximum energy is in trophic level
because the organisms which trap solar energy are primary producers and they have got
maximum energy. Only 10% energy is transferred from one trophic level to next trophic level.
84. Which of the following communities is more vulnerable to invasion by outside animals and
plants?
(a) temperate forests
(c) mangroves
84. (d): Tropical forests are found in tropical zone of the world and are characterised by very
high temperature with rainfall in abundance. The flora of tropical rain forest is very rich and
highly diversified. The tropical forests have a very rich fauna both in density as well as in
varieties. The reason for this high diversity and variety of flora and fauna is the occurrence of
suitable conditions in these forests. So these are more vulnerable to invasion by outside plants
and animals.
85. The rate at which light energy is converted into chemical energy of organic molecules is the
ecosystems
85. (b): Gross primary productivity is the total energy stored in the food materials synthesized
by the green plants or total rate of photosynthesis including the organic matter used up in the
respiration during total photosynthesis or total assimilation.
86. The Minamata disease in Japan was caused through the pollution of water by
(a) cyanide
(c) lead
(d) mercury.
87. D.D.T. is
(b) an antibiotic
88. Which of the following organism is likely to have more concentration of D.D.T. in its body?
(c) herbivores
(d) carnivores.
88. (a): DDT is fat soluble and persistent pesticide that shows biomagnification. It means that its
concentration increase at each trophic level of food chain. Therefore top carnivores will have
more concentration of toxic materials in their body.
(a) silicosis
(b) pneumonicosis
(c) fluorosis
(d) leprosis.
89. (c): Flourides are given out during refining of metals. Flourides cause flourosis. This is a
pollution Telated dissorder. When the level of flouride content in drinking water becomes as
high as 3 to 12 mg/L, the water becomes polluted. It affects teeth as well as bones.
90. Energy transfer from one trophic level to other, in a food chain, is
(a) 10%
(b) 20%
(c) 1%
(d) 2%.
91. (b): Bhopal gas tragedy occurred on 3 Dec 1984 in which a storage tank containing 36
tonnes of methyl isocyanate (MIC) burst in pesticide manufacturing plant of Union Carbide in
Bhopal. MIC is one of the deadliest toxins which when inhaled even in very small dose can kill
the animal. It is highly irritating to skin, eyes or mucus membrane and causes death by lung
oedema. It is also a carcinogenic agent.
(a) PAN
(b) aerosol
(c) CO
(d) CO2
92. (a): Secondary pollutant is formed from a primary one through change or reaction. The
secondary pollutants are more toxic than primary ones. Nitrogen oxides and hydrocarbons
react photocheniically to produce peroxyacyl nitrates and ozone. Peroxyacyl nitrates are
produced due to photochemical reactions between nitrogen oxides and unsaturated
hydrocarbons.
(c) grasslands
(d) savannahs.
93. (b): Trophical forests are found in trophical zone of the world and are characterised by very
high temperature with rainfall in abundance. The flora of trophical rain forest is very rich and
highly diversified. The trophical forests have a very rich fauna both in density as well as in
varieties. The reason for this high diversity and variety of flora and fauna is the occurence of
suitable conditions in these forests.
94. The maximum biomagnifications would be in which of the following in case of aquatic
ecosystem?
(a) zooplanktons
(b) phytoplanktons
(c) fishes
(d) birds.
94. (c): Pesticides sprayed over crops also pass into water bodies due to surface run-off. In
excess they cause immediate and mass scale deaths of aquatic animals. Persistant pesticides
(e.g. organ chlorine or chlorinated hydrocarbons like DDT) pass into food chain and increase in
amount per unit weight of organisms with the rise in trophic level due to their accumulation in
fat.
The phenomenon is called biomagnification. e.g. 0.01-0.05 parts per billion in water, 25 parts
per billion or 0.025 ppm in phytoplankton, 0.123 ppm in zooplankton, 1.04 ppm in clams and
small fish, 4.83 ppm in predator fish and 124 ppm in fish eating birds like Sea Gulls. So the
maximum biomagnification occurs in fishes in case of aquatic ecosystem.
95. (d): Lichens are bioindicators of air pollution. The algal symbiont of lichen is most vulnerable
to s02 pollution. The following chemical reactions take place during chlorophyll degradation of
the phycobiont under the influence of SO2.
(a) 30%
(b) 60%
(c) 11%
(d) 22%.
96. (a): Land forms about 1/5 of the earth’s surface. About 36.6% of the land area is covered by
houses factories, roads, desert etc. And about 30% by forests, and about 22% meadows and
only 11% land area is fit for tilling.
(b) pollution
(c) radiation
97. (b): Pollution is any change in physical, chemical or biological charecteristics of the
environment that has the potentiality to harm human life, life of other desirable species,
natural resources, cultural assests and industries. Another type of pollution ;s increase in C02
and other greenhouse gases and a decrease in stratospheric ozone on global scale which would
be affecting air, water and land resources, biological diversity and human health. Thus pollution
results in damage to biological effectiveness.
(d) diatoms.
98. (c): The benthic region includes all the sea floor from the wave-washed ashore-line to the
greatest depths. Depending upon the penetration of light it is subdivided into two main zones:
the lighted or littoral zone and the deep sea system. Due to abundance of light, water, oxygen,
carbon dioxide and less salanity of water, the tidal zone is characterized by exhorbitant growth
of plants. The dense growth of vegetation, on the other hand, provides shelter and food for
animals. A wide variety of algae, few grasses and animals of every phylum of animal kingdom
are represented in this region.
99. (d): Soil nature is described in pH values. It can be alkaline, acidic or neutral. Highly acidic
and highly saline soil often remain injurious for plant growth, micro organisms etc. Soil pH
strongly affects the microbial activities. Neutral or slightly acidic soil (5.5 -6.5) remain best for
growth of majority of plants.
100. What is B.O.D.?
100. (b): Strength of sewage or degree of water pollution is measured in terms of BOD
(Biochemical Oxygen Demand) value. BOD may be defined as, ‘number of milligrams of O2
required for decomposition of one litre of waste or water by decomposing micro-organisms
(bacteria)’.
(a) 10-20 dB
(b) 30-60 dB
(c) 70-90 dB
101. (b): Unit of sound level is decibel. As reference intensity, sound of noise level is taken as
100 dB. 10 dB is ten times the threshold intensity, 20 dB 100 times, 40 dB is 104,100 times the
threshold intensity. Moderate conversation produces 60 dB sounds. Unwanted sound is noise
and is therefore pollutant.
(a) Hydrilla
103. (c): Stone fly (plecoptera order) larva requires well aerated, non polluted water. It is
absent in polluted water.
(c) interbreeding
104. (c): Species may be defined as the uniform interbreeding population of individuals which
freely interbreed among themselves. Niche represents the habitat and functions of a species.
Habitat is a specific place where an organisms lives.
105. Maximum green house gas released by which of the following country?
(a) India
(b) France
(c) USA
(d) Britain.
106. Which type of association is found in between entomophilous flower and pollinating
agent:
(a) mutualism
(b) commensalism
(c) coperation
(d) co-evolution.
106. (d): Co-evolution can occur in any interspecific relationship like symbiosis or mutualism.
The relation between an entomophilous flower and pollinating insect shows co-evolved
mutualism. In this the plant depends exclusively on the insect for pollination and the insect
relies on the plant for food.
107. Two different species cannot live for long duration in the same niche or habitat. This law is
107. (b): Interspecific competition is rivalry amongst members of different species. The severity
of competition depends upon similarity in the requirement of food and shelter. Every type of
organism has a particular niche; no two organisms can live in same niche. One of the two is
eliminated. This phenomenon is called Gause hypothesis of competitive exclusion. Different
organisms develop different types of variations in order to exploit niches, e.g. 14 species of
Finches in Galapagos Islands.
Allen’s law states that there is tendency of smaller extremities like ear, nose, tail etc in animals
living in colder climate.
109. Which type of association is found in between entomophilous flower and pollinating agent
(a) mutualism
(b) commensalism
(c) co-operation
(d) co-evolution
109. (d): Co evolution may be defined as, “evolution in two species that interact extensively
with one another so that each acts as a major force of natural selection on the other”. When
two species or two populations of a single species interact extensively, each exerts strong
selective pressures on the other. When one evolves a new feature or modifies an old one, the
other generally evolves new adaptations in response.
This constant, mutual feedback between two species is called co evolution. Animal-pollinated
flowers must attract useful pollinators and frustrate undesirable visitors eating nectar or pollen
without fertilizing the flower in return. The animals, in turn, have been under selective
pressures to locate flowers quickly and identify the flowers that can provide them with
sufficient nutrition in terms of nectar or pollen with minimum expenditure of energy. So that
the entomophilous flower and the insects have coevolved.
(a) brain
(b) heart
(c) teeth
(d) kidney
111. Escherichia coli is used as an indicator organism to determine pollution of water with
(b) ectoparasitism
(c) endoparasitism
(d) decomposers
112. (a): In mutalism or symbosis both the organisms in association are mutually benefitted and
further this association is obligatory, i.e., necessary for existence of both organisms. Mycorrhiza
is a example of symbiosis. It is association between roots of higher plants and fungal hyphae.
The fungal hyphae supply water and nutrients to the plant and in turn get food form the plant.
So both the organism are mutually benefitted.
(a) high fertility, low or rapidly fall rate, rapid population growth and age distribution
(b) high fertility, high density, mortality rate and a very young age
(c) high infant mortality, low fertility population growth and a very distribution
(d) high mortality, high density, uneven growth and a very old age distribution.
113. (a): In developing countries the conditions are becoming better for survival of human
beings. So the mortality rate or the number of individuals dying per unit of time is low.
(a) a species which makes up only a small proportion of the total biomass of a community, yet
has a huge impact community’s organization and s
(b) a common species that has plenty of biomass yet has a fairly low impact on the community
organization
(c) a rare species that has minimal impact on the biomass and on other species in the
community
(d) a dominant species that constitutes a large proportion of the biomass and which affects
many other species.
114. (a): Keystone species are those species which has significant and disproportionately large
influence on the community structure and characteristics. It has often considerably low
abundance and biomass as compared to dominant species. Removal of such species causes
serious disruption in structure and function of community.
115. Which of the following is expected to have the highest value (gm/m2/yr) in a grassland
ecosystem?
Secondary productivity is productivity at consumer’s level. Since gross production includes total
production including the amount utilized in respiration and other metabolic activities so it is
more than other forms of productivity.
NP = GP – Respiration
116. In 1984, the Bhopal gas tragedy took place because methyl isocyanate
116. (d): Bhopal gas tragedy occurred on 3 Dec. 1984 in a Union Carbide pesticide plant. When
water and MIC mixed, an exothermic chemical reaction started, which produced a lot of heat.
As a result, the safety valve of the tank burst because of the increase in pressure. This burst was
so violent that even the concrete around the tank also broke.
The high moisture content (aerosol) in the discharge while evaporating gave rise to a heavy gas
which rapidly sank to the ground. It caused several of the following ailments like partial or
complete blindness, disorders like, gastrointestinal disorders in many surviving people.
(a) 20 g / 100 ml
(b) 30 g / 100 ml
(c) 4 – 6 g / 100 ml
118. In which one of the following pairs is the specific characteristic of a soil not correctly
method?
118. (d): Black soil forms the largest group. It is developed mainly on the Deccan traps of
Maharashtra, Madhya Pradesh and Kathiawar. Because of its hydrology and climatic conditions
of the environment, the medium and deep black soils are very suitable for cotton cultivation.
Laterite soil is rich in insoluble iron oxides and aluminium compounds, which gives laterites a
reddish appearance. Chernozems are rich in nutrients (due to abundant organic rich
compounds) and consequently the most fertile in the world.
119. An ecosystem which can be easily damaged but can recover after some time if damaging
effect stops will be having
119. (a): Stability can be defined as the power of a system to be in their state against
unfavourable factors and resilience is the capability of regaining its original shape or position
after being deformed. An ecosystem can be damaged easily and it must be having high
resilence.
120. (d): Maximum growth rate occurs in exponential or acceleration or log phase. The point at
which the exponential growth begins to slow down is known as inflexion point.
122. In which one of the following habitats does the diurnal temperature of soil surface vary
most?
(b) forest
(c) desert
(d) grassland.
122. (c): Deserts are places where the diurnal temperatures vary greatly. It is extremely hot
during the day time and very cold at night. This change in temperature also affects the
temperature condition of the soil.
123. In your opinion, which is the most effective way to conserve the plant diversity of an area?
(a) by tissue culture method
123. (b): Biosphere reserves are multipurpose protected areas of different representative
ecosystems which are meant for conservation of biodiversity or wild-life, traditional life tyle of
tribals and their domesticated animals and also plant resources. Each biosphere reserve has a
core zone (where no human activity is allowed), a buffer zone (with limited human activity) and
manipulation zone (where human activity is allowed without degradation of ecology.
Thus the biosphere reserves protect not just wild varieties ies but also domesticated varieties of
plants of an area.
124. Prolonged liberal irrigation of agricultural fields is likely to create the problem of
(a) acidity
(b) aridity
(c) salinity
124. (c): Irrigation induced salinity can arise as a result of the use of any irrigation water,
irrigation of saline water etc. combined with inadequate leaching. Since all surface and ground
water contains salts to varying degrees, irrigation is often seen as the primary culprit for
bringing salts into the field.
125. Which one of the following is not used for disinfection of drinking water?
(a) chlorine
(b) ozone
(c) chloramine
(d) phenyl.
(b) gene flow does not occur between the populations of a species
126. (b): Species may be defined as an uniform interbreeding population or group of individuals
which freely interbreed among themselves. Gene flow occurs between populations of a species
by gene migration i.e., emigration and immigration.
127. (b): Kyoto protocol occurred in Dec 1997. International conference held in Kyoto, Japan
obtained comments from different countries for reducing overall greenhouse gas emissions at a
level 5% below 1990 level by 2008-2012.
(c) Antartica
(d) Greenland.
Answer and Explanation:
128. (a): Nearly about 97% of the earth’s water is saline in the oceans and seas. 3% of the
earth’s water is locked up on the polar ice caps. 85% of the frozen freshwater is in the Antarctic
is ice cap, 15% of the frozen freshwater is in the northern polar ice cap and glaciers.
129. At which latitude, heat gain through insulation approximately equals heat loss through
terrestrial radiation?
129. (b): Earth does not receive equal radiation at all points. The east west rotation of earth
provides equal exposure to sunlight but latitude and dispersion do affect the amount of
radiation received. The poles receive far less radiation than equator. This uneven heating is
called differential insulation. At 40° North and South, approximately the heat gain is equal to
heat loss through terrestrial radiation.
130. Animals have the innate ability to escape from predation. Examples for the same are given
below. Select the incorrect example.
130. (c): Colour change in chameleon and melanism in moths are examples of camouflage in
animals adapted to prevent predation from prey. As a defence mechanim puffers have the
ability to inflate rapidly, filling their extremely elastic stomach with water (or air) until they are
almost spherical. This prevents them from being identified by the predator. But poison fangs in
snakes are a method adopted for preying and not escaping predation.
131. (c): Due to heavy industrilization and transportation (modernization), CO2 concentration is
increasing day by day in the atmosphere. CO2 has capacity for absorbing heat radiations and
thus increases temperature. This increase in global temperature (global warming) is mainly due
to CO2 concentration is called green house effect. Complete combustion of fossil fuels and
biomass releases carbon dioxide. Nuclear power plants releases radioactive wastes.
(a) Tundra
(b) Savanna
(c) prairie
132. (c): A biome is a major terrestrial community characterized by a distinct climate and
inhabited by a particular species of plants and animals. Tundra is characterized by precipitation
of less than 25 cm annually. Permafrost or permanent ice is found about a meter down from
the surface; it never melts and is impenetrable to both water and roots.
Savannahs are open grasslands with scattered shrubs and trees. Coniferous forest contains
evergreen trees. In these forests all plants do not shed their leaves at the same time hence
forest remains always evergreen. But pairies is grassland and epiphytes and ephemerals are
found in deserts.
133. Biodiversity Act of India was passed by the Parliament in the year.
(a) 1992
(b) 1996
(c) 2000
(d) 2002.
Answer and Explanation:
133. (d): The biological Act provides for conservation of biological diversity, sub stainable use of
its components and fair and equitable sharing of the benefits arising out of the use of biological
resources, knowledge and for matters connected there with or incidental there to. The
biological act of India was passed in 2002. This act of parliament received the assent of
President of India on the 5th February 2003.
134. (b): Hot-spot are areas with high density of biodiversity or megadiversity which are also
the most threatened ones. Hot spots are determined by four factors, (i) Number of
species/species diversity, (ii) Degree of endemism. (iii) Degree of threat to habitat due to its
degradation and fragmentation (iv) Degree of exploitation. India has two hotspots-North-East
Himalayas and Western Ghats.
Western Ghats occur along the western cost of India for a distance of about 1600 km in
Maharashtra, Karnataka, Tamil Nadu and Kerala extending over to Srilanka.
135. Limit of BOD prescribed by Central Pollution Control Board for the discharge of industrial
and municipal waste waters into natural surface waters, is
135. (a): Strength of sewage of degree of water pollution is measured in terms of BOD
(Biological oxygen demand) value. BOD may be defined as, ‘number of milligrams of 02
required for decomposition of one litre of waste or water by decomposing micro-organisms
(bacteria)’. According to central pollution control board, limit of BOD prescribed is 30 ppm
(mg/d) for 3 days at 27° C.
136. Which one of the following is not used for construction of ecological pyramids?
136. (a): Ecological pyramids represents the tropic structure and tropic function of an
ecosystem. In an ecological pyramid, the first tropic level forms the base and successive tropic
levels the tiers which make up the apex. Ecological pyramids may be of three general type’s
pyramid of number, pyramid of biomass and pyramid of energy.
Pyramid of biomass i.e. the living weight of the organisms of the food chain present at any time
in an ecosystem forms the pyramids of biomass. The pyramid of biomass indicates the decrease
or the gradual reduction in biomass at each trophic level from base to apex. Fresh weight is not
used in ecological pyramids.
(d) sharing of one or more resources between the two species (2006)
137. (d): Niche/ecological niche is specific part of habitat occupied by individuals of a species
which is circumsribed by its range of tolerance, range of movement, microclimate, type of food
and its availability, shelter, type of predator, and timing of activity. A habitat has several
ecological niches and supports a number of species.
An ecological niche is used by a single species. Two or more species cannot use the same niche
despite having a mutualistic association. Organisms or populations in competition have a niche
overlap of a limited resource for which they compete.
Both owl and cat feed on shrews and mice. They occupy the same niche because of being
ecological equivalents though their habitats are different.
138. Photochemical smog pollution does not contain
(b) ozone
138. (d): Photochemical smog is grey or yellow brown opaque smog having oxidising
environment with little smoke. Photochemical smog contains secondary pollutants or
photochemical oxidants. It was first reported over Loss Angels in 1940s. Photochemical smog is
formed at high temperature over cities and towns due to still air, emission of nitrogen oxides
and carbohydrates from automobile exhausts and solar energy.
Nitrogen dioxides split into nitric oxide and nascent oxygen. Nascent oxygen combines with
molecular oxygen to form ozone. Ozone reacts with carbohydrates to form aldehydes and
ketones. Nitrogen oxides, oxygen and ketones combine to form peroxy-acyl-nitrates (PAN). In
areas with intense solar radiations, photoelectrical smog forms brown air.
139. In which one of the following the BOD (Biochemical Oxygen Demand) of sewage (S),
distillery effluent (DE), paper mill effluent (PE) and sugar mill effluent (SE) have been arranged
in ascending order?
139. (b): The BOD of the given pollutants in ascending order is PE < S < SE < DE
140. In a coal fired power plant electrostatic precipitators are installed to control emission of
(a) NOx
(b) SPM
(c) CO
(d) SO2.
140. (b): SPM is suspended particulate matter which is less than 10 p.m remaining in air for
more than one day to several weeks. It includes aerosol, dust, mist, smoke, soot etc.
(a) population
(b) landscape
(c) ecosystem
141. (a): Population has several characteristics or attributes which are a function of the whole
group and not of individual. Age distribution is one of them that is the number or the
percentage of individuals in a population in different age groups. This is represented
geometrically in the form of age pyramid.
142. The population of an insect species shows an explosive increase in numbers during rainy
season followed by its disappearance at the end of the season. What does this show?
(a) the food plants mature and die at the end of the rainy season
142. (b): J-shape of growth pattern can be easily observed in algae blooms, some insects,
annual plants and the lemmings of Tundra. In the beginning density of the population increases
rapidly in compound interest fashion and then stops abruptly as the environmental resistance
or other limiting factors become effective. These factors may be food, space, seasonal (frost,
excessive rain etc.) or the termination of reproduction session.
(a) Both Azotobacter and Rhizobium fix atmospheric nitrogen in root nodules of plants.
(b) Cyanobacteria such as Anabaena and Nostoc are important mobilizers of phosphates and for
plant nutrition in soil
(d) Extensive use of chemical fertilizers may lead to eutrophication of nearby water bodies.
143. (d): Eutrophication in the phenomenon of nutrient enrichment of a water body that
initially supports a dense growth of plants and animals. It is caused by runoff from fertilized
fields, suburban lawns, detergent rich sewage; Eutrophication is caused by the increase in an
ecosystem of chemical nutrients, typically compounds containing nitrogen and phosphorus.
144. If the mean and the median pertaining to a certain character of a population are of the
same value, the following is most likely to occur
144. (d): It the mean and the median pertaining to a certain character of a population are of the
same value a normal distribution is most likely to occur.
(d) mutualism.
Answer and Explanation:
145. (d): Competition is rivalry for obtaining the same resource. Competition is of two types,
intraspecific and interspecific. Intraspecific competition is the competition amongst members
of the same species for a common resource.
It may be for food, space, and mate. So if the density of elephant population in an area
increases, it will lead to intraspecific competition. This will lead to the establishment of
territories in elephants which will result in pushing out of the extra number securing shelter,
mate and food for the rest.
146. Which one of the following ecosystem types has the highest annual net primary
productivity?
146. (d): Net primary productivity is the total organic matter stored by producers per unit area
per unit time. Gross primary productivity is the total organic matter synthesized by producers in
the process of photosynthesis per unit area per unit time. So
Tropical rain forests occur over equatorial/subequatorial regions with abundant warmth and
rainfall. Diversity and productivity are maximum as compared to other regions.
147. Which one of the following pairs of organisms are exotic species introduced in India?
In India, large varieties of exotic animal and plant species have been introduced from other
parts of the world through the ages. Some exotic plants have turned into weeds, multiplying
fast and causing harm to the ecosystem, e.g. water hyacinth and Lantam camara. Water
hyacinth was introduced in Indian waters to reduce pollution. It has clogged water bodies
including wetlands at many places resulting in death of aquatic orgnisms.
(a) blood-worms
(d) sludge-worms.
148. (b): Some plants and animals act as the measure of existing environmental conditions
because of their response to these conditions. The organisms are called bioindicators. From the
given options, stone flies do not act as bioindicator of water pollution.