Loss of Biodiversity
Trending Questions
- (i) - vertebrates, (ii) - intraspecific competition
- (i) - invertebrates, (ii) - interspecific competition
- (i) - vertebrates, (ii) - interspecific competition
- (i) - invertebrates, (ii) - intraspecific competition
What is the definition of natural selection?
How does diversity enrich our lives?
- Characteristics their parents acquired by use and disuse
- The greatest number of offspring
- Large body size
- Variations best suited to environmental conditions
- CITES Convention
- The Earth Summit
- G–16 Summit
- MAB Programme
___ results in depletion of wildlife.
What is common to Lantana, Eichhornia, and African catfish?
All are keystone species
All the endangered species of India
All the species are neither threatened nor indigenous species of India
All mammals found in India
Which one is an example of alien species?
Introduction of water hyacinth into India
Introduction of Nile perch into Lake Victoria in East Africa
Introduction of African catfish into Indian rivers
All of the above
- three
- four
- five
- six
Quite a few species of plants and animals are endangered in India. Why?
A taxon which is facing an extremely high risk of extinct in the wild in immediate future is known as
Vulnerable
Critically endangered
Rare
Exotic
- compilation of red list
- establishment of biosphere reserves
- convention on biodiversity
- development of hotspots
- Calculated from widespread events that wipes out the majority of living plants and animals.
- The extinction of individual species due to natural environmental or ecological factors.
- Calculated from rate of extinction that occurred before homo sapiens appeared on Earth.
- Species going extinct once every thousand years.
I. It is called the lungs of the planet.
II. It harbours probably millions of species.
III. It is the largest tropical rainforest in South America and has the greatest biodiversity on earth.
IV. They are being cut and cleared for cultivating soya beans or for the conversion to grasslands for raising beef cattle.
- Only II, III and IV
- Only I and II
- Only I, II and III
- I, II, III and IV
Why should we conserve biodiversity ? How can we do it ? [5]
Can you think of a situation, where we deliberately want to make a species extinct? How would you justify it?
- Acquired characteristics that are inherited are the driving force of evolution
- Clutch size or number of offspring is not related to fitness
- There is high chance of survival if more offspring are produced
- Nature always selects the largest and strongest
What are the major causes of species losses in a geographical region?
A new species X is introduced into a forest. How is it likely to affect the local species of that area?
Reason: The ‘Evil Quartet’ is a sobriquet for biodiversity conservation
- Both assertion and reason are true and the reason is the correct explanation of the assertion
- Assertion is true but the reason is false
- Both assertion and reason are false
- Both assertion and reason are true but the reason is not the correct explanation of the assertion
- Both Assertion and Reason are correct and Reason is the correct explanation for Assertion
- Both Assertion and Reason are correct but Reason is not the correct explanation for Assertion
- Assertion is correct but Reason is incorrect
- Both Assertion and Reason are incorrect
- Struggle for existence
- Differential reproduction
- Sexual selection
- Survival of the fittest
- Biodiversity of many areas will be developed.
- Biodiversity of many areas will be severely affected.
- Both A and B.
- None of the above.
- They can be threatened in the near future
- They are species found in a particular region
- They are at risk of getting extinct
- They are also known as vulnerable species
- individuals with the mean value of the trait are favoured
- individuals with the extreme value of the trait are favoured
- individuals with the mean value of the trait are eliminated
- Both a and b
What name is given to those species.
That has died out completely?
- False
- True