Entrance Exams
Govt. Exams
Community Reserves in India are established on community or private land to protect species, habitats, and ecosystems while allowing local communities sustainable use, balancing conservation with livelihood needs.
Directional selection operates when antibiotics kill susceptible bacteria, providing selective advantage to resistant strains, continuously shifting the population toward greater antibiotic resistance.
Energy pyramids are always upright because energy decreases at each trophic level due to metabolic losses, following the second law of thermodynamics, unlike biomass or number pyramids which can be inverted.
Habitat fragmentation, resulting from urbanization, agriculture, and infrastructure development, is identified as the primary driver of biodiversity loss in India, more significant than other factors.
Asian elephants are keystone species in Indian forests because their feeding and movement patterns significantly influence forest structure, vegetation composition, and create habitats for other species.
The phosphorus cycle is primarily abiotic, involving weathering of rocks, sedimentation, and geological processes, with minimal involvement of microorganisms compared to nitrogen or carbon cycles.
Gause's competitive exclusion principle states that two species with identical ecological niches cannot coexist indefinitely. Classic laboratory experiments with Paramecium species demonstrated that one species outcompetes and excludes the other.
The Western Ghats qualify as a biodiversity hotspot due to their exceptional species richness, with over 50% endemic species and significant ongoing habitat destruction from human activities.
Deserts are characterized by extremely low annual precipitation (less than 25 cm per year), making them the driest biomes on Earth, though tundras are also very dry.
Azotobacter (free-living) and Rhizobium (symbiotic with legumes) are the primary nitrogen-fixing bacteria in soil that convert atmospheric N₂ into ammonia (NH₃), making nitrogen available to plants.