NCERT Solutions for Class 9 Science Exploration Chapter 12: Patterns in Life: Diversity and Classification






Class 9 Science Exploration Chapter 12: Patterns in Life: Diversity and Classification


NCERT Solutions for Class 9 Science Exploration Chapter 12: Patterns in Life: Diversity and Classification

Session 2026-27 Updated

Revise, Reflect, Refine

1. Meena and Hari observed an animal in their garden. Hari called it an insect while Meena said it was an earthworm. Choose the correct option which confirms that it is an insect:
(i) Bilateral symmetrical body
(ii) Body with jointed legs
(iii) Cylindrical body
(iv) Body with little segmentation
Answer: The correct option is: (ii) Body with jointed legs
Explanation: Insects belong to the phylum Arthropoda, which is characterized by the presence of jointed legs. Earthworms do not have legs; they have a cylindrical segmented body. Therefore, the presence of jointed legs confirms that the animal is an insect.

2. Sponges represent one of the simplest animal body plans. Their bodies lack true tissues and organs. Which feature of sponge cells supports its classification under the animal kingdom?
(i) Absence of mitochondria
(ii) Ability to photosynthesise
(iii) Presence of a cell membrane
(iv) Presence of a cell wall
Answer: The correct option is: (iii) Presence of a cell membrane
Explanation: Animals have cells with a cell membrane and do not have a cell wall. Sponges also show this feature, which supports their classification under the animal kingdom. They do not perform photosynthesis and do not have a cell wall like plants.

3. Observe two different animals in your immediate environment. What features help you distinguish between them? How do these features help place them into different groups?
Answer: Let us consider two animals: a dog and a butterfly.

Features Dog Butterfly
1. Body structure Vertebrate (has backbone) Invertebrate (no backbone)
2. Body covering Hair/fur Wings covered with scales
3. Mode of movement Walks/runs on legs Flies using wings
4. Reproduction Gives birth to young ones (viviparous) Lays eggs (oviparous)
5. Level of organisation Complex organ systems (mammal) Simpler compared to mammals (insect)
6. Grouping Dog is placed in the group Vertebrata → Mammalia. Butterfly is placed in the group Arthropoda → Insecta.

Conclusion: These features such as presence of backbone, body covering, movement and reproduction help in classifying organisms into different groups.

4. How would a scientist justify choosing cellular organisation as a more fundamental characteristic for the basis of classification rather than the presence of xylem and phloem?
Answer: Cellular organisation is a more fundamental characteristic because it reflects the basic structure and complexity of an organism. It distinguishes organisms at a deeper level, such as prokaryotic (without true nucleus) and eukaryotic (with true nucleus) or unicellular and multicellular forms.

In contrast, the presence of xylem and phloem is a specific feature found only in certain plants. It is not applicable to all living organisms. Therefore, cellular organisation provides a broader and more universal basis for classification compared to xylem and phloem.

5. You find an unlabelled slide of a single-celled organism that has a well-defined nucleus and multiple cilia. Which group would it most likely belong to? Give reasons.
Answer: The organism most likely belongs to the kingdom Protista.
Reasons:

  • It is unicellular → characteristic of Protista
  • It has a well-defined nucleus → indicates it is eukaryotic
  • Presence of cilia → common in protozoans like Paramecium (Protista)

Thus, these features clearly place it in the kingdom Protista.

6. How does the diversity of organisms contribute to the balance and stability of an ecosystem?
Answer: Diversity of organisms plays an important role in maintaining ecosystem balance and stability:

  • Different organisms perform different roles (producers, consumers, decomposers).
  • It ensures proper flow of energy and cycling of nutrients.
  • Greater diversity increases the ability of ecosystems to withstand disturbances.
  • If one species is affected, others can help maintain balance.

Thus, biodiversity ensures the smooth functioning and long-term stability of ecosystems.

7. If all unicellular organisms were grouped into a single kingdom, what problems would arise?
Answer: Grouping all unicellular organisms into a single kingdom would create several problems:

  1. It would ignore important differences such as prokaryotic and eukaryotic cells.
  2. It would mix organisms with very different structures and functions.
  3. It would make classification less accurate and less useful.
  4. It would not reflect evolutionary relationships properly.

Therefore, such grouping would lead to confusion and reduce scientific clarity.

8. Viruses were studied in earlier classes. Why are they not placed in any of the five kingdoms? Give reasons.
Answer: Viruses are not placed in any of the five kingdoms because:

  1. They are not made of cells (lack cellular organisation).
  2. They can reproduce only inside a host cell.
  3. Outside a host, they behave like non-living particles.
  4. They do not carry out metabolic activities independently.

Thus, viruses show both living and non-living characteristics, so they are not included in the five-kingdom classification.

9. If you were asked to revise the five kingdom classification, would you create a separate category for viruses or keep them outside the system? Justify your answer and explain what this indicates about the evolving nature of scientific classification.
Answer: It is better to create a separate category for viruses.
Justification:

  • Viruses are unique as they show both living and non-living characteristics.
  • They do not fit into any of the existing kingdoms.
  • A separate category would help in better understanding and studying them.

This indicates that scientific classification is not fixed. It evolves with new discoveries and improved understanding. Scientists continuously revise classification systems to make them more accurate.

10. Viruses contain genetic material like living organisms but lack cellular organisation. Which features prevent them from fitting into the five kingdom system? What does this tell us about the limitations of classification systems?
Answer: Features that prevent viruses from fitting into the five-kingdom system:

  1. Lack of cellular structure
  2. No independent metabolism
  3. Dependence on host for reproduction
  4. Inactive outside host cells

This shows that classification systems have limitations. They are based on current knowledge and may not include all types of organisms. As new information is discovered, classification systems need to be updated.

11. Both pteridophytes and bryophytes lack flowers and seeds, yet they are placed in different groups. Explain this classification using their key features.
Answer:
Bryophytes:

  • Non-vascular plants (no xylem and phloem)
  • Small and simple structure
  • Depend on water for reproduction
  • Examples: moss, liverworts

Pteridophytes:

  • Vascular plants (have xylem and phloem)
  • More developed body with roots, stems and leaves
  • Less dependent on water compared to bryophytes
  • Examples: ferns

Conclusion: Although both lack flowers and seeds, the presence or absence of vascular tissues is the key factor that separates them into different groups.

12. In the classification hierarchy, which group—class or genus—has fewer members but more features in common? Explain your answer.
Answer: Genus has fewer members but more features in common.
Explanation: In the classification hierarchy, as we move from higher levels (like kingdom, phylum, class) to lower levels (like genus and species), the number of organisms decreases while similarities increase.

  • A class contains many different organisms with fewer common features.
  • A genus contains closely related organisms that share many similar characteristics.

Therefore, genus has fewer members but more features in common compared to class.

13. A scientist discovers a new organism with the characteristic features of locomotion and autotrophic nutrition. Which character(s) would help the scientist identify the organism belonging to Protista according to the five kingdom classification?
Answer: The key character that would help identify the organism as Protista is that it is unicellular and eukaryotic.
Explanation: Although locomotion and autotrophic nutrition are seen in some Protists (like Euglena), these features alone are not sufficient.
Important identifying features of Protista:

  1. Unicellular organisation
  2. Eukaryotic cell (well-defined nucleus)
  3. May show both autotrophic and heterotrophic nutrition
  4. Some possess locomotory structures like cilia or flagella

Thus, if the organism is unicellular and eukaryotic with these features, it can be classified under Protista.

14. A researcher identified a unicellular eukaryotic organism as fungi. What identification key would you suggest according to the five kingdom classification to keep a unicellular organism in the Kingdom Fungi?
Answer: The identification key to classify a unicellular organism under Kingdom Fungi is its mode of nutrition and cell structure.
Explanation: Even though most fungi are multicellular, some (like yeast) are unicellular. To identify it as fungi, the organism should have:

  1. Heterotrophic mode of nutrition (absorptive nutrition)
  2. Cell wall made of chitin
  3. Lack of chlorophyll (non-photosynthetic)
  4. Reproduction by budding or spores

Thus, if a unicellular organism shows these features, it can be classified under Kingdom Fungi.

15. During a long-term ecological study, students examined organisms collected from three different environments—a freshwater pond, damp soil near decaying logs and the digestive tract of animals. Instead of naming organisms directly, scientists recorded only structural, cellular and nutritional features as given in the table below. The students realised that some organisms fit neatly into Whittaker’s five kingdom classification, while others challenged the very basis of this classification. Based on the case study, answer the following questions:

(i) Identify one organism that clearly belongs to the Kingdom Fungi. State one observation that supports your answer.
(ii) Which organism would be placed in the Kingdom Monera? Mention one characteristic that justifies this placement.
(iii) Organisms R and Q are both eukaryotic, yet they are placed in different kingdoms. Analyse the criteria that separate them.
(iv) Explain why organism S cannot be classified using the mode of nutrition alone.
(v) Organism T does not fit into any of the five kingdoms. Which fundamental characteristic used in classification does it lack and what does this reveal about the limitations of classification systems?
(vi) If classification were based only on habitat, which organisms might be incorrectly grouped together? Explain the scientific consequences of such a classification.
(vii) Imagine scientists discover a new organism that is multicellular, eukaryotic, lacks chlorophyll and absorbs nutrients from a host externally. Should it be placed under fungi or animalia? Justify your reasoning using classification criteria.

Answer:
(i) Organism Q belongs to Kingdom Fungi.
Reason: It grows on dead organic matter (saprophytic nutrition), which is a key characteristic of fungi.

(ii) Organism P belongs to Kingdom Monera.
Reason: It has no true nucleus (prokaryotic cell), which is the main feature of Monera.

(iii) Although both are eukaryotic, they differ in:

  • Level of organisation: R is unicellular, Q is multicellular.
  • Mode of nutrition: R can be autotrophic (photosynthesis) and heterotrophic, Q is heterotrophic (absorptive).
  • Kingdom classification: R → Protista, Q → Fungi.

Thus, organisation and nutrition separate them into different kingdoms.

(iv) Organism S has:

  • Multicellular body
  • Well-differentiated tissues
  • Backbone (vertebrate)

These features show it belongs to Animalia. Mode of nutrition alone is not enough because many organisms share similar nutrition types. Structural features like presence of backbone and tissues are more important for classification.

(v) Organism T lacks cellular organisation.
Explanation: It is acellular (like a virus) and cannot carry out life processes independently. This reveals that classification systems have limitations because some entities (like viruses) do not fit into existing categories. Classification must evolve with new discoveries.

(vi) Organisms like P (bacteria), R (protist) and S (animal) might be grouped together if they share the same habitat (e.g., water).
Consequences:

  1. It would ignore structural and cellular differences
  2. It would mix unrelated organisms
  3. It would not reflect evolutionary relationships
  4. It would reduce accuracy and usefulness of classification

Thus, habitat alone is not a reliable basis for classification.

(vii) It should be placed under Kingdom Fungi.
Justification:

  • Multicellular and eukaryotic
  • Lacks chlorophyll
  • Shows absorptive nutrition (key feature of fungi)

Animals ingest food internally, whereas fungi absorb nutrients externally. Hence, this organism fits the characteristics of fungi.

Very Short Answer Type Questions

1. What is biodiversity?
Answer: Biodiversity is the immense variety of living organisms on Earth, from microscopic bacteria to giant trees, found across diverse habitats from the Himalayas to coral reefs.

2. What are endemic species? Give one example from India.
Answer: Endemic species are those found only in a specific region and nowhere else in the world. Examples from India include the Nilgiri tahr and Neelakurinji.

3. What is a biodiversity hotspot?
Answer: A biodiversity hotspot is a region that supports a large number of endemic species and has undergone significant habitat loss. Examples include India’s Western Ghats and the Himalayas.

4. What is biological classification?
Answer: Biological classification is the scientific system of grouping living organisms based on their similarities, differences, and evolutionary relationships to make their study systematic and organised.

5. Name the five kingdoms proposed by Robert H. Whittaker in 1969.
Answer: Whittaker’s Five Kingdom Classification includes Monera, Protista, Fungi, Plantae and Animalia, proposed in 1969 based on cell type, organisation and nutrition.

6. What is the key difference between Monera and Protista?
Answer: Monera contains unicellular prokaryotes (no true nucleus), such as bacteria and cyanobacteria. Protista contains unicellular eukaryotes (true nucleus), such as Amoeba, Paramecium and Euglena.

7. Why are fungi not placed in kingdom Plantae?
Answer: Fungi have heterotrophic nutrition (they absorb from dead organic matter) and their cell wall is made of chitin, not cellulose. They do not perform photosynthesis, unlike plants.

8. What are the five classes of Kingdom Plantae?
Answer: Kingdom Plantae is divided into Thallophyta (algae), Bryophyta (mosses), Pteridophyta (ferns), Gymnosperm (pines) and Angiosperm (flowering plants).

9. Why are bryophytes called the ‘amphibians of the plant kingdom’?
Answer: Bryophytes live on moist land but require water for reproduction – their male gametes must swim to fertilise the egg. This dual dependence makes them the plant kingdom’s amphibians.

10. What is a notochord and what is its significance in classifying animals?
Answer: A notochord is a flexible rod-shaped internal structure. Its presence or absence is a major criterion for classifying animals into Chordata (with notochord) and non-Chordata (without).

11. What is binomial nomenclature? Who introduced it?
Answer: Binomial nomenclature is a universal two-part scientific naming system using genus and species names in Latin. It was introduced by Carolus Linnaeus in the 18th century.

12. Write the scientific name of tiger and state the rules used.
Answer: The scientific name of tiger is Panthera tigris. The genus name (Panthera) begins with a capital letter; the species name (tigris) is in lowercase; both are written in italics.

13. What are fossils and how do they serve as evidence of evolution?
Answer: Fossils are preserved remains of past organisms found in rock layers. Older layers contain simpler forms; newer layers show complex forms, providing evidence of how life changed over millions of years.

14. Name the invertebrate phylum with the simplest body organisation and state its key feature.
Answer: Porifera (sponges) has the simplest body – multicellular but with no true tissues or organs. Water flows through numerous pores, bringing food and oxygen directly to individual cells.

15. What is the hierarchical sequence of classification from broadest to most specific?
Answer: The hierarchy from broadest to most specific is: Kingdom → Phylum → Class → Order → Family → Genus → Species. Each lower level shares more features in common.

Short Answer Type Questions

1. What criteria do scientists use to classify living organisms? List any four.
Answer: Scientists use: (1) Cell type – prokaryote or eukaryote; (2) Level of organisation – unicellular or multicellular; (3) Mode of nutrition – autotrophic or heterotrophic; (4) Cell structure – presence or absence of cell wall and its composition (chitin or cellulose). Additional criteria include ecological role, reproduction method and genetic similarity via DNA analysis.

2. Why was the two kingdom classification (Plantae and Animalia) insufficient?
Answer: The two kingdom system failed to accommodate organisms like Amoeba and Paramecium, which move like animals but are unicellular; bacteria, which are prokaryotic; and fungi, which are heterotrophic decomposers rather than photosynthetic plants. These could not be clearly placed in either Plantae or Animalia, necessitating additional kingdoms.

3. Explain the key advancement Pteridophyta shows over Bryophyta.
Answer: Pteridophytes (e.g., ferns) possess true roots, stems and leaves – unlike bryophytes which only have root-like rhizoids and lack true differentiation. More importantly, pteridophytes have vascular tissues – xylem (transports water) and phloem (transports food) – enabling them to grow taller and live on drier land, though they still need water for reproduction and do not produce seeds.

4. How do Gymnosperms represent a major advance in plant evolution over Pteridophytes?
Answer: Gymnosperms produced seeds, which protect the embryo and provide stored food for germination – a major advantage for land survival. More critically, gymnosperms do not require water for fertilisation (unlike pteridophytes), making reproduction possible in cold and dry environments. Their needle-like leaves also reduce water loss. Their only limitation over angiosperms is that their seeds are not enclosed in fruits.

5. What is the ecological role of fungi? Why would their absence be harmful?
Answer: Fungi are saprophytic decomposers – they break down dead organic matter (fallen leaves, dead organisms) into simpler substances, recycling nutrients back into the soil. Without fungi, dead organic matter would accumulate, soil fertility would decline severely and nutrient cycling in ecosystems would be disrupted. Some fungi (like Aspergillus and Penicillium) also produce medically important antibiotics.

6. Distinguish between Porifera and Cnidaria in terms of body organisation and feeding.
Answer: Porifera (sponges) are multicellular but lack true tissues – they are at the cellular level of organisation. They feed passively by drawing water through pores. Cnidaria (hydra, jellyfish) have tissue-level organisation with specialised cells. They feed actively using tentacles to capture prey. However, cnidarians have a single opening that serves for both food intake and waste removal, unlike more advanced animals.

7. Why are Arthropods the most successful invertebrate group on Earth?
Answer: Arthropods have a hard exoskeleton that provides protection, reduces water loss and supports powerful muscles – allowing them to survive in dry and exposed environments. Their segmented bodies with specialised segments, jointed appendages (allowing diverse movement) and organ-system-level organisation enable them to occupy land, water and air habitats. This combination makes them the most diverse and numerically abundant animal group on Earth.

8. What is the significance of binomial nomenclature in science?
Answer: Binomial nomenclature provides every organism a unique, universally recognised two-part scientific name regardless of language or region. A tiger is called bagh in Hindi, puli in Tamil, and tiger in English, but scientists worldwide recognise it as Panthera tigris. This prevents confusion in scientific communication, allows accurate identification and reveals evolutionary relationships – organisms sharing a genus name (e.g., Panthera tigris and Panthera leo) are closely related.

9. How does the classification of Kingdom Plantae show an evolutionary progression from water to land?
Answer: The five classes of Plantae show a clear evolutionary sequence in reducing water dependence: Thallophyta lives in water; Bryophyta colonised moist land but still needs water for reproduction and lacks vascular tissue; Pteridophyta developed vascular tissue (xylem/phloem) for land life but still needs water for reproduction; Gymnosperms produced seeds and freed fertilisation from water; Angiosperms developed flowers and enclosed seeds in fruits, becoming the most diverse and successful land plants.

10. Why did scientists add a separate kingdom for Fungi instead of keeping them in Plantae?
Answer: Though fungi do not move like animals, they cannot be placed in Plantae because they are heterotrophic (not autotrophic) – they absorb nutrients from dead or decaying matter rather than producing food through photosynthesis. Their cell wall is made of chitin (not cellulose like plant cells) and they reproduce mainly by spore formation. These fundamental differences in nutrition, biochemistry and reproduction warranted a separate kingdom.

Long Answer Type Questions

1. Trace the evolution of biological classification systems from Aristotle to Whittaker. Why did each system need to be revised?
Answer: Biological classification has been an evolving framework, continually refined as scientific tools and knowledge improved.

  • Aristotle (4th Century BCE) – Artificial System: Aristotle classified animals based on habitat (land, water, air) and external appearance. While a useful starting point, this system was flawed because it grouped unrelated organisms together simply because they shared a habitat. A fish and a whale, for instance, would be grouped together as “aquatic” despite being fundamentally different.
  • Carolus Linnaeus (1758) – Two Kingdom System: Linnaeus divided all living organisms into Plantae (non-moving, autotrophic) and Animalia (moving, heterotrophic). This was an improvement, but created problems for organisms like Amoeba and Paramecium – they move like animals but are single-celled and both were multicellular kingdoms. Bacteria and fungi also didn’t fit clearly.
  • Ernst Haeckel (1866) – Three Kingdom System: Haeckel added a third kingdom, Protista, for microscopic unicellular organisms. This solved the problem of Amoeba and Paramecium, but bacteria remained problematic – they were structurally very different from Amoeba even though both are unicellular.
  • Herbert F. Copeland (1938) – Four Kingdom System: When improved microscopes revealed that bacteria lack a true nucleus (prokaryote) while Amoeba has a true membrane-bound nucleus (eukaryote), bacteria were moved to a new kingdom called Monera. This gave: Monera, Protista, Plantae, Animalia.
  • Robert H. Whittaker (1969) – Five Kingdom System: Whittaker recognised that fungi, though non-moving like plants, are heterotrophic decomposers and have chitin cell walls, not cellulose. They obtain nutrients by absorption from dead matter – fundamentally different from photosynthetic plants. A fifth kingdom, Fungi, was created. This system – Monera, Protista, Fungi, Plantae, Animalia – remains the most widely used in school education.
  • Carl Woese (1977) – Three Domain System (Ready to Go Beyond): Genetic studies (DNA comparisons) revealed that even within prokaryotes, there are two fundamentally different groups – Bacteria and Archaea (which survive in extreme environments). Woese proposed a three domain system: Bacteria, Archaea, and Eukarya. This showed that microscopic life is far more diverse than previously understood and demonstrated how molecular genetics continues to refine classification beyond what morphology alone can reveal.

Conclusion: Each revision occurred because new tools (microscopes, staining techniques, genetic analysis) revealed previously invisible differences among organisms. This shows that classification is not fixed but an evolving framework – a reflection of how science progresses.

2. Describe the classification of Kingdom Plantae into five classes. Explain the evolutionary significance of this progression from Thallophyta to Angiosperm.
Answer: Kingdom Plantae includes all multicellular, autotrophic eukaryotes with cellulose cell walls that perform photosynthesis. It is divided into five classes that show a clear evolutionary sequence of increasing complexity and decreasing dependence on water.

  1. Thallophyta (Algae) – Primitive plants: The simplest plants, found mainly in water or very moist environments. They form a thallus – an undifferentiated body without distinct roots, stems or leaves. This simple structure allows direct exchange of gases and nutrients with surroundings, making them perfectly adapted to aquatic life. Examples: Spirogyra. Limitation: Cannot live on land.
  2. Bryophyta – First steps on land: Mosses and liverworts (e.g., Marchantia) represent the first plants to colonise moist land. They have root-like rhizoids (for anchorage and water absorption) and simple stem-like and leaf-like structures, but lack true vascular tissue (xylem and phloem). They are called the ‘amphibians of the plant kingdom’ because they live on moist land but still require water for their male gametes to swim and fertilise eggs. Limitation: Always need moisture; cannot grow tall.
  3. Pteridophyta – Adaptation to land with transport: Ferns represent a significant advance – they possess true roots, stems and leaves, and crucially, vascular tissues: xylem (transports water) and phloem (transports food). These allow efficient transport throughout the plant, enabling growth on drier land and greater height. However, pteridophytes still require water for reproduction (male gametes must swim) and do not produce seeds. Example: Fern. Limitation: Reproduction tied to water.
  4. Gymnosperm – Reproduction freed from water: Gymnosperms (e.g., pine, cycads) made the critical breakthrough of seed production, where the embryo is protected and provided stored food – enormously improving survival on land. More importantly, water is not required for fertilisation, as pollen is transferred through air. Their needle-like leaves reduce water loss, enabling survival in cold and dry environments. Limitation: Seeds are not enclosed in fruits – they are “naked” (gymnos = naked), exposed on cones, making dispersal less efficient.
  5. Angiosperm – Most successful land plants: Angiosperms (flowering plants) represent the peak of plant evolution. They produce flowers (which attract pollinators, increasing reproductive efficiency) and fruits (which enclose seeds and aid dispersal by wind, water, animals and birds). This combination allows angiosperms to occupy virtually every land environment. Examples: Gulmohar, rose, wheat, mango.

Evolutionary Significance: The progression from Thallophyta to Angiosperm reflects the story of plant life moving from complete dependence on water toward independence – developing vascular transport, seeds and finally flowers and fruits. Each structural innovation solved a specific survival challenge of land life, making plants progressively more diverse and widespread.

3. Describe the classification of Kingdom Animalia, distinguishing between invertebrates and vertebrates. Give the key features of any four invertebrate phyla.
Answer: Kingdom Animalia includes all multicellular, heterotrophic eukaryotes without cell walls. Animals exhibit locomotion, rapid response to stimuli, and coordinated behaviour. The primary criterion for classifying animals is the presence or absence of a notochord – a flexible rod-shaped internal support structure.

Major Division:

  • Non-Chordata (Invertebrates): Lack a notochord; include the vast majority of animal species.
  • Chordata: Possess a notochord at least once in their life. Chordata is further divided into Protochordata (primitive, with notochord but no backbone, e.g., Amphioxus) and Vertebrata (have a vertebral column or backbone).

Vertebrate Groups:
Vertebrates have a vertebral column that supports the body and protects vital organs. They are classified into five groups: Fish (aquatic, gills, scales), Amphibians (live in water and on land, e.g., frogs), Reptiles (land, dry scaly skin, internal fertilisation), Birds (feathers, hollow bones, warm-blooded) and Mammals (body hair, mammary glands, warm-blooded).

Key Features of Four Invertebrate Phyla:

  1. Porifera (Sponges): The simplest multicellular animals, at the cellular level of organisation – they have no true tissues or organs. Their bodies are filled with numerous pores through which water continuously flows, bringing food and oxygen directly to individual cells. They are non-motile and found in aquatic (mainly marine) environments. One kilogram of sponge can filter up to 24,000 litres of seawater per day.
  2. Cnidaria (Hydra, Jellyfish, Corals): Cnidarians show tissue-level organisation – specialised cells perform specific functions. They have tentacles to capture prey (unlike sponges that depend on water currents). However, a single opening serves both food intake and waste elimination. They live in fresh and marine water.
  3. Annelida (Earthworms, Leeches): Annelids represent a major organisational advance – organ system level, cylindrical bodies divided into segments. Segmentation allows greater flexibility and precise movement control. They possess a body cavity, muscles for locomotion and a nerve cord for control and coordination. Earthworms live in moist soil and play a vital role in soil health.
  4. Arthropoda (Insects, Crabs, Spiders): The most diverse and successful animal phylum. Arthropods have segmented bodies with specialised segments, jointed appendages (arthro = limbs), and a defining feature: a hard exoskeleton that provides protection, reduces water loss and supports powerful muscles. This exoskeleton allowed arthropods to conquer dry, exposed land environments. They show organ-system-level organisation and occupy land, water and air.
4. What is binomial nomenclature? Explain its rules, advantages and give four examples of scientific names with their common names.
Answer:
What is Binomial Nomenclature?
Binomial nomenclature is the universal, internationally accepted system of giving every known living organism a unique two-part scientific name. It was introduced by the Swedish botanist Carolus Linnaeus in the 18th century. The name is derived from or written in Latin (or a Latinised form), making it language-neutral and universally understood by scientists worldwide.

Why was it needed?
The same organism has different common names in different languages and regions. A tiger is called bagh in Hindi, puli in Tamil, tiger in English, and tigre in French. This creates confusion in scientific communication. A single, unique scientific name eliminates this confusion and allows scientists across the world to discuss the same organism precisely, regardless of their native language.

Rules of Binomial Nomenclature:

  1. The scientific name has exactly two parts – the Genus name (first) and the Species name (second).
  2. The Genus name begins with a capital letter; the species name is written entirely in lowercase.
  3. When printed, the scientific name is written in italics (e.g., Panthera tigris).
  4. When handwritten, both words are underlined separately.
  5. The name is written in Latin or a Latinised form.

Understanding Genus and Species:

  • The genus groups closely related species that share important common features. For example, Panthera tigris (tiger) and Panthera leo (lion) share the genus Panthera because they are both large roaring cats with similar skull structures.
  • The species name indicates a group of organisms that are similar and capable of interbreeding to produce fertile offspring.

Advantages of Binomial Nomenclature:

  • Provides a unique, globally recognised name for every organism.
  • Eliminates language-based confusion in scientific communication.
  • Reveals evolutionary relationships through shared genus names.
  • Allows scientists to identify, compare and study organisms accurately anywhere in the world.
  • New organisms can be named systematically within this framework.
5. What is biodiversity? Explain India’s importance as a biodiversity hotspot, the threats to biodiversity and why conservation is critical.
Answer:
What is Biodiversity?
Biodiversity refers to the immense variety of living organisms on Earth – from microscopic bacteria and algae invisible to the naked eye, to giant trees and complex animals – found across an extraordinary range of habitats, from snow-clad Himalayan peaks to tropical coral reefs. Every organism in this diversity plays a role in keeping ecosystems functioning: algae produce oxygen, fungi decompose dead matter and recycle nutrients, bees and birds pollinate plants and plants capture sunlight to feed nearly all other life.

India as a Biodiversity Hotspot:
India’s geography makes it one of the world’s most biologically rich nations. Its diverse landscapes – northern Himalayas, western deserts, northeastern rainforests, southern plateaus and long coastlines along both the Arabian Sea and the Bay of Bengal – create a wide range of habitats with distinct climates and soils, each supporting unique communities of species.
India is home to numerous endemic species — organisms found nowhere else on Earth – such as:

  • Nilgiri tahr (mountain goat of the Western Ghats)
  • Lion-tailed macaque (primate of the Western Ghats)
  • Nepenthes khasiana (pitcher plant of Northeast India)
  • Neelakurinji (flowering plant of the Nilgiri Hills)

Regions with high endemism and significant habitat loss are called biodiversity hotspots. India’s biodiversity hotspots include the Western Ghats, Indo-Burma region (including Northeast India), the Himalayas and Sundaland (including the Nicobar Islands). These areas are particularly critical for conservation.
India also has remarkable cultural traditions of biodiversity awareness – the Sangam Tinai classification of landscapes, protection of sacred groves and the Rigveda’s and Brihat Samhita’s classification of animals by habitat and ecological role. The 17th-century botanical compendium Hortus Malabaricus, compiled with the help of Indian herbalists, documented hundreds of plant species and their medicinal uses.

Threats to Biodiversity:
Today, human activities are rapidly eroding Earth’s biodiversity:

  • Deforestation destroys habitats and fragments ecosystems.
  • Pollution (air, water, soil) degrades habitats and poisons organisms.
  • Overuse of resources (overgrazing, overfishing, over-harvesting) depletes populations.
  • Climate change alters temperature, rainfall, and seasonal patterns, forcing species to shift ranges or face extinction.
  • Invasive species introduced by human activity can outcompete native species.

When one species disappears, others that depend on it – for food, pollination, seed dispersal or predator control – may also decline and eventually vanish. The extinction of even one species can cascade through an ecosystem. The Sangai deer of Manipur’s phumdis (floating grasslands of Loktak Lake), currently listed in the IUCN Red Data list, illustrates how habitat degeneration threatens endemic species.

Why Conservation is Critical:
Biodiversity conservation protects the ecological services all life depends on: oxygen production, water purification, nutrient cycling, crop pollination, climate regulation and disease control. Forests with rich biodiversity, like mangroves, protect coastlines from cyclones – as evidenced when mangrove diversity reduced destruction during Odisha’s 1999 super cyclone. The Western Ghats’ rich biodiversity acts as a biological barrier against tick-borne diseases like Kyasanur Forest Disease.

Classification science directly serves conservation – it helps identify species under threat of extinction, understand their ecological relationships and design targeted protection strategies. Without knowing what exists and how it is organised, conservation is impossible.