1. Which statement best defines genetics?
ⓐ. It is the branch of biology that deals with inheritance and variation.
ⓑ. It is the branch of biology that studies only cell division in plants.
ⓒ. It is the branch of biology that explains only body structure and function.
ⓓ. It is the branch of biology that deals only with classification of organisms.
Correct Answer: It is the branch of biology that deals with inheritance and variation.
Explanation: Genetics is concerned with how characters are transmitted from parents to offspring and why offspring are not exactly identical to one another. It therefore includes both continuity and difference. The study is not limited to classification, anatomy, or cell division alone. That is why inheritance and variation together form the core of genetics.
2. In biology, inheritance refers to
ⓐ. sudden changes in chromosome number
ⓑ. differences produced only by the environment
ⓒ. transmission of characters from parents to offspring
ⓓ. appearance of new species over long periods
Correct Answer: transmission of characters from parents to offspring
Explanation: Inheritance is the passing of traits from one generation to the next. It explains why offspring often resemble their parents in several features. The term does not mainly describe environmental effects, mutation alone, or long-term evolution. Its central idea is parental transmission of characters.
3. Which option best describes variation?
ⓐ. identical transmission of all parental traits to every offspring
ⓑ. differences seen among offspring and between offspring and parents
ⓒ. exchange of chromosomes during gamete formation only
ⓓ. inheritance of one character without any change
Correct Answer: differences seen among offspring and between offspring and parents
Explanation: Variation means the differences that appear among individuals of the same generation or between parents and their progeny. These differences may involve visible or less obvious characters. Without variation, all offspring would be exact copies, which is not what is observed in nature. Variation is therefore a basic feature of living populations.
4. Which statement correctly links heredity and variation?
ⓐ. Heredity prevents all variation from appearing in offspring.
ⓑ. Variation and heredity are unrelated ideas in biology.
ⓒ. Heredity means only resemblance, whereas variation means only disease.
ⓓ. Heredity ensures continuity of characters, while variation introduces differences.
Correct Answer: Heredity ensures continuity of characters, while variation introduces differences.
Explanation: Living organisms show both similarity and difference across generations. Heredity preserves continuity by transmitting traits, while variation prevents complete sameness among offspring. These two ideas work together rather than opposing each other completely. This is why offspring resemble their parents but are not exact duplicates.
5. A child has the same blood group as one parent but differs from both parents in height. Which option best interprets this?
ⓐ. Both observations represent variation only.
ⓑ. Same blood group shows inheritance, while difference in height shows variation.
ⓒ. Same blood group shows variation, while difference in height shows inheritance.
ⓓ. Neither observation is related to genetics.
Correct Answer: Same blood group shows inheritance, while difference in height shows variation.
Explanation: Resemblance in a character between parent and offspring reflects inheritance. A difference in another character reflects variation. Both can be seen together in the same individual because heredity and variation operate side by side. This combined pattern is one of the basic observations that genetics seeks to explain.
6. Which of the following is the most accurate statement about offspring in sexually reproducing organisms?
ⓐ. They are always completely different from both parents.
ⓑ. They are always exact copies of one parent.
ⓒ. They usually show both resemblance to parents and some differences from them.
ⓓ. They cannot inherit any trait unless it is visible externally.
Correct Answer: They usually show both resemblance to parents and some differences from them.
Explanation: Sexual reproduction produces offspring that inherit characters from their parents, so resemblance is expected. At the same time, offspring are not identical in all respects, so variation is also seen. This dual pattern is a fundamental starting point in genetics. External appearance alone is not the only basis of inheritance.
7. Which question is most directly addressed by genetics?
ⓐ. How rocks are formed inside Earth
ⓑ. How energy flows through an ecosystem
ⓒ. How traits are transmitted and why individuals differ
ⓓ. How muscles contract during movement
Correct Answer: How traits are transmitted and why individuals differ
Explanation: Genetics asks how characters pass from parents to offspring and why offspring are not exactly alike. It therefore deals with transmission and variation together. Questions about geology, ecology, or muscle physiology belong mainly to other fields. The central focus here is biological inheritance and difference.
8. Which statement about variation is correct?
ⓐ. Variation means failure of inheritance.
ⓑ. Variation is seen only in harmful traits.
ⓒ. Variation occurs only when parents belong to different species.
ⓓ. Variation makes progeny differ from one another and from their parents.
Correct Answer: Variation makes progeny differ from one another and from their parents.
Explanation: Variation does not mean inheritance has failed. It simply means that differences exist among offspring and between offspring and parents. These differences may be small or large and are a normal feature of living organisms. Because of variation, a group of progeny is not perfectly identical.
9. Which option correctly distinguishes genetics from heredity?
ⓐ. Genetics is the study of inheritance and variation, whereas heredity refers to transmission of traits.
ⓑ. Genetics and heredity are exactly identical terms in all contexts.
ⓒ. Genetics refers only to variation, whereas heredity refers only to mutation.
ⓓ. Genetics is a process in organisms, whereas heredity is a branch of chemistry.
Correct Answer: Genetics is the study of inheritance and variation, whereas heredity refers to transmission of traits.
Explanation: Genetics is a branch of biology, so it is a field of study. Heredity is one of the core biological phenomena studied within that field and refers to the passing of characters from parents to offspring. The two terms are related, but they are not interchangeable. One names the discipline, and the other names a central process.
10. Which statement is incorrect?
ⓐ. Inheritance explains parental resemblance in offspring.
ⓑ. Variation explains differences among progeny.
ⓒ. Genetics includes the study of both inheritance and variation.
ⓓ. Variation means all offspring receive exactly the same set of characters.
Correct Answer: Variation means all offspring receive exactly the same set of characters.
Explanation: Variation refers to differences, not exact sameness. If all offspring received exactly the same set of characters and expressed them identically, variation would not be observed. Inheritance explains resemblance, while variation explains diversity within the progeny. Together they form the basic framework of genetics.
11. Which statement best explains why heredity alone does not fully describe the relationship between parents and offspring?
ⓐ. Offspring show parental resemblance, but they also differ from parents in some characters.
ⓑ. Heredity acts only in asexual reproduction and not in sexual reproduction.
ⓒ. Offspring inherit only acquired characters from their parents.
ⓓ. Heredity affects visible traits only and not hidden traits.
Correct Answer: Offspring show parental resemblance, but they also differ from parents in some characters.
Explanation: Biological inheritance explains continuity of characters across generations, but it does not eliminate differences among individuals. Offspring often resemble their parents in many traits, yet they are not exact copies. That additional element is variation. Both heredity and variation are therefore needed to describe real patterns in living organisms.
12. Which pair is correctly matched?
ⓐ. Genetics — study of body functions only
ⓑ. Inheritance — sudden change in DNA sequence
ⓒ. Variation — transmission of characters to progeny
ⓓ. Heredity — continuity of characters across generations
Correct Answer: Heredity — continuity of characters across generations
Explanation: Heredity refers to the continuity of traits from one generation to the next. Genetics is the branch of biology that studies inheritance and variation together, not body functions alone. Variation means differences, not continuity, and inheritance is not the same as mutation. The correct match therefore links heredity with continuity across generations.
13. Fill in the blank in the most accurate way:
The branch of biology that studies how traits are passed on and how offspring differ from one another is called ______.
ⓐ. ecology
ⓑ. genetics
ⓒ. anatomy
ⓓ. physiology
Correct Answer: genetics
Explanation: Genetics is the study of inheritance and variation. It asks why offspring resemble their parents and why they also show differences. Ecology, anatomy, and physiology deal with other biological themes. The focus here is specifically on transmission of characters and the origin of differences.
14. Two siblings resemble their parents in many features, yet they are not identical to each other. Which option best interprets this observation?
ⓐ. It shows only heredity and no variation.
ⓑ. It shows only variation and no inheritance.
ⓒ. It shows both inheritance and variation together.
ⓓ. It shows that traits are not transmitted across generations.
Correct Answer: It shows both inheritance and variation together.
Explanation: Resemblance to parents points to inheritance, while differences between siblings point to variation. These two ideas are not contradictory. They operate together in normal reproduction. This is why members of the same family can share many traits without being exactly alike.
15. Which statement about variation is most appropriate?
ⓐ. It is limited to changes caused by disease.
ⓑ. It is a normal feature that contributes to differences among individuals.
ⓒ. It means that offspring do not inherit any trait from parents.
ⓓ. It occurs only when organisms belong to different species.
Correct Answer: It is a normal feature that contributes to differences among individuals.
Explanation: Variation is a regular and expected feature of living populations. It does not refer only to disease or abnormality. Organisms can inherit many parental traits and still differ from one another in some respects. Those differences help explain diversity within a species.
16. Gregor Mendel is regarded as the foundational figure in genetics mainly because he
ⓐ. discovered the structure of DNA in pea plants
ⓑ. proposed the first cell theory of heredity
ⓒ. explained how acquired characters are inherited
ⓓ. established basic laws of inheritance through breeding experiments
Correct Answer: established basic laws of inheritance through breeding experiments
Explanation: Mendel performed carefully planned crossing experiments and drew clear conclusions about the inheritance of characters. His work laid the foundation for classical genetics. He did not discover DNA structure or frame the cell theory. The importance of his contribution lies in the principles of inheritance he derived from experiments.
17. Which feature made garden pea especially suitable for Mendel’s experiments?
ⓐ. It had no visible differences among varieties.
ⓑ. It produced only one generation over many years.
ⓒ. It had sharply contrasting traits and could be easily cross-pollinated.
ⓓ. It could reproduce only by artificial methods in the laboratory.
Correct Answer: It had sharply contrasting traits and could be easily cross-pollinated.
Explanation: Mendel needed an organism with clear, observable alternatives such as tall versus dwarf and round versus wrinkled. Garden pea provided such contrasting traits. It is naturally self-pollinating, yet controlled cross-pollination can also be done easily. These features made it ideal for studying inheritance in a precise way.
18. Which property of pea plants helped Mendel maintain pure lines before making crosses?
ⓐ. They are naturally self-pollinating.
ⓑ. They produce spores instead of seeds.
ⓒ. They show no variation in any trait.
ⓓ. They have a very large chromosome number.
Correct Answer: They are naturally self-pollinating.
Explanation: Natural self-pollination allows a pea plant line to maintain the same traits generation after generation. This helps produce true-breeding or pure lines. Such lines are essential when studying the effect of crossing parents with contrasting characters. A stable starting material makes the results easier to interpret.
19. Why was a short life cycle advantageous in Mendel’s experimental organism?
ⓐ. It prevented the expression of recessive traits.
ⓑ. It allowed many generations to be studied within a manageable time.
ⓒ. It eliminated the need for controlled pollination.
ⓓ. It ensured that all offspring had identical genotypes.
Correct Answer: It allowed many generations to be studied within a manageable time.
Explanation: A short life cycle means the next generation appears quickly. This makes it possible to observe parental, F1, and later generations without waiting for long periods. Mendel’s conclusions depended on repeated observations across generations. An organism that reproduces quickly is therefore very useful for inheritance studies.
20. Which statement correctly describes the usefulness of true-breeding pea plants in genetic experiments?
ⓐ. They always produce heterozygous offspring on selfing.
ⓑ. They prevent any recessive character from appearing in later generations.
ⓒ. They provide parents with stable and predictable contrasting traits.
ⓓ. They make cross-pollination impossible in flowering plants.
Correct Answer: They provide parents with stable and predictable contrasting traits.
Explanation: True-breeding plants consistently produce offspring with the same trait when selfed. This stability helps the experimenter begin with clearly defined parental types. When such parents are crossed, the results can be linked more confidently to the inherited factors being studied. Predictable parent lines are therefore central to good genetic analysis.