101. In the expression $S = CA^Z$, the symbol $A$ stands for
ⓐ. area
ⓑ. abundance
ⓒ. adaptation
ⓓ. altitude
Correct Answer: area
Explanation: The letter $A$ in the equation refers to area. As area increases, the value of $S$, or species richness, generally also increases. This is why ecologists use the relation to examine how biodiversity changes with the size of the region considered. The equation does not describe altitude or abundance directly.
102. Which statement about the ordinary species-area curve is most accurate?
ⓐ. It forms a straight line without any transformation.
ⓑ. It first decreases and then rises sharply.
ⓒ. It remains horizontal for small areas.
ⓓ. It resembles a rectangular hyperbola.
Correct Answer: It resembles a rectangular hyperbola.
Explanation: In its ordinary form, the species-area relation rises rapidly at first and then begins to level off. That shape resembles a rectangular hyperbola rather than a straight line. The pattern reflects the fact that each additional increase in area does not add species at the same rate forever. Early increases in area often capture many new species, but later increases add fewer.
103. When the species-area relationship is plotted on a logarithmic scale, it becomes
ⓐ. circular
ⓑ. parabolic
ⓒ. linear
ⓓ. discontinuous
Correct Answer: linear
Explanation: A logarithmic transformation converts the curved species-area relationship into a straight-line form. This makes it easier to compare slopes and analyze the relationship mathematically. The transformed equation is written as $\log S = \log C + Z \log A$. Linear form is especially useful for estimating the value of $Z$.
104. Which logarithmic equation correctly represents the species-area relationship?
ⓐ. $\log S = C + A + Z$
ⓑ. $\log S = \log C + Z \log A$
ⓒ. $\log A = \log C + S \log Z$
ⓓ. $\log S = \log A + C/Z$
Correct Answer: $\log S = \log C + Z \log A$
Explanation: The log-transformed form of the species-area equation is $\log S = \log C + Z \log A$. This equation shows that the relationship becomes linear on a log-log graph. The slope of that straight line is $Z$. The constant term is $\log C$, not $C$ itself in the simple untransformed sense.
105. In the logarithmic form of the species-area relationship, $Z$ represents the
ⓐ. slope or regression coefficient
ⓑ. total number of species
ⓒ. intercept on the $x$-axis
ⓓ. mean area sampled
Correct Answer: slope or regression coefficient
Explanation: In the log-transformed equation, $Z$ tells us how steeply species richness increases with area. A higher value of $Z$ means a steeper rise in richness with increasing area. This makes $Z$ a very important quantity in comparing species-area relationships across regions and scales. It does not represent the total number of species by itself.
106. The usual value of $Z$ for species-area relationships in smaller or regional studies is generally
ⓐ. $0.6$ to $1.2$
ⓑ. $1.5$ to $2.0$
ⓒ. $2.0$ to $3.0$
ⓓ. $0.1$ to $0.2$
Correct Answer: $0.1$ to $0.2$
Explanation: For many regional analyses, the slope value $Z$ commonly lies between $0.1$ and $0.2$. This indicates a moderate increase in species richness with increasing area. The value is important because it provides a standard range for many ordinary species-area comparisons. Much larger values are usually associated with very large geographic scales.
107. For very large areas such as entire continents, the value of $Z$ is generally
ⓐ. $0.01$ to $0.05$
ⓑ. $0.1$ to $0.2$
ⓒ. $1.5$ to $2.5$
ⓓ. $0.6$ to $1.2$
Correct Answer: $0.6$ to $1.2$
Explanation: On very large geographic scales, the slope becomes much steeper than in small regional studies. Values of $Z$ in such cases usually range from $0.6$ to $1.2$. This means species richness changes more sharply with area across very large spatial extents. Scale therefore matters greatly when interpreting the species-area relationship.
108. A steeper species-area slope for frugivorous birds and mammals in tropical forests, close to 1.15, mainly indicates
ⓐ. lower biodiversity in tropical forests
ⓑ. a stronger increase in species richness with increasing area
ⓒ. complete independence between species richness and area
ⓓ. that area has no ecological significance
Correct Answer: a stronger increase in species richness with increasing area
Explanation: A larger value of $Z$ means the line on the log-log plot is steeper. That indicates species richness responds more strongly to increases in area. For frugivorous birds and mammals in tropical forests, a value around 1.15 shows a particularly steep relationship. It does not mean area is irrelevant; it means area matters greatly for richness in that case.
109. Which statement about the value of $Z$ in the species-area relationship is most accurate?
ⓐ. A higher $Z$ always means fewer species are present in the region.
ⓑ. A higher $Z$ means species richness becomes independent of area.
ⓒ. A higher $Z$ always proves that the region has the world’s highest biodiversity.
ⓓ. A higher $Z$ indicates a steeper increase in species richness with increasing area.
Correct Answer: A higher $Z$ indicates a steeper increase in species richness with increasing area.
Explanation: The value of $Z$ reflects the slope of the species-area relationship on a log-log plot. When $Z$ is larger, species richness rises more sharply as area increases. This does not automatically mean the region has the greatest total number of species. It specifically describes how strongly richness changes with area.
110. In the logarithmic form $\log S = \log C + Z \log A$, the term $\log C$ represents the
ⓐ. intercept
ⓑ. area sampled
ⓒ. species count
ⓓ. slope value
Correct Answer: intercept
Explanation: In the straight-line form of the equation, $\log C$ behaves as the intercept. The slope of the line is given by $Z$, not by $\log C$. This is why the transformed equation is useful for graph-based interpretation. It separates the steepness of the relationship from its intercept term.
111. The species-area relationship has been found to apply broadly across which of the following groups?
ⓐ. Only mammals and reptiles
ⓑ. Only insects and fungi
ⓒ. Angiosperms, birds, bats, and freshwater fishes
ⓓ. Mosses, algae, and gymnosperms alone
Correct Answer: Angiosperms, birds, bats, and freshwater fishes
Explanation: The species-area relationship is not restricted to one narrow taxonomic group. It has been shown to hold broadly across angiosperms, birds, bats, and freshwater fishes. This wide applicability is one reason it is treated as a general ecological pattern. The exact slope may differ, but the overall relationship remains useful across these groups.
112. Two regions are compared on a log-log species-area graph. Region X has a higher $Z$ value than Region Y. Which conclusion is most appropriate?
ⓐ. Region X must have a smaller area than Region Y.
ⓑ. Species richness in Region X changes more sharply with area than in Region Y.
ⓒ. Region Y must contain more endemic species than Region X.
ⓓ. Species richness in both regions is unaffected by changes in area.
Correct Answer: Species richness in Region X changes more sharply with area than in Region Y.
Explanation: A larger $Z$ means a steeper slope on the log-log plot. That means the number of species responds more strongly to increasing area. The value does not by itself reveal endemism or the absolute area of the region. It specifically describes the rate at which richness changes with area.
113. Fill in the blank in the most accurate way:
On an ordinary scale, the species-area relationship generally appears as a ______.
ⓐ. rectangular hyperbola
ⓑ. perfect circle
ⓒ. vertical line
ⓓ. declining straight line
Correct Answer: rectangular hyperbola
Explanation: When species richness is plotted directly against area, the curve rises quickly at first and then gradually flattens. That general shape resembles a rectangular hyperbola. The curve shows that larger areas continue to add species, but not at the same rate indefinitely. A log transformation converts this curved pattern into a straight line.
114. Which statement best distinguishes the species-area relationship from the latitudinal gradient in biodiversity?
ⓐ. Species-area relationship compares tropical and polar regions, whereas latitudinal gradient compares genes within a species.
ⓑ. Species-area relationship deals only with ecosystem diversity, whereas latitudinal gradient deals only with plant diversity.
ⓒ. Species-area relationship explains how diversity changes with time, whereas latitudinal gradient explains how diversity changes with rainfall.
ⓓ. Species-area relationship relates richness to area, whereas latitudinal gradient relates richness to distance from the equator.
Correct Answer: Species-area relationship relates richness to area, whereas latitudinal gradient relates richness to distance from the equator.
Explanation: These are two different biodiversity patterns. The species-area relationship examines how richness changes as the size of the area changes. The latitudinal gradient examines how richness changes from the equator toward the poles. Confusing the two leads to incorrect interpretation of ecological data.
115. A straight-line graph is obtained when species richness and area are both plotted after logarithmic transformation. This mainly helps in
ⓐ. removing all ecological variation from the data
ⓑ. estimating the slope of the species-area relationship more clearly
ⓒ. proving that all regions contain equal biodiversity
ⓓ. showing that species richness decreases with area
Correct Answer: estimating the slope of the species-area relationship more clearly
Explanation: Logarithmic transformation makes the species-area relation easier to analyze because the curved pattern becomes linear. Once the line is straight, the slope can be measured and compared more clearly. That slope is represented by $Z$. This approach is especially useful when comparing different groups or spatial scales.
116. Which statement is correct for very large areas such as continents?
ⓐ. The value of $Z$ always becomes zero.
ⓑ. The value of $Z$ remains fixed at $0.1$ in all cases.
ⓒ. The value of $Z$ is usually much higher than in small regional studies.
ⓓ. The value of $Z$ becomes negative because species are lost.
Correct Answer: The value of $Z$ is usually much higher than in small regional studies.
Explanation: On continental or similarly large scales, the slope of the species-area relationship becomes steeper. This is why $Z$ values commonly rise from the smaller regional range of $0.1$ to $0.2$ up to about $0.6$ to $1.2$. The increase reflects stronger richness differences across broad geographic extents. Scale therefore has a major effect on how the relationship appears.
117. If the area sampled increases and $Z$ is positive, the species-area equation predicts that species richness will
ⓐ. increase
ⓑ. decrease
ⓒ. remain constant
ⓓ. become unrelated to area
Correct Answer: increase
Explanation: In the equation $S = CA^Z$, a positive value of $Z$ means that richness grows as area becomes larger. This reflects the general ecological pattern that larger areas tend to contain more species. The increase may not be linear on an ordinary plot, but the direction is still upward. A positive slope therefore indicates a positive area-richness relationship.
118. Which statement about a $Z$ value of about 1.15 for frugivorous birds and mammals in tropical forests is most accurate?
ⓐ. It shows that frugivorous animals are absent from smaller areas.
ⓑ. It means all tropical forests have identical species richness.
ⓒ. It proves that frugivores are the most abundant organisms on Earth.
ⓓ. It indicates an especially steep species-area relationship for those groups.
Correct Answer: It indicates an especially steep species-area relationship for those groups.
Explanation: A $Z$ value near 1.15 is much steeper than the ordinary regional range. This means richness in those frugivorous birds and mammals changes strongly with area. The value does not directly describe abundance or global dominance. It only tells us that the area-richness relation is particularly steep for those organisms in that context.
119. Which range would be most appropriate for $Z$ in a study carried out across very large geographic regions?
ⓐ. $0.01$ to $0.05$
ⓑ. $0.1$ to $0.2$
ⓒ. $0.6$ to $1.2$
ⓓ. $1.5$ to $2.0$
Correct Answer: $0.6$ to $1.2$
Explanation: Very large spatial scales usually produce steeper species-area slopes. For such cases, the value of $Z$ commonly lies between $0.6$ and $1.2$. This is distinctly higher than the usual regional range. Matching the slope range to the spatial scale is important in biodiversity interpretation.
120. Assertion: A higher value of $Z$ does not automatically mean that a region has more species overall.
Reason: $Z$ describes the steepness of the relationship between area and species richness, not the total richness by itself.
ⓐ. Both Assertion and Reason are false.
ⓑ. Both Assertion and Reason are true, and the Reason correctly explains the Assertion.
ⓒ. Assertion is true, but Reason is false.
ⓓ. Assertion is false, but Reason is true.
Correct Answer: Both Assertion and Reason are true, and the Reason correctly explains the Assertion.
Explanation: The value of $Z$ tells us how rapidly species richness changes with area. It does not by itself provide the total species count of a region. Two regions may differ in total richness for reasons beyond slope alone. The reason therefore correctly explains why a higher $Z$ should not be misread as simply meaning “more species.”