401. A biologist compares two forest regions: Region X has higher species richness, while Region Y has lower richness but much higher endemism and faster habitat destruction. Which region would usually deserve higher immediate conservation priority under hotspot logic?
ⓐ. Region X, because total species count is always the only deciding factor
ⓑ. Both equally, because endemism does not affect extinction risk
ⓒ. Region Y, because uniqueness under severe threat raises irreplaceable loss risk
ⓓ. Neither, because hotspot logic applies only to countries, not regions
Correct Answer: Region Y, because uniqueness under severe threat raises irreplaceable loss risk
Explanation: Hotspot logic gives special weight to endemic species because they are restricted to a particular region. If such a region is also under rapid habitat loss, extinction there may mean global loss rather than local decline alone. Total richness is important, but it is not the only criterion. Threat plus irreplaceability often drives stronger priority.
402. Which statement best explains why protecting a national park can conserve more biodiversity than storing seeds from a few plant species alone?
ⓐ. A national park preserves species, habitats, and ecological interactions together, whereas seed storage preserves only a limited component
ⓑ. Seed storage is not useful in conservation under any condition
ⓒ. National parks are ex situ, while seed storage is in situ
ⓓ. Seed banks conserve animal behaviour less effectively than coral reefs
Correct Answer: A national park preserves species, habitats, and ecological interactions together, whereas seed storage preserves only a limited component
Explanation: A national park is an in situ conservation measure, so it protects living organisms in their natural setting. That includes interactions such as pollination, dispersal, predation, and nutrient cycling. Seed storage is valuable, but it captures only plant genetic material and not the whole ecosystem. This makes habitat protection broader in ecological scope.
403. A community contains many species, yet one fig tree species supports numerous birds, bats, and insects through much of the year. If that fig species disappears, the likely concept illustrated is
ⓐ. latitudinal gradient
ⓑ. ecological succession
ⓒ. species-area transformation
ⓓ. key-species effect
Correct Answer: key-species effect
Explanation: A key species has an ecological influence that is disproportionately large relative to its abundance or number. If many other organisms depend heavily on one species for food or shelter, losing it can disrupt the system strongly. This is more specific than the general rivet popper idea. The example focuses on one especially important species rather than gradual equal losses.
404. Which option most clearly shows a direct-use argument and an indirect-use argument for conservation in the correct order?
ⓐ. Pollination by bees; medicinal alkaloids from plants
ⓑ. Medicinal compounds from plants; pollination service in crop systems
ⓒ. Intrinsic value of species; atmospheric oxygen regulation
ⓓ. Cultural forest protection; tissue culture propagation
Correct Answer: Medicinal compounds from plants; pollination service in crop systems
Explanation: Direct-use value refers to goods humans can obtain more immediately, such as plant-derived medicines. Indirect-use value refers to ecosystem services that support life and economy, such as pollination. The order matters in this question, and option B follows it correctly. This separates narrowly utilitarian reasoning from broadly utilitarian reasoning.
405. Which statement is most accurate about why tropical forests remain central to biodiversity estimation challenges?
ⓐ. They are often highly diverse yet incompletely inventoried, so many species may remain undescribed
ⓑ. They contain fewer species than temperate ecosystems but are easier to classify
ⓒ. Their biodiversity is fully known, so uncertainty comes only from polar regions
ⓓ. They contain no prokaryotic diversity worth estimating
Correct Answer: They are often highly diverse yet incompletely inventoried, so many species may remain undescribed
Explanation: Tropical forests combine extraordinary richness with limited taxonomic coverage in many places. That means they likely contain many undescribed species across plants, animals, fungi, and microbes. Because of this, global biodiversity estimates remain uncertain. The challenge is not lack of life, but incomplete scientific documentation.
406. A lake loses several native fish species after introduction of a foreign predator, but one remaining native fish survives because it can use habitats and resources differently from the others. This most strongly highlights
ⓐ. that invasive species never affect adaptable natives
ⓑ. that species-area slope becomes zero after invasion
ⓒ. that ecological differences among species can influence survival under disturbance
ⓓ. that co-extinction can occur only in terrestrial ecosystems
Correct Answer: that ecological differences among species can influence survival under disturbance
Explanation: Species do not all respond identically to stress or invasion. Differences in habitat use, diet, or behaviour can make some species more resilient than others. This is one reason biodiversity and ecological roles matter in ecosystem responses. The question emphasizes functional difference rather than simple species count.
407. Which pairing is correctly matched?
ⓐ. Sacred grove — ex situ protection of rare plants outside natural habitat
ⓑ. Botanical garden — ex situ conservation of plants under managed conditions
ⓒ. Hotspot — legal category identical to wildlife sanctuary
ⓓ. Biosphere reserve — cryostorage of gametes and seeds
Correct Answer: Botanical garden — ex situ conservation of plants under managed conditions
Explanation: Botanical gardens conserve plant species outside their natural habitats, making them ex situ institutions. Sacred groves are in situ cultural refuges, hotspots are priority regions rather than legal categories identical to sanctuaries, and biosphere reserves are habitat-based protected areas. Correct matching depends on understanding both conservation type and institutional role. Only option B aligns fully.
408. Why can a region with high ecological diversity but only moderate local species richness still be conservation-worthy?
ⓐ. Ecological diversity replaces the need to consider species entirely
ⓑ. Species richness and ecosystem variety always mean the same thing
ⓒ. Conservation value depends only on how many protected areas already exist
ⓓ. Variety among ecosystems can preserve many distinct ecological settings, processes, and future biodiversity opportunities
Correct Answer: Variety among ecosystems can preserve many distinct ecological settings, processes, and future biodiversity opportunities
Explanation: Ecological diversity refers to the variety of habitats, communities, and ecosystems in a region. Even if no single habitat is the richest in species, the region as a whole may support very different life forms across multiple ecosystems. This broadens its conservation importance. Preserving ecosystem variety can therefore protect both present and future biodiversity potential.
409. Assertion: A species-rich community may remain functioning after losing a few species, yet still become progressively less secure over time.
Reason: Ecosystems can be buffered by diversity, but repeated species losses may erode functions gradually even before collapse occurs.
ⓐ. 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.
ⓓ. Both Assertion and Reason are false.
Correct Answer: Both Assertion and Reason are true, and the Reason correctly explains the Assertion.
Explanation: This captures the logic behind gradual weakening in ecosystems. Diversity can provide some functional buffering, so one loss may not cause immediate failure. However, repeated losses can reduce resilience, productivity, and reliability step by step. The reason therefore explains the assertion well.
410. Which observation would most strongly support the idea that biodiversity loss affects ecosystem functioning rather than merely reducing species counts?
ⓐ. After diversity declines, the ecosystem shows wider fluctuations in productivity and pest cycles
ⓑ. A checklist of species becomes shorter by two names
ⓒ. One rare plant becomes difficult to photograph
ⓓ. A protected area boundary is redrawn on a map
Correct Answer: After diversity declines, the ecosystem shows wider fluctuations in productivity and pest cycles
Explanation: Functional impact is shown when ecological processes become less stable or less efficient. Fluctuations in productivity and pest cycles indicate that the ecosystem is operating differently, not just containing fewer species. This links biodiversity directly with ecosystem performance. It is stronger evidence than a simple reduction in the species list alone.
411. Which statement best explains why a seed bank and tissue culture are complementary rather than identical ex situ methods?
ⓐ. Seed banks store reproductive material, while tissue culture can multiply living plant material under controlled conditions
ⓑ. Seed banks conserve only animals, while tissue culture conserves only microbes
ⓒ. Tissue culture is in situ, while seed banking is ex situ
ⓓ. Both methods preserve complete ecosystem interactions equally well
Correct Answer: Seed banks store reproductive material, while tissue culture can multiply living plant material under controlled conditions
Explanation: Both are ex situ methods, but they serve different practical roles. Seed banks are excellent for long-term storage of reproductive material, whereas tissue culture helps propagate plants rapidly from small tissue samples. This makes them useful in different stages of conservation and restoration. Their value increases when used together rather than as substitutes.
412. A biologist argues that protecting only currently useful species is too narrow because unknown species may later prove important. This argument is strongest against the assumption that
ⓐ. biodiversity has ethical value
ⓑ. direct utility can extend into future discovery through bioprospecting
ⓒ. only already-known human uses justify conserving life
ⓓ. ecosystem services matter for conservation
Correct Answer: only already-known human uses justify conserving life
Explanation: The argument points out that present usefulness is not the full measure of value. Species not yet known to be useful may later yield medicines, materials, or other benefits. This expands conservation reasoning even within a utilitarian framework. It directly challenges the idea that only currently recognized uses matter.
413. Which situation best illustrates that a high species count alone does not guarantee strong conservation security?
ⓐ. A rich habitat continues to lose endemic species rapidly because destruction is intense
ⓑ. A protected forest contains many ecosystems and remains stable
ⓒ. A seed bank stores multiple crop varieties
ⓓ. A sacred grove shelters native vegetation over time
Correct Answer: A rich habitat continues to lose endemic species rapidly because destruction is intense
Explanation: High species richness can coexist with high threat. If destruction is rapid, biodiversity may still be highly insecure despite large species numbers. This is exactly why conservation must consider risk and irreplaceability, not just richness. A large count does not automatically mean a safe future.
414. Which statement is most accurate about the relationship between described biodiversity and actual biodiversity?
ⓐ. Actual biodiversity must be lower because scientists exaggerate species estimates
ⓑ. Described biodiversity includes all species except insects
ⓒ. The two are identical once major plant groups are known
ⓓ. Actual biodiversity is likely higher because many species remain undescribed
Correct Answer: Actual biodiversity is likely higher because many species remain undescribed
Explanation: Described biodiversity counts only those species formally recorded by science. Actual biodiversity includes both known and still-undiscovered species. Because many taxa and regions remain incompletely explored, actual diversity is expected to be higher. This gap is central to biodiversity estimation.
415. Which option best separates habitat loss from over-exploitation in terms of immediate mechanism?
ⓐ. Habitat loss directly removes or degrades living space, whereas over-exploitation removes organisms faster than populations can recover
ⓑ. Habitat loss affects only plants, whereas over-exploitation affects only animals
ⓒ. Habitat loss is always natural, whereas over-exploitation is always artificial
ⓓ. Habitat loss causes co-extinction instantly, whereas over-exploitation cannot cause extinction
Correct Answer: Habitat loss directly removes or degrades living space, whereas over-exploitation removes organisms faster than populations can recover
Explanation: The two processes differ in how they act. Habitat loss changes or destroys the environment species depend on, while over-exploitation reduces population size through excessive harvesting or use. Both can lead to extinction, but by different immediate routes. Understanding the mechanism is important for choosing the right conservation response.
416. A region contains several ecosystem types and many species, but conservationists especially value one wetland because it supports seasonal migrants, local fish breeding, and flood buffering together. This example mainly highlights
ⓐ. only genetic diversity
ⓑ. how ecological value may include both biodiversity support and broader ecosystem function
ⓒ. that species richness alone determines all conservation priorities
ⓓ. that wetlands are always hotspots
Correct Answer: how ecological value may include both biodiversity support and broader ecosystem function
Explanation: The wetland matters not only because species occur there, but also because it performs important ecological functions. Breeding support, migration support, and flood buffering are broader ecosystem roles. This shows that conservation decisions often integrate biodiversity and ecosystem service reasoning. The value is therefore functional as well as biological.
417. Assertion: Some biodiversity-rich regions deserve urgent conservation even when they are not the largest habitats in size.
Reason: Conservation priority depends on threat and irreplaceability, not only on sheer area.
ⓐ. Assertion is false, but Reason is true.
ⓑ. Both Assertion and Reason are false.
ⓒ. Assertion is true, but Reason is false.
ⓓ. Both Assertion and Reason are true, and the Reason correctly explains the Assertion.
Correct Answer: Both Assertion and Reason are true, and the Reason correctly explains the Assertion.
Explanation: Large area can be important, but it is not the only basis for conservation priority. Small regions containing endemic species under strong threat may be globally irreplaceable. That is why hotspot-based thinking emphasizes uniqueness and danger, not size alone. The reason therefore explains the assertion directly.
418. Which scenario most clearly shows why co-extinction can magnify biodiversity loss beyond the initially affected species?
ⓐ. Loss of one plant causes disappearance of several specialized insects tied to it
ⓑ. A forest is legally declared protected
ⓒ. A seed bank preserves multiple plant varieties
ⓓ. A tropical region receives high solar energy
Correct Answer: Loss of one plant causes disappearance of several specialized insects tied to it
Explanation: Co-extinction occurs when dependent species disappear after the loss of another species they rely on. This can turn one extinction into several. The effect is important because it shows that biodiversity is linked through ecological relationships. Losses can therefore cascade through a system.
419. Which inference is most appropriate from the existence of many rice strains and mango varieties in one country?
ⓐ. Species diversity is low because too many varieties belong to the same species
ⓑ. Genetic diversity can be very high within domesticated species as well as wild ones
ⓒ. Ecological diversity must be absent where crop varieties are abundant
ⓓ. Crop varieties are not relevant to biodiversity
Correct Answer: Genetic diversity can be very high within domesticated species as well as wild ones
Explanation: Genetic diversity refers to variation within a species, and cultivated varieties are strong examples of it. Domesticated species can contain large numbers of genetically distinct forms with practical and biological value. This diversity is important for breeding, resilience, and adaptation. It therefore counts as a major part of biodiversity.
420. Which statement best integrates biodiversity, conservation method, and long-term ecological reality?
ⓐ. Ex situ conservation alone is enough because ecosystems can always be reconstructed later
ⓑ. In situ conservation is useful only when a species has economic value
ⓒ. Biodiversity is best conserved by protecting natural habitats while using ex situ methods as selective support where needed
ⓓ. Conservation should focus only on currently described species because unknown species cannot be protected
Correct Answer: Biodiversity is best conserved by protecting natural habitats while using ex situ methods as selective support where needed
Explanation: Natural habitats preserve species, interactions, ecological processes, and continuing evolution, so in situ conservation is central. Ex situ methods are valuable for rescue, propagation, storage, and backup, especially when wild survival becomes uncertain. The strongest conservation strategy often combines both approaches intelligently. This reflects the real complexity of biodiversity protection.