1. Which statement best reflects the role of microbes in human welfare?
ⓐ. Microbes are useful only in soil nutrient cycling and not in daily life.
ⓑ. Microbes are mainly important because they always cause infectious diseases.
ⓒ. Microbes are valuable because many of them can be used in food, industry, agriculture, and environmental management.
ⓓ. Microbes are beneficial only when they are visible to the naked eye.
Correct Answer: Microbes are valuable because many of them can be used in food, industry, agriculture, and environmental management.
Explanation: Microbes are involved in many beneficial human activities, not just in disease. They are used in preparing foods and beverages, making industrial products, treating sewage, producing biogas, controlling pests, and enriching soil fertility. Their value comes from their metabolic diversity and their ability to perform useful biochemical processes. That is why microbes are important in both natural systems and human welfare.
2. Which group is correctly included under microbial diversity?
ⓐ. Bacteria, fungi, protozoa, viruses, viroids, and prions
ⓑ. Bryophytes, pteridophytes, gymnosperms, and angiosperms
ⓒ. Insects, annelids, molluscs, and echinoderms
ⓓ. Algae, mosses, lichens, and ferns only
Correct Answer: Bacteria, fungi, protozoa, viruses, viroids, and prions
Explanation: The microbial world includes a wide range of biological and subcellular forms. Besides bacteria, fungi, and protozoa, it also includes viruses, viroids, and prions in standard biological discussion. These differ greatly in structure and mode of existence, but all are grouped together while discussing microbial diversity. This broad range helps explain why microbes show such varied effects in living systems.
3. Which option best explains why microbes are considered major components of biological systems?
ⓐ. They are always the largest organisms in every habitat.
ⓑ. They are found only in laboratories and controlled cultures.
ⓒ. They exist in many forms and participate widely in natural as well as human-used processes.
ⓓ. They survive only inside the bodies of diseased organisms.
Correct Answer: They exist in many forms and participate widely in natural as well as human-used processes.
Explanation: Microbes are present in diverse habitats and carry out many essential activities. Their variety allows them to decompose materials, ferment substrates, recycle nutrients, and support several useful human applications. Because of this widespread presence and functional importance, they form a major part of biological systems. Their significance is ecological as well as practical.
4. Which of the following is the most appropriate welfare-oriented view of microbes?
ⓐ. All microbes are harmful and must be eliminated from human surroundings.
ⓑ. Microbes are important only in medicine and have no role in food production.
ⓒ. Microbes are relevant only when they infect plants and animals.
ⓓ. Many microbes are beneficial, even though some others may cause disease.
Correct Answer: Many microbes are beneficial, even though some others may cause disease.
Explanation: Microbes are often associated with disease, but that is only one part of their role. Many microbes are useful and are deliberately employed by humans in household products, industrial production, farming, and waste treatment. A balanced biological view recognizes both harmful and beneficial roles. Focusing only on pathogenic effects gives an incomplete understanding of microbes.
5. Which pair contains only subcellular infectious agents included in microbial diversity?
ⓐ. Viruses and viroids
ⓑ. Fungi and protozoa
ⓒ. Bacteria and fungi
ⓓ. Protozoa and prions
Correct Answer: Viruses and viroids
Explanation: Viruses and viroids are both acellular infectious agents rather than full cellular organisms. Viroids are even simpler than viruses and are composed only of small RNA molecules. By contrast, bacteria, fungi, and protozoa are cellular forms of life. This distinction helps in understanding the wide structural range covered under microbes.
6. Which statement best introduces the use of microbes in everyday life?
ⓐ. Microbes are used only in genetic engineering laboratories.
ⓑ. Routine human life includes the use of microbial activity in several household products.
ⓒ. Household use of microbes is limited to vaccine preparation.
ⓓ. Most household microbial processes depend on viruses alone.
Correct Answer: Routine human life includes the use of microbial activity in several household products.
Explanation: Humans have used microbes in domestic practices for a very long time, often without directly observing them. Many familiar products are formed through microbial action, especially by fermentation. This makes microbes part of everyday life rather than something restricted to industrial science. Household examples provide a natural entry point into the useful role of microbes.
7. Which process is most closely linked with the early household use of microbes?
ⓐ. Photosynthesis
ⓑ. Distillation
ⓒ. Fermentation
ⓓ. Transpiration
Correct Answer: Fermentation
Explanation: Fermentation is one of the most common and familiar ways in which microbes are used by humans. In this process, microbes convert substrates into products such as acids, gases, or alcohols. Many household food products depend on this microbial activity. Because fermentation recurs in several examples, it serves as a key connecting idea in useful microbial activity.
8. What is the most suitable reason household products are often used first to explain microbial benefits?
ⓐ. They require only pathogenic microbes.
ⓑ. They depend only on prions for preparation.
ⓒ. They are unrelated to daily human experience.
ⓓ. They provide familiar examples of useful microbial activity.
Correct Answer: They provide familiar examples of useful microbial activity.
Explanation: Household products make the beneficial role of microbes easier to understand because they are closely connected with daily life. Familiar examples show that microbes can help produce desirable changes in food and related materials. This approach builds the idea of microbial usefulness from simple and observable contexts. From there, the same principle can be extended to larger industrial and environmental applications.
9. Which statement best describes a common feature of many household products made with microbial help?
ⓐ. They are formed only after chemical distillation.
ⓑ. They often result from microbial fermentation of food materials.
ⓒ. They are prepared only by adding mineral salts to raw food.
ⓓ. They are produced mainly through viral infection of tissues.
Correct Answer: They often result from microbial fermentation of food materials.
Explanation: Many familiar household products are made through fermentation. In this process, microbes act on food substrates and bring about desirable biochemical changes. These changes may produce acids, gases, or other compounds that improve texture, taste, or digestibility. Fermentation is therefore one of the most important recurring mechanisms in useful microbial activity.
10. In household use of microbes, the main biochemical process behind many food-based examples is
ⓐ. nitrification
ⓑ. photolysis
ⓒ. calcification
ⓓ. fermentation
Correct Answer: fermentation
Explanation: Fermentation is a metabolic process in which microbes convert organic substrates into simpler products such as acids, gases, or alcohols. This process is widely used in preparing several food items. It helps change the texture, flavor, and sometimes the nutritional value of the starting material. That is why fermentation is central to many domestic microbial applications.
11. Which group of microbes is mainly responsible for converting milk into curd?
ⓐ. Lactic acid bacteria such as Lactobacillus
ⓑ. Methanogenic bacteria such as Methanobacterium
ⓒ. Nitrifying bacteria such as Nitrosomonas
ⓓ. Denitrifying bacteria such as Pseudomonas
Correct Answer: Lactic acid bacteria such as Lactobacillus
Explanation: Curd formation depends mainly on lactic acid bacteria, especially Lactobacillus and related forms. These bacteria multiply in milk and convert lactose into lactic acid. The acid then brings about the setting of milk into curd. This is one of the most familiar examples of beneficial microbial action in food.
12. What directly causes milk proteins to coagulate during curd formation?
ⓐ. Release of methane into the milk
ⓑ. Digestion of all milk sugars by yeast
ⓒ. Production of acid by lactic acid bacteria
ⓓ. Removal of water from milk by evaporation
Correct Answer: Production of acid by lactic acid bacteria
Explanation: As lactic acid bacteria grow in milk, they produce lactic acid. The increasing acidity causes milk proteins to coagulate and set. This coagulation changes liquid milk into the semi-solid texture of curd. The transformation is therefore driven by acid production rather than by gas formation or water loss.
13. Why is a small amount of previously formed curd added to milk during curd preparation?
ⓐ. It improves the color of the milk.
ⓑ. It serves as inoculum containing lactic acid bacteria.
ⓒ. It removes fat from the milk.
ⓓ. It prevents the multiplication of all microbes.
Correct Answer: It serves as inoculum containing lactic acid bacteria.
Explanation: Starter curd contains living lactic acid bacteria that can quickly begin growth in fresh milk. Once introduced into milk under suitable conditions, these bacteria multiply and produce acid. This speeds up curd formation in a controlled way. The starter therefore acts as an inoculum rather than as a flavoring or preservative alone.
14. A vessel of warm milk receives a spoonful of starter curd and is then left undisturbed. Which sequence best explains the formation of curd?
ⓐ. LAB multiply, produce acid, and coagulate milk proteins
ⓑ. Yeast multiply, release oxygen, and harden milk fats
ⓒ. Algae grow, use lactose, and form green clumps
ⓓ. Protozoa divide, consume proteins, and liquefy the milk
Correct Answer: LAB multiply, produce acid, and coagulate milk proteins
Explanation: Starter curd introduces lactic acid bacteria into the milk. Under suitable temperature, these bacteria multiply and ferment lactose to lactic acid. The acid lowers the pH and causes milk proteins to coagulate. This chain of events converts milk into curd in a predictable biological sequence.
15. Which nutritional change is associated with curd prepared by lactic acid bacteria?
ⓐ. Large increase in starch content
ⓑ. Increase in vitamin B12 content
ⓒ. Conversion of all proteins into fats
ⓓ. Complete removal of mineral salts
Correct Answer: Increase in vitamin B12 content
Explanation: Microbial action during curd formation can improve the nutritional quality of milk. One important change is an increase in vitamin B12. Along with this, partial digestion of milk components can make curd easier to digest. The nutritional benefit is therefore not just about taste or texture but also about food quality.
16. Which statement correctly describes the effect of lactic acid bacteria on milk proteins?
ⓐ. They convert milk proteins entirely into glucose.
ⓑ. They leave milk proteins completely unchanged.
ⓒ. They remove all proteins from milk as sediment.
ⓓ. They help in partial digestion and coagulation of milk proteins.
Correct Answer: They help in partial digestion and coagulation of milk proteins.
Explanation: Lactic acid bacteria do more than simply sour the milk. Their activity causes protein coagulation and also supports partial digestion of milk proteins. This contributes to the characteristic texture of curd and improves its digestibility. The change is therefore both structural and nutritional.
17. Which observation would best indicate that milk is being converted into curd by lactic acid bacteria?
ⓐ. The milk develops a sour taste and becomes semi-solid.
ⓑ. The milk starts giving off bright green color.
ⓒ. The milk forms large air cavities like bread dough.
ⓓ. The milk separates into alcohol and water layers.
Correct Answer: The milk develops a sour taste and becomes semi-solid.
Explanation: As lactic acid accumulates, the milk becomes sour and its proteins set into a semi-solid mass. These are the typical signs of curd formation. Bread-like air spaces are not the main feature here, and alcohol production is not involved. The visible and taste-related changes reflect acid-mediated coagulation.
18. Fill in the blank with the most accurate option:
During curd formation, lactic acid bacteria convert milk sugar mainly into ______.
ⓐ. ethanol
ⓑ. methane
ⓒ. lactic acid
ⓓ. ammonia
Correct Answer: lactic acid
Explanation: The key metabolic product in curd formation is lactic acid. Lactic acid bacteria ferment lactose present in milk and release this acid as a major product. The resulting acidity changes the physical state of milk proteins and leads to curd formation. This is why these microbes are called lactic acid bacteria.
19. Which statement about lactic acid bacteria in curd is correct?
ⓐ. They make milk alkaline and prevent coagulation.
ⓑ. They convert curd back into fresh milk.
ⓒ. They are used only for adding artificial flavor.
ⓓ. They improve nutritional value while helping milk set.
Correct Answer: They improve nutritional value while helping milk set.
Explanation: Lactic acid bacteria play a dual role in curd formation. They help convert milk into curd by producing acid, and they also improve nutritional value by increasing vitamin B12 and aiding digestibility. Their role is therefore not limited to texture alone. That is why curd is such a familiar example of useful microbial action in food.
20. Which beneficial effect in the human body is associated with lactic acid bacteria present in curd?
ⓐ. They stimulate methane formation in the intestine.
ⓑ. They promote the growth of disease-causing microbes in the stomach.
ⓒ. They help check the growth of harmful microbes in the stomach.
ⓓ. They digest all body proteins into amino acids.
Correct Answer: They help check the growth of harmful microbes in the stomach.
Explanation: Lactic acid bacteria are not only useful in food preparation but also beneficial after consumption. In the stomach, they help suppress the growth of harmful microbes. This gives them a health-related role in addition to their role in fermentation. Their presence is therefore linked with both food processing and microbial balance in the digestive system.