Life Process
Life Process
Life Process
STUDY PACKAGE
BIOLOGY
LIFE PROCESS
KS/Biology/Class-X CH-1: LIFE PROCESS
PRECIS
Life Process
Process required for
maintenance of life
Definite Indefinite
Clearly Defined Not Clearly
Define
d
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CH-1: LIFE PROCESS KS/Biology/Class-X
LIFE PROCESS
1.1 INTRODUCTION
1.1 Introduction
Some Characteristic of living organisms
1.2 Nutrition
(i) Cellular organization
1.3 Respiration All organisms are made up of cells
(ii) Sensitivity: Giving response to stimuli (Stimulus = change in
1.4 Transportation
environment) (Response = visible effect because of stimulus)
Consciousness is one of the most important definite life feature.
1.5 Excretion
eg. Plants grows towards light, pupil dilate in dark etc.
(iii) Respiration & Energy utilization: Respiration is the process
in which nutrients are converted into useful energy in a cell.
Energy produced during respiration is used to perform many
kinds of works with in the body.
(iv) Internal growth: It is characteristic feature of livings.
(v) Homeostasis: All organism maintain relatively constant internal
conditions in different environments, known as homeostasis.
(vi) Regulation: All organism have neural or chemical regulatory
mechanism that co-ordinate internal processes.
(vii) Reproduction: It is a process of producing young ones of their
own kinds. Heredity character are passed from parent to the
offspring’s during reproduction.
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1.2 NUTRITION
Nutrients
Macro nutrients Micro nutrients
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Mode of Nutrition
Starch test: Requirement for photosynthesis can be test by reaction between starch and iodine
Starch + I2 Blue Black Colour
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Covered part will show Brown/Yellow while uncovered part will show blue black colour
This proves light is essntial for photosynthesis
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3. Chlorophyll: Take a variegated (multi-colour) leaf like Crotons. Mark green and non-green areas.
Perform starch test.
Non green part will show Brown/Yellow while green part will show blue black colour.
This proves chlorophyll is essential for photosynthesis.
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Phases of photosynthesis
Desert plants are exception. They open stomata in night to absorb CO 2 and form intermediate
compound i.e. malate. Which is stored in vacuole and during day it is converted into sugar.
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Structure of Stomata
These are tiny pores present on the surface of the leaves, which are guarded by guard cells, having
nucleus, chloroplast etc. Guard cells regulate opening and closing of stomata. When guard cells
absorb water from surrounding cells than they swells up (or become turgid) and stomata get open.
When these cells losses water and become flaccid than stomata get close. In plants, stomata helps in
gaseous exchange and transpiration.
Steps of Nutrition:
(a) Ingestion: Intake of food.
(b) Digestion: Large insoluble molecules are broken into small, water soluble molecules
(c) Absorption: Digested food nutrients are absorbed by villi in small intestine & passes through the
intestinal wall into blood stream.
(d) Assimilation: Absorbed food is utilized by body cells and used for energy production, growth &
repair.
(e) Egestion: – Process of removing undigested food from the body.
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Steps of Nutrition
(i) Ingestion: Food taken in with help of pseudopodia
(ii) Digestion: Intracellular with help of enzymes present in lysosomes.
(iii) Absorption and Assimilation
(iv) Egestion: Undigested food thrown out
MouthPharynxOesophagusStomachDuodenumJejunumIleumCeacumColonRectumAnus
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Transverse
Caecum Ascending Colon
Descending Large Intestine
Rectum
Human teeths are thecodont, diphyodont and heterodont. Following types of teeths are present in
humans:
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Absorption: Villi present in ileum helps in absorption of digested food and thus, food passes into the
blood stream.
Assimilation: It is utilized by cell for the purpose of growth, repair and development of the body.
Egestion: Removal of undigested food.
(e) Large Intestine: It has following parts:
Ceacum: Along with appendix it is regarded as vestigial in humans.
Colon: Absorb water from undigested food.
Rectum: Stores undigested food.
Anus: Undigested food passes out through it.
Sphincter Muscle: Present at the Junction of stomach and small intestine and also present at the
opening of anus. Sphincters controls movement of food and opening and closing of particular organ.
Some diseases
1. Peptic Ulcer: A lesion on the inner membrane of the stomach, because of higher acidity of gastric
juice.
2. Dental Caries: Gradual softening of enamel and dentine. Bacteria acts on sugars and produce acid
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CH-1: LIFE PROCESS KS/Biology/Class-X
Try yourself
1. Oxygen evolved during photosynthesis comes from
(A) CO2 (B) H2O (C) Both (A) and (B) (D) None of these
2. The atmosphere contains CO2 by volume
(A) 0.1% (B) 0.5% (C) 0.03% (D) 0.3%
3. A cell that lacks chloroplast does not
(A) Evolve carbon dioxide (B) Liberate oxygen
(C) Require water (D) Utilize carbohydrates
4. Rate of photosynthesis is independent of
(A) Quality of light (B) NO2 (C) Light duration (D) CO2
5. Most effective wavelength of light for photosynthesis is
(A) Red (B) Yellow (C) Green (D) Violet
6. Photolysis of water takes place in
(A) Calvin cycle (B) Glycolysis (C) Light phase (D) Dark Phase
7. Man needs carbohydrates as a source of energy and he can get this energy from
(A) Cellulose (B) Starch (C) Both (A) and (B) (D) None of these
8. Trypsin converts
(A) Fats into fatty acids (B) Starch and glycogen into maltose
(C) Proteins into peptones (D) Sucrose into glucose and fructose
9. Liver cells secrete
(A) Lipase (B) Bile and no enzyme (C) Trypsin (D) Amylase
10. Glycogen is stored in
(A) Liver and muscles (B) Liver only (C) Pancreas (D) Muscles only
11. Gastric juice contains
(A) HCl (B) Renin (C) Pepsin (D)All of these
12. Saliva contains
(A) Ptyalin (B) Renin (C) Trypsin (D) All of these
13. Human digestive juices lack
(A) Lactase (B) Cellulase (C) Amylase (D) Lipase
14. In alimentary canal maximum absorption of water occurs in
(A) Rectum (B) Small intestine (C) Appendix (D) Stomach
15. The appendix in man is
(A) Vestigial (B) Involved in bile storage
(C) Similar to stomach in shape (D) Involved in digestion of vegetable
1.3 RESPIRATION
Respiration refers to process by which energy is released by oxidation of food. Various organisms
have evolved diverse ways to break down glucose (respiratory substrate). It is a catabolic process.
Typical equation of respiration is
C 6 H 12 O 6 6 O 2 6 CO 2 6 H 2 O Energy
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The end product i.e. CO2 can be tested by reaction with lime water. Lime water becomes milky in
presence of CO2.
CO2 + Ca (OH) 2 or Lime Water CaCO3 (Milky) + H2O
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Presence of O CO + HO + energy
2 2 2
Important Information
(i) Lactic acid produced in muscles during insufficient oxygen supply cause cramps in muscles.
(ii) Energy produced at end of respiration is used in synthesis of high energy bond in ATP (Adenosine tri
phosphate). ATP is energy currency of cell. Cleavage of terminal phosphate bond of ATP releases
30.5 Kj/ mol of energy.
Energy thus produced is used to derive various activities of cell such as muscle contraction, protein
synthesis etc.
1.3.4 Supply of Oxygen
–Aerobic respiration depends on Oxygen supply.
–Plants obtained oxygen and other gases by diffusion (Diffusion is movement of substance from
higher to lower concentration).
Plants are multi-cellular but still they can ensure gaseous exchange by diffusion because of following
reasons.
(A) Presence of Large inter-cellular spaces so all cells are in contact with air.
(B) All parts of plant respire independently of each other.
Direction of diffusion of gases in plants is not fixed and it changes according to environment
(Day/Night) and requirement of plants.
During Day During Night
- CO2 is used in photosynthesis - No photosynthesis
- Oxygen released as by product - CO2 produced in respiration is eliminated
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anaerobic conditoins in soil. Plants die because of production of alcohol in Anaerobic respiration.
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exchange as they have extremely thin-walled, covered with network of blood capillaries and have
large surface area of some 80 m2.
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Transport of CO2
(i) 7% as dissolve gas in blood plasma.
(ii) 70% is absorbed by RBC and converted into HCO3- ions but transported to lungs as sodium
bicarbonate by plasma.
(iii) 25% of CO2 reacts with blood proteins and form carbamino compounds (carbamino Haemoglobin).
Many substances like dust, pollen, pepper or even cold blasts of air etc. cause irritation in mucous
membrane of nasal cavity. To remove these irritant from respiratory path way sneezing takes place.
Thus, sneezing is like a cough in the upper breathing passages.
Hiccups are the sudden movements of the diaphragm. It is involuntary activity. There are many
causes of hiccups. The diaphragm may get irritated by many reasons like eating to fast etc.
Try yourself
16. Which one of the following does not contribute to the breathing movements in mammals?
(A) Diaphragm (B) Larynx (C) Abdominal muscles (D) Ribs
17. A person with high fever may breath faster than normal. This may be due to
(A) Additional requirement of O2 for the invaded germs
(B) High temperature of body
(C) Loss of appetite
(D) Mental worry of patient
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1.4 TRANSPORTATION
Transportation in Animals
The transport system in animals is called the circulatory system. It helps in transported of material and
gases from one part of the body to another by a mass flow system. The animals, particularly the more
advanced forms, have a higher metabolic rate. This means that they require more nutrients and
oxygen at a faster rate. They also produce more wastes that have to be removed from the cells
in less time. The circulatory system collects the materials from the cells and transports them wherever
required.
Materials to be transported include digested food, respiratory gases, hormones, excretory products,
etc.
The digested food includes sugars like glucose, amino acids, fatty acids and their derivatives.
There are two circulatory systems in humans:
(i) Blood circulatory system (ii) Lymphatic circulatory system
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KS/Biology/Class-X CH-1: LIFE PROCESS
Blood
Blood is fluid connective tissue which comprise of
Plasma: Fluid part of blood in which corpuscles or cells are suspended. It contains water and
dissolved substances such as proteins, nutrients, nitrogenous waste etc. Plasma transport food,
carbon dioxide and nitrogenous waste in dissolve from.
Cells: Blood contain
Erythrocytes/RBC (Red Blood Cell) having iron containing pigment haemoglobin for transport of
oxygen to various parts of body as oxyhaemoglobin.
Leukocytes/WBC or white blood cell helps in fighting against infections by showing phagocytosis
and producing antibodies against germs. So, WBCs are called natural solider of human body. WBC
may contain granules in their Cytoplasm (Granulocytes) or may be no granules in cytoplasm.
(Agranulocytes)
Platelets or blood dust are cell fragments that helps in blood clotting.
Blood Vessels
Blood Vessels are tubes in which blood flows. There are 3 types of blood vessels
Blood vessels
Capillaries-fine, thin wall branches that supplies to tissue and from these capillaries exchange of
materials, gases take place between blood and tissues.
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CH-1: LIFE PROCESS KS/Biology/Class-X
Heart
Heart is muscular involuntary organ, which is as big as our fist. It is made up of cardiac muscles
which work rhythmically. Heart is situated in middle of chest cavity but it is tilted towards left. Heart
is divided into chambers. Number of chambers varies in different animals:
Fishes - 2 chambered heart (1 auricle, 1 ventricle)
Amphibian & most reptiles - 3 chambered heart (2 auricles, 1 ventricle)
Birds and mammals - 4 chambered heart (2 auricles, 2 ventricles)
Note: Crocodile (reptiles) is an exception, it possess 4 chambered heart
Heart receives blood from the veins and pumps it into the arteries. Interior of human heart is divided
into 4 chambers.
The Atria -Superior chamber of heart that receives blood. Right atrium receives deoxygenated blood
through superior and inferior vena cava while left atrium receives oxygenated blood through
pulmonary veins.
The Ventricle – Inferior chamber of heart, ventricles pump blood to various part of body so there
wall is thicker than atria. Right ventricle pumps de-oxygenated blood to lungs (for purification)
through pulmonary arteries while left ventricle pumps oxygenated blood to whole body through
different arteries.
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Valves in heart: Valves are muscular flaps present between auricle and ventricle that prevent back
flow of blood. Two type of valves are found in human heart:
Valves
Atrio-venticular Semi-Lunar
Separate atria & Ventricle Located in Aorta
Right side has tricuspid Pulmonary SLV* are present in right
(three flaps) and left side side and Aortic SLV are in left side
has bicuspid (two flaps) valve
Flow of Blood
Vena cava brings de-oxygenated blood to right atrium.
When right atrium is filled with blood it contract causing tricuspid valve to open. Blood is pushed
into right ventricle.
When right ventricle is filled, it contract and push blood into pulmonary artery (Tricuspid close,
Pulmonary SLV open).
Pulmonary artery carry blood to lungs for oxygenation (Pulmonary SLV prevents back flow).
Oxygenated blood returns to heart by pulmonary vein.
Pulmonary vein brings oxygenated blood to left auricle.
Left auricle contract, blood passed to left ventricle (Bicuspid open).
Left ventricle put blood into aorta, the largest artery (bicuspid close, aortic SLV open) which
supplies to tissues.
Double circulation – Circulatory system of most terrestrial animals consists of two phase’s .Blood
passes from heart twice in one complete cycle, and it is called double circulation.
It involves (a) Pulmonary circulation (b) Systemic circulation. Former is related to right side of
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heart and later related to left side of heart.Double Circulation prevents mixing of oxygenated blood
present in left side and deoxygenated blood present in right side of heart.It was first discovered by
William Harvey (1578-1657).
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Figure: A Sphygmomanometer
High Blood Pressure: Constriction of arterioles, results in increased resistance to blood flow. This
cause high blood pressure or hypertension. Hypertension can cause rupture of an artery and internal
bleeding.
Maintenance System: Platelets helps in plugging the injured site and preventing excess blood flow.
Platelets or blood dust keeps on circulating in blood. At injury site, they come in contact with air and
release a chemical known as thromboplastin, which triggers following changes:
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Functions of Lymph
1. Carry digested and absorbed fat from intestine back into blood.
2. It contains lymphocytes which help in killing germs.
Lymph nodes are kidney shaped structure. They are rich in lymphocytes.
Lymph vessels and capillaries – Tubular structure in which lymph flows, these vessels open into
large veins of the body.
Transport in Plants
Plants transport system helps in movement of food energy stored in leaves and raw materials from
roots to various parts of plant. They perform conduction with help of vascular tissues (xylem and
phloem).
Transport in plant
Xylem Phloem
Transportation of water + minerals Translocation of food & hormones
Xylem is a complex permanent tissue that performs unidirectional transport and comprise of
following components:
Xylem Tracheids
Vessels Dead
(unidirectional) Xylem fibers
Xylem parenchyma Living
1.4.3 Ascent of Sap (upwards movement of water and mineral in Xylem from
root to various parts of plant)
Vessels and tracheids in xylem of root, stem and leaves are interconnected to form a continuous
system.
Root absorbs water from soil through root hairs.
There are various theories to explain movement of water from roots to upper parts of plant.
Most accepted theory of ascent of sap is cohesion tension theory.
Dixon and Jolly proposed that water is pulled up in plant by tension (negative pressure) from above.
This suction pressure is created by transpiration
Water is continually being lost from leaves by transpiration.
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Loss of water in the leaves exerts a pull on the water in the xylem ducts and draws more water into
the leaf.
A water molecule clings to each other by hydrogen bond (cohesion) which maintains strength in
column.
Because of the critical role of cohesion, the transpiration-pull theory is also called the cohesion
theory.
The rate of ascent of water is 10-75 cm/min.
Xylem Phloem
Mainly transport water and minerals Mainly translocate food
Most part is dead. Most part is living
Flow is unidirectional (Roots to Apex) Flow is Bi-directional(Leaves to all parts)
No energy required (Physical force Energy is required
involved)
Located Superficially Located Deeply
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CH-1: LIFE PROCESS KS/Biology/Class-X
Try yourself
22. Heart is incompletely 4 chambered in
(A) Fishes (B) Amphibians (C) Reptiles (D) Birds
23. Valves are not found in
(A) Veins (B) Arteries (C) Heart (D) All of these
24. A person exercising hard shows the following except
(A) Decrease in blood glucose (B) Increase in lactic acid
(C) Increase in glycogen (D) None of these
25. Circulatory system is open in
(A) Prawn (B) Toad (C) Lizard (D) Pigeon
26. Normal blood pressure (systolic/diastolic) is_______mm of Hg
(A) 120/80 (B) 160/80 (C) 120/60 (D) 180/80
27. Heart beat initiates from
(A) Sino auricular node (B) Bundle of his
(C) Purkinje fibers (D) Auriculo ventricular node
1.5. EXCRETION
Excretion: It is biological removal of harmful nitrogenous metabolic waste from body. Different
organisms have different modes of excretion. Unicellular organism removes waste by diffusion into
surrounding water while multicellular organism have specialized organs for excretion (Flame cell
in flat worm, kidney in mammals etc.)
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1.5.1 Nephron
Nephron is the basic filtration and functional unit in the kidney. It comprise of:
(a) Malpighian Body (b) Tubular system (PCT, Loop of Henele, DCT and collecting tubule)
Malpighian
body
(DCT)
(PCT)
(i) Malpighian body: The Bowman’s capsule and Glomerulus together form a Malpighian body. It is
part of nephron where ultra-filtration of blood takes place.
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(ii) The Tubular System is related with re-absorption of useful substances from ultra filtrate. Waste
material left after selective re-absorption along with small amount of water is known as urine. The
process of urination is called as micturition.
1.5.3 Dialysis
If one kidney of a person fails the other kidney enlarges and takes over its function but if both
kidneys fail than Dialysis or Artificial Kidney is used to remove Nitrogenous wastes. It is periodic
solution and ultimate solution is kidney transplantation.
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The machine acts as an artificial kidney and filters the blood. An opening is made in arm or leg of the
patient, which allows the blood to circulate through the hemodialyzer. The blood leaves the body via a
flexible tube in the veins. Semi-permeable filters, filter the blood and after filtration blood returns to the
body. It is usually performed three times a week and it takes 3-4 hours to complete the procedure.
Excretion in plants
Plant produces a number of waste products during their life processes including carbon dioxide,
water vapour and oxygen.
Plant gets rid of excess water by transpiration. (Via Stomata)
The gaseous waste of respiration and photosynthesis in plants (carbon dioxide, water vapour and
oxygen) are removed through the ‘stomata’ in leaves and ‘lenticels’ in stems. These wastes are then
released into the air.
Many plants waste products are stored in cellular vacuoles. (Storage House of cells)
Waste products may be stored in leaves that fall off; other waste products are stored as resins and
gums.
Plants also excrete some waste substance into the soil around them.
Some of the substances considered as plant wastes are useful to humans. Few examples are – natural
rubber, gum, resins and essential oils like sandalwood oil.
Try yourself
28. Snake/animals living in desert are:
(A) Ureotelic (B) Uricotelic (C) Ammonotelic (D) Both (A) & (B)
29. Urinary bladder opens into:
(A) Uterus (B) Ureter (C) Urethra (D) None of these
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*****
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KS/Biology/Class-X CH-1: LIFE PROCESS
EXERCISE-I
1. What is the importance of HCl? From where it is secreted?
2. Where & how the acidic food turns alkaline?
3. Why fishes have single circulation?
4. Why right kidney is slightly lower in position?
5. Describe the step of respiration that take place in cytoplasm.
6. What is fermentation?
7. What is the significance of large inter-cellular spaces in the plants?
8. Why cramps relieve on treatment with hot water?
9. What is residual volume? How does it helps in exchange of oxygen.
10. What is the respiratory pigment in human? What is its function?
EXERCISE-II
1. Artifical removal of metabolic wastes from the body is called as –
(A) Ultra filteration (B) Dialysis (C) Osmoregulation (D) None of these
2. Human kidney resembles contractile vacuole of Amoeba in expelling out –
(A) Excess H2O (B) Salts (C) Glucose (D) Urea
3. The units of a mammalian kidney are –
(A) Nephrons (B) Seminiferous tubules (C) Uriniferous tubules (D) Ureters
4. NH3 converted to urea in –
(A) Kidney (B) Liver (C) Spleen (D) Heart
5. Glomerular filtrate normally contain –
(A) Glucose (B) NaCl (C) Amino acids (D) All of these
6. Man is –
(A) Uricotelic (B) Ureotelic (C) Ammonotelic (D) None of these
7. Which is not excretory organ?
(A) Skin (B) Kidney (C) Liver (D) Pancreas
8. Special excretory organ is lacking in :
(A) Earthworm (B) Amoeba (C) Man (D) Insects
9. Which of the following is not a excretory product in plant –
(A) Terpentine oil (B) Latex
(C) Glucose produced during photosynthesis (D) Oxygen
10. Sweat is an excretory waste because it contains
(A) N2 waste (B) excess H2O (C) Salts (D) All of the above
11. Urea cycle occur in
(A) Nephron (B) Spleen (C) Pancreas (D) Liver
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EXERCISE-
III
SECTION-A
Fill in the blanks
1. Glucose is broken down to provide energy in the form of ________.
2. The circulatory system consist of the ________, ________ and ________.
3. Plant store waste in the form of ________ and ________.
4. ________ help in ultrafilteration in kidney.
• Multiple blanks
5 Double circulatory system of blood flow includes two distinct and separate systems. This distinction is
shared by most vertebrates including amphibians, _____ and mammals.In contrast, fish have a single
circulation system because they lacks_______.
(A)Birds, Lungs (B) Reptiles,lungs (C) Artropoda, Lungs (D)Birds, Gills
SECTION-B
Multiple choice question with one correct answers
1. Which among them is not correct equation of an anabolic process in plants
(A) C6H12O6 + 6O2 6CO2 + 6H2O (B) 6CO2 + 6H2O C6H12O6 + 6O2
(C) 6CO2 + 12H2O C6H12O6 + 6O2 + 6H2O (D) All of these
2. Organelle responsible for anabolic process of food production in plant.
(A) Mitochondria (B) Peroxisome (C) Ribosome (D) Plastids
3. A major metabolic process taking place in germinating seed to
(A) Photosynthesis (B) Absorption of water
(C) Absorption of mineral (D) Respiration
4. Catabolism is
(A) Anabolism first than metabolism (B) Breakdown of the product of anabolism
(C) Formation of the product in a cell (D) All of the above
5. Growth in a plant is because of
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(A) More anabolism than catabolism (B) More catabolism than anabolism
(C) Equal amount of anabolism and catabolism (D) More energy consumption
6. Photosynthetically active radiation (PAR) represents the following range of wavelength
(A) 400 – 700 nm (B) 500 – 600 nm (C) 450 – 950 nm (D) 340–450 nm
7. In chlorophyll which metal is present?
(A) Mn (B) Mo (C) Mg (D) S
8. Photolysis of water take place in
(A) Absorption (B) Transpiration (C) Respiration (D) Photosynthesis
9. Photolysis is
(A) Another name for photosynthesis (B) Another name for respiration
(C) Breakdown of glucose (D) Breakdown of water
10. During light reactions the following molecules are formation
(A) ATP (B) ATP & NADPH (C) NADPH (D) None
11. Dark reaction of photosynthesis
(A) Takes place in dim light
(B) Takes place both in light and dark
(C) Is termed as dark reaction because it is inhibited by light
(D) Utilizes the assimilatory power formed in light reaction
12. In which form is food transported in plants
(A) Sucrose (B) Fructose (C) Glucose (D) Lactose
13. Some plant absorb CO2 at night. They are
(A) Water plant (B) Land plant (C) Desert plant (D) Both (A)&(B)
14. Magnesium is constituent of which pigment?
(A) Florigen (B) Chlorophyll (C) Haemoglobin (D) Enzyme
15. In photosynthesis
(A) CO2 is reduced while H2O oxidized (B) CO2 is oxidized white H2O reduced
(C) CO2 and H2O are oxidized (D) CO2 & H2O are reduced
16. In chloroplast, chlorophyll is present in the
(A) Stroma (B) Outer membrane (C) Inner membrane (D) Thylakoids
17. Phenomenon which converts light energy into chemical energy is
(A) Respiration (B) Photosynthesis (C) Transpiration (D) None of these
18. Chlorophyll in chloroplast is located in
(A) Grana (B) Pyrenoid (C) Stroma (D) None of these
19. Photosynthesis is maximum in which light
(A) Red light (B) Green light (C) Low light intensity
(D) High light intensity
20. Cell organelle associated with conversion of light energy to chemical energy.
(A) Chloroplast (B) Mitochondria (C) Ribosome (D) ER
21. Stomata of desert plant/succulant plant are
(A) always open
(B) open during the day and close during the night
(C) Open during the night and close during the day (D) Never open
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SECTION-C
Multiple choice question with one or more than one correct answers
1. Which of them is a part of stomata
(A) Guard cell (B) Chloroplast (C) Stomatal pore (D) Germ pore
2. These are found in leaves
(A) Waxy cuticle (B) Palisade (C) Spongy Parenchyma (D) Midrib
3. Enzyme produced by pancreas.
(A) Cellulase (B) Polymerase (C) Amylase (D) Lipase
4. Pseudopodia helps in
(A) Respiration (B) Movement (C) Capturing Food (D) Egestion
5. End product of aerobic respiration
(A) CO2 (B) H2 O (C) Lactic acid (D) Ethanol
SECTION-D
Assertion & Reason
Instructions: In the following questions as Assertion (A) is given followed by a Reason (R). Mark your
responses from the following options.
(A) Both Assertion and Reason are true and Reason is the correct explanation of ‘Assertion’
(B) Both Assertion and Reason are true and Reason is not the correct explanation of ‘Assertion’
(C) Assertion is true but Reason is false
(D) Assertion is false but Reason is true
1. Assertion: Oxygen is absorbed by different organs in different organism.
Reason: All these organs have structure that increase surface area
2. Assertion: It would take 3 year for a molecule of oxygen to get to our toes from our lungs.
Reason: Diffusion is movement from high to low concentration
SECTION-E
Match the following (one to one)
Column-I and column-II contains four entries each. Entries of column-I are to be matched with some
entries of column-II. Only One entries of column-I may have the matching with the some entries of
column-II and one entry of column-II Only one matching with entries of column-I
1. Column I Column II
(A) Bronchiole (P) Circulation
(B) Vena cava (Q) Absorption
(C) Glomerulus (R) Respiration
(D) Villi (S) Excretion
SECTION-F
Comprehension
Photosynthesis is a process by which green plant make their own food in the presence of sunlight,
water, CO2 and chlorophyll. If we keep a water plant in a beaker, inverted by a funnel and a test tube
placed over having water than we can see bubble of gas accumulated at the bottom of the test tube. This
gas down ward displaces water.
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KS/Biology/Class-X CH-1: LIFE PROCESS
SECTION-G
Match the following (one to many)
Column-I and column-II contains four entries each. Entries of column-I are to be matched with some
entries of column-II. One or more than one entries of column-I may have the matching with the some entries
of column-II and one entry of column-II may have one or more than one matching with entries of column-I
1. Column I Column II
(A) Lactic acid (P) Aerobic respiration
(B) Ethanol (Q) Anaerobic respiration
(C) CO2 (R) Photosynthesis
(D) O2 (S) Transpiration
******
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CH-1: LIFE PROCESS KS/Biology/Class-X
Answer
s
Knowledge base questions
1. (D) 2. (A) 3. (B) 4. (C) 5. (B)
6. (D) 7. (C) 8. (A) 9. (C) 10. (C)
Try Yourself
1. (B) 2. (C) 3. (B) 4. (B) 5. (A)
6. (C) 7. (B) 8. (C) 9. (B) 10. (A)
11. (D) 12. (A) 13. (B) 14. (A) 15. (A)
16. (B) 17. (B) 18. (D) 19. (B) 20. (D)
21. (A) 22. (C) 23. (B) 24. (C) 25. (A)
26. (A) 27. (A) 28. (B) 29. (C) 30. (A)
31. (A) 32. (D)
Exercise-II
1. (B) 2. (A) 3. (A) 4. (B) 5. (D)
6. (B) 7. (D) 8. (B) 9. (C) 10. (D)
11. (D) 12. (A) 13. (C) 14. (D) 15. (A)
16. (B) 17. (B)
Exercise-III
Section-A
1. ATP 2. Heart, blood & blood vessel
3. gum and resin 4. Bowman capsule
5. A
Section-B
1. (A) 2. (D) 3. (D) 4. (B) 5. (A)
6. (A) 7. (C) 8. (D) 9. (D) 10. (B)
11. (D) 12. (A) 13. (C) 14. (B) 15. (A)
16. (D) 17. (B) 18. (A) 19. (A) 20. (A)
21. (C)
Section-C
1. (A,B,C) 2. (A,B,C,D) 3. (C,D) 4. (B,C) 5. (A,B)
Section-D
1. (B) 2. (B)
Section-E
1. (A)-(R), (B)-(P), (C)-(S), (D)-(Q)
Section-F
1. (C) 2. (B) 3. (B)
Section-G
1. (A)-(Q), (B)-(Q), (C)-(P,Q,R), (D)-(P,R)
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