Tag: systematics

  • CHAPTER 10 MICROBES IN HUMAN WELFARE

    10.1 Microbes in HouseholdProducts10.2 Microbes in IndustrialProducts10.3 Microbes in SewageTreatment10.4 Microbes in Production ofBiogas10.5 Microbes as BiocontrolAgents10.6 Microbes as Biofertilisers Besides macroscopic plants and animals, microbes arethe major components of biological systems on this earth.You have studied about the diversity of living organismsin Class XI. Do you remember which Kingdoms amongthe living organisms contain micro-organisms?…

    Read More: CHAPTER 10 MICROBES IN HUMAN WELFARE
  • CHAPTER 9 STRATEGIES FOR ENHANCEMENTIN FOOD PRODUCTION

    9.1 Animal Husbandry9.2 Plant Breeding9.3 Single Cell Proteins9.4 Tissue Culture With ever -increasing population of the world,enhancement of food production is a major necessity.Biological principles as applied to animal husbandry andplant breeding have a major role in our efforts to increasefood production. Several new techniques like embryotransfer technology and tissue culture techniques are goingto play…

    Read More: CHAPTER 9 STRATEGIES FOR ENHANCEMENTIN FOOD PRODUCTION
  • CHAPTER 8 HUMAN HEALTH AND DISEASE

    8.1 Common Diseases inHumans8.2 Immunity8.3 AIDS8.4 Cancer8.5 Drugs and Alcohol Abuse Health, for a long time, was considered as a state of bodyand mind where there was a balance of certain ‘humors’.This is what early Greeks like Hippocrates as well asIndian Ayurveda system of medicine asserted. It wasthought that persons with ‘blackbile’ belonged to hotpersonality…

    Read More: CHAPTER 8 HUMAN HEALTH AND DISEASE
  • CHAPTER 6 MOLECULAR BASIS OFINHERITANCE

    6.1 The DNA6.2 The Search for GeneticMaterial6.3 RNA World6.4 Replication6.5 Transcription6.6 Genetic Code6.7 Translation6.8 Regulation of GeneExpression6.9 Human Genome Project6.10 DNA Fingerprinting In the previous chapter, you have learnt the inheritancepatterns and the genetic basis of such patterns. At thetime of Mendel, the nature of those ‘factors’ regulatingthe pattern of inheritance was not clear. Over…

    Read More: CHAPTER 6 MOLECULAR BASIS OFINHERITANCE
  • CHAPTER 5 PRINCIPLES OF INHERITANCEAND VARIATION

    4.1 Mendel’s Laws ofInheritance4.2 Inheritance of One Gene4.3 Inheritance of Two Genes4.4 Sex Determination4.5 Mutation4.6 Genetic Disorders Have you ever wondered why an elephant always givesbirth only to a baby elephant and not some other animal?Or why a mango seed forms only a mango plant and notany other plant?Given that they do, are the offspring…

    Read More: CHAPTER 5 PRINCIPLES OF INHERITANCEAND VARIATION
  • CHAPTER 4 REPRODUCTIVE HEALTH

    3.1 Reproductive Health –Problems and Strategies3.2 Population Explosion andBirth Control3.3 Medical Termination ofPregnancy3.4 Sexually TransmittedDiseases3.5 Infertility You have learnt about human reproductive system and itsfunctions in Chapter 2. Now, let’s discuss a closely relatedtopic – reproductive health. What do we understand bythis term? The term simply refers to healthy reproductiveorgans with normal functions. However, it…

    Read More: CHAPTER 4 REPRODUCTIVE HEALTH
  • CHAPTER 3 HUMAN REPRODUCTION

    2.1 The Male ReproductiveSystem2.2 The Female ReproductiveSystem2.3 Gametogenesis2.4 Menstrual Cycle2.5 Fertilisation andImplantation2.6 Pregnancy and EmbryonicDevelopment2.7 Parturition and Lactation As you are aware, humans are sexually reproducing andviviparous. The reproductive events in humans includeformation of gametes (gametogenesis), i.e., sperms in malesand ovum in females, transfer of sperms into the femalegenital tract (insemination) and fusion of male…

    Read More: CHAPTER 3 HUMAN REPRODUCTION
  • CHAPTER 2 SEXUAL REPRODUCTION INFLOWERING PLANTS

    1.1 Flower – A FascinatingOrgan of Angiosperms1.2 Pre-fertilisation : Structuresand Events1.3 Double Fertilisation1.4 Post-fertilisation: Structuresand Events1.5 Apomixis andPolyembryony Are we not lucky that plants reproduce sexually? Themyriads of flowers that we enjoy gazing at, the scents andthe perfumes that we swoon over, the rich colours thatattract us, are all there as an aid to sexual…

    Read More: CHAPTER 2 SEXUAL REPRODUCTION INFLOWERING PLANTS
  • CHAPTER 1REPRODUCTION IN ORGANISMS

    1.1 AsexualReproduction1.2 SexualReproduction Each and every organism can live only for a certain periodof time. The period from birth to the natural death of anorganism represents its life span. Life spans of a feworganisms are given in Figure 1.1. Several other organismsare drawn for which you should find out their life spansand write in the…

    Read More: CHAPTER 1REPRODUCTION IN ORGANISMS