General Comprehension (UPSC) (Part-II)

Total Questions: 50

11. What is the central focus of this passage? [2013-11]

Ecological research over the last quarter of the century has established the deleterious effects of habitat fragmentation due to mining, highways and such other intrusions on forests. When a large block of forests gets fragmented into smaller bits, the edges of all these bits come into contact with human activities resulting in the degradation of the entire forests.

Continuity of forested landscapes and corridors gets disrupted affecting several extinction-prone species of wildlife. Habitat fragmentation is therefore considered as the most serious threat to biodiversity conservation. Ad hoc grants of forest lands to mining companies coupled with rampant illegal mining is aggravating this threat.

Correct Answer: (d) Disruption of habitat
Solution:The passage revolves around the problem of habitat fragmentation which poses a serious threat to biodiversity conservation.

12. What is the purpose of maintaining the continuity of forested landscapes and corridors? [2013-11]

1. Preservation of biodiversity.

2. Management of mineral resources.

3. Grant of forest lands for human activities.

Select the correct answer using the codes given below.

Ecological research over the last quarter of the century has established the deleterious effects of habitat fragmentation due to mining, highways and such other intrusions on forests. When a large block of forests gets fragmented into smaller bits, the edges of all these bits come into contact with human activities resulting in the degradation of the entire forests.

Continuity of forested landscapes and corridors gets disrupted affecting several extinction-prone species of wildlife. Habitat fragmentation is therefore considered as the most serious threat to biodiversity conservation. Ad hoc grants of forest lands to mining companies coupled with rampant illegal mining is aggravating this threat.

Correct Answer: (a) I only
Solution:When forest lands get fragmented human activities start on the edges of these fragmented lands which results in degradation of entire forests. Therefore continuity of the forested landscapes and corridors should be maintained.

13. According to the passage, why should the discharge of agricultural slurry into watercourses be restricted? [2013-11]

1. Losing nutrients in this way is not a good practice economically.

2. Watercourses do not contain the microorganisms that can

decompose organic components of agricultural slurry.

3. The discharge may lead to the eutrophication of water bodies.

Select the correct answer using the codes given below:

The law in many parts of the world increasingly restricts the discharge of agricultural slurry into watercourses. The simplest and often the most economically sound practice returns the material to the land as semisolid manure or as sprayed slurry.

This dilutes its concentration in the environment to what might have occurred in a more primitive and sustainable types of agriculture and converts pollutant into fertilizer. Soil microoganisms decompose the organic components of sewage and slurry and most of the mineral nutrients become available to be absorbed again by the vegetation.

The excess input of nutrients, both nitrogen and phosphorus based, agricultural runoff (and human sewage) has caused many 'healthy' oligotrophic lakes (low nutrient concentrations, low plant productivity with abundant water weeds, and clear water) to change to eutrophic condition where high nutrient inputs lead to high phytoplankton productivity (sometimes dominated by bloom-forming toxic species).

This makes the water turbid, eliminates large plants and, in the worst situations, leads to anoxia and fish kills; so called cultural eutrophication. Thus, important ecosystem services are lost, including the provisioning service of wild-caught fish and the cultural services associated with recreation.

The process of cultural eutrophication of lakes has been understood for some time. But only recently did scientists notice huge dead zones' in the oceans near river outlets., particularly those draining large catchment areas such as the Mississippi in North America and the Yangtze in China. The nutrient-enriched water flows through streams, rivers and lakes, and eventually to the estuary and ocean where the ecological impact may be huge, killing virtually all invertebrates and fish in areas up to 70,000 km2 in extent.

More than 150 sea areas worldwide are now regularly starved of oxygen as a result of decomposition of algal blooms, fuelled particularly by nitrogen from agricultural runoff of fertilizers and sewage from large cities. Oceanic dead zones are typically associated with industrialized nations and usually lie off countries that subsidize their agriculture, encouraging farmers to increases productivity and use more fertilizer.

Correct Answer: (c) 1 and 3 only
Solution:The discharge of agricultural slurry into watercourses should be restricted because watercourses do not contain the microorganisms that can decompose organic components of agricultural slurry. Secondly, the discharge may lead to the eutrophication of water bodies.

14. The passage refers to the conversion of "pollutant to fertilizer". What is pollutant and what is fertilizer in this context? [2013-11]

The law in many parts of the world increasingly restricts the discharge of agricultural slurry into watercourses. The simplest and often the most economically sound practice returns the material to the land as semisolid manure or as sprayed slurry.

This dilutes its concentration in the environment to what might have occurred in a more primitive and sustainable types of agriculture and converts pollutant into fertilizer. Soil microoganisms decompose the organic components of sewage and slurry and most of the mineral nutrients become available to be absorbed again by the vegetation.

The excess input of nutrients, both nitrogen and phosphorus based, agricultural runoff (and human sewage) has caused many 'healthy' oligotrophic lakes (low nutrient concentrations, low plant productivity with abundant water weeds, and clear water) to change to eutrophic condition where high nutrient inputs lead to high phytoplankton productivity (sometimes dominated by bloom-forming toxic species).

This makes the water turbid, eliminates large plants and, in the worst situations, leads to anoxia and fish kills; so called cultural eutrophication. Thus, important ecosystem services are lost, including the provisioning service of wild-caught fish and the cultural services associated with recreation.

The process of cultural eutrophication of lakes has been understood for some time. But only recently did scientists notice huge dead zones' in the oceans near river outlets., particularly those draining large catchment areas such as the Mississippi in North America and the Yangtze in China. The nutrient-enriched water flows through streams, rivers and lakes, and eventually to the estuary and ocean where the ecological impact may be huge, killing virtually all invertebrates and fish in areas up to 70,000 km2 in extent.

More than 150 sea areas worldwide are now regularly starved of oxygen as a result of decomposition of algal blooms, fuelled particularly by nitrogen from agricultural runoff of fertilizers and sewage from large cities. Oceanic dead zones are typically associated with industrialized nations and usually lie off countries that subsidize their agriculture, encouraging farmers to increases productivity and use more fertilizer.

Correct Answer: (b) Discharged agricultural slurry is pollutant and decomposed slurry in soil is fertilizer.
Solution:Discharged agricultural slurry has been referred to as pollutant and decomposed slurry in soil as fertilizer.

15. According to the passage, what are the effects of indiscriminate use of fertilizers? [2013-11]

1. Addition of pollutants to the soil and water.

2. Destruction of decomposer microorganism in soil.

3. Nutrient enrichment of water bodies.

4. Creation of algal blooms.

Select the correct answer from the codes given below:

The law in many parts of the world increasingly restricts the discharge of agricultural slurry into watercourses. The simplest and often the most economically sound practice returns the material to the land as semisolid manure or as sprayed slurry.

This dilutes its concentration in the environment to what might have occurred in a more primitive and sustainable types of agriculture and converts pollutant into fertilizer. Soil microoganisms decompose the organic components of sewage and slurry and most of the mineral nutrients become available to be absorbed again by the vegetation.

The excess input of nutrients, both nitrogen and phosphorus based, agricultural runoff (and human sewage) has caused many 'healthy' oligotrophic lakes (low nutrient concentrations, low plant productivity with abundant water weeds, and clear water) to change to eutrophic condition where high nutrient inputs lead to high phytoplankton productivity (sometimes dominated by bloom-forming toxic species).

This makes the water turbid, eliminates large plants and, in the worst situations, leads to anoxia and fish kills; so called cultural eutrophication. Thus, important ecosystem services are lost, including the provisioning service of wild-caught fish and the cultural services associated with recreation.

The process of cultural eutrophication of lakes has been understood for some time. But only recently did scientists notice huge dead zones' in the oceans near river outlets., particularly those draining large catchment areas such as the Mississippi in North America and the Yangtze in China. The nutrient-enriched water flows through streams, rivers and lakes, and eventually to the estuary and ocean where the ecological impact may be huge, killing virtually all invertebrates and fish in areas up to 70,000 km2 in extent.

More than 150 sea areas worldwide are now regularly starved of oxygen as a result of decomposition of algal blooms, fuelled particularly by nitrogen from agricultural runoff of fertilizers and sewage from large cities. Oceanic dead zones are typically associated with industrialized nations and usually lie off countries that subsidize their agriculture, encouraging farmers to increases productivity and use more fertilizer.

Correct Answer: (b) 1, 3 and 4 only
Solution:The pollutants are added to both the soil and water. Soil doesn't get polluted as microorganisms convert pollutant into fertilizer. Water is enriched with the nutrient which flows through streams, rivers and lakes. These nutrients are responsible for eutrophication which results in decomposition of algal blooms.

16. What is/are the characteristics of a water body with cultural eutrophication? [2013-11]

1. Loss of ecosystem services

2. Loss of flora and fauna

3. Loss of mineral nutrients

Select the correct answer using the code given below:

The law in many parts of the world increasingly restricts the discharge of agricultural slurry into watercourses. The simplest and often the most economically sound practice returns the material to the land as semisolid manure or as sprayed slurry.

This dilutes its concentration in the environment to what might have occurred in a more primitive and sustainable types of agriculture and converts pollutant into fertilizer. Soil microoganisms decompose the organic components of sewage and slurry and most of the mineral nutrients become available to be absorbed again by the vegetation.

The excess input of nutrients, both nitrogen and phosphorus based, agricultural runoff (and human sewage) has caused many 'healthy' oligotrophic lakes (low nutrient concentrations, low plant productivity with abundant water weeds, and clear water) to change to eutrophic condition where high nutrient inputs lead to high phytoplankton productivity (sometimes dominated by bloom-forming toxic species).

This makes the water turbid, eliminates large plants and, in the worst situations, leads to anoxia and fish kills; so called cultural eutrophication. Thus, important ecosystem services are lost, including the provisioning service of wild-caught fish and the cultural services associated with recreation.

The process of cultural eutrophication of lakes has been understood for some time. But only recently did scientists notice huge dead zones' in the oceans near river outlets., particularly those draining large catchment areas such as the Mississippi in North America and the Yangtze in China. The nutrient-enriched water flows through streams, rivers and lakes, and eventually to the estuary and ocean where the ecological impact may be huge, killing virtually all invertebrates and fish in areas up to 70,000 km2 in extent.

More than 150 sea areas worldwide are now regularly starved of oxygen as a result of decomposition of algal blooms, fuelled particularly by nitrogen from agricultural runoff of fertilizers and sewage from large cities. Oceanic dead zones are typically associated with industrialized nations and usually lie off countries that subsidize their agriculture, encouraging farmers to increases productivity and use more fertilizer.

Correct Answer: (b) 1 and 2 only
Solution:Cultural eutrophication will result in loss of flora and fauna as eutrophication of water bodies do not allow oxygen to pass through it.

17. What is the central theme of this passage? [2013-11]

The law in many parts of the world increasingly restricts the discharge of agricultural slurry into watercourses. The simplest and often the most economically sound practice returns the material to the land as semisolid manure or as sprayed slurry.

This dilutes its concentration in the environment to what might have occurred in a more primitive and sustainable types of agriculture and converts pollutant into fertilizer. Soil microoganisms decompose the organic components of sewage and slurry and most of the mineral nutrients become available to be absorbed again by the vegetation.

The excess input of nutrients, both nitrogen and phosphorus based, agricultural runoff (and human sewage) has caused many 'healthy' oligotrophic lakes (low nutrient concentrations, low plant productivity with abundant water weeds, and clear water) to change to eutrophic condition where high nutrient inputs lead to high phytoplankton productivity (sometimes dominated by bloom-forming toxic species).

This makes the water turbid, eliminates large plants and, in the worst situations, leads to anoxia and fish kills; so called cultural eutrophication. Thus, important ecosystem services are lost, including the provisioning service of wild-caught fish and the cultural services associated with recreation.

The process of cultural eutrophication of lakes has been understood for some time. But only recently did scientists notice huge dead zones' in the oceans near river outlets., particularly those draining large catchment areas such as the Mississippi in North America and the Yangtze in China. The nutrient-enriched water flows through streams, rivers and lakes, and eventually to the estuary and ocean where the ecological impact may be huge, killing virtually all invertebrates and fish in areas up to 70,000 km2 in extent.

More than 150 sea areas worldwide are now regularly starved of oxygen as a result of decomposition of algal blooms, fuelled particularly by nitrogen from agricultural runoff of fertilizers and sewage from large cities. Oceanic dead zones are typically associated with industrialized nations and usually lie off countries that subsidize their agriculture, encouraging farmers to increases productivity and use more fertilizer.

Correct Answer: (c) Improper waste disposal from agriculture can destroy the aquatic ecosystems.
Solution:The theme of the passage is based on how the agricultural slurry when discharged in water causes cultural eutrophication resulting ecosystem service loss. The magnitude of the problem has been so much that the scientists have noticed huge 'dead zones' near big water bodies which means destruction of aquatic life.

18. According to the passage, which of the following statements is most likely to be true as the reason for man's miseries? [2013-11]

The miseries of the world cannot be cured by physical help only. Until man's nature changes, his physical needs will always arise, and miseries will always be felt, and no amount of physical help will remove them completely. The only solution of the problem is to make mankind pure. Ignorance is the mother of evil and of all the misery we see.

Let men have light, let them be pure and spiritually strong and educated; then alone will misery cease in the world. We may convert every house in the country into a charitable asylum, we may fill the land with hospitals, but human misery will continue until man's character changes.

Correct Answer: (b) The refusal on the part of man to change his character.
Solution:Man's physical need is never going to cease as long as man is craving for it. Desire brings along miseries. If man doesn't realize this and keeps on doing what he is doing then no physical help can reduce his miseries. It is man's nature which is responsible for all the miseries. The only solution to this is man's spiritual growth and bringing change in his character.

19. With reference to the passage, the following assumptions have been made. [2013-11]

1. The author gives primary importance to physical and material help in eradicating human misery.

2. Charitable homes, hospitals, etc. can remove human misery to a great extent.

Which of the assumption is/are valid?

The miseries of the world cannot be cured by physical help only. Until man's nature changes, his physical needs will always arise, and miseries will always be felt, and no amount of physical help will remove them completely. The only solution of the problem is to make mankind pure. Ignorance is the mother of evil and of all the misery we see.

Let men have light, let them be pure and spiritually strong and educated; then alone will misery cease in the world. We may convert every house in the country into a charitable asylum, we may fill the land with hospitals, but human misery will continue until man's character changes.

Correct Answer: (d) Neither 1 nor 2
Solution:The author gives primary importance to spiritual growth in man in eradicating human misery.

20. Which of the following is closest to the view of democracy as mentioned in the above passage? [2013-11]

The subject of democracy has become severely muddled because of the way the rhetoric surrounding it has been used in recent years. There is, increasingly, an oddly confused dichotomy between those who want to 'impose' democracy on countries in the non-Western world (in these countries' own interest', of course) and those who are opposed to such 'imposition' (because of the respect for the countries' 'own ways').

But the entire language of 'imposition', used by both sides, is extraordinarily inappropriate since it makes the implicit assumption that democracy belongs exclusively to the West, taking it to be a quintessentially 'Wester' idea which has originated and flourished only in the West.

But the thesis and the pessimism it generates about the possibility of democratic practice in the world would be extremely hard to justify. There were several experiments in local democracy in ancient India. Indeed, in understanding the roots of democracy in the world, we have to take an interest in the history of people participation and public reasoning in different parts of the world.

We have to look beyond thinking of democracy only in terms of European and American evolution. We would fail to understand the pervasive demands for participatory living, on which Aristotle spoke with far-reaching insight, if we take democracy to be a kind of a specialized cultural product of the West.

It cannot, of course, be doubted that the institutional structure of the contemporary practice of democracy is largely the product of European and American experience over the last few centuries. This is extremely important to recognize since these developments in institutional formats were immensely innovative and ultimately effective. There can be little doubt that there is a major 'Western' achievement here.

Correct Answer: (c) While democracy is not essentially a Western idea belonging exclusively to the West, the institutional structure of current democratic practices has been their contribution.
Solution:The democracies in the west have evolved over a period of time because of people's participation in the democratic process. The western democracies have institutionalized the various instrument of governance. As a result their democracies are far more robust than the newly formed democracies.