NCERT Solutions For Class 11 Biology Animal Kingdom
NCERT Solutions Class 11 Biology Animal Kingdom
NCERT Solutions For Class 11 Biology Animal Kingdom is designed and prepared by the best teachers across India. All the important topics are covered in the exercises and each answer comes with a detailed explanation to help students understand concepts better. These NCERT solutions play a crucial role in your preparation for all exams conducted by the CBSE, including the JEE.
NCERT TEXTBOOK QUESTIONS SOLVED
1. What are the difficulties that you would face in classification of animals, if common fundamental features are not taken into account?Ans. The common fundamental features used for classifying animals include body symmetry, arrangement of cells, nature of coelom, level of organisation. Animal classification would be very confusing if fundamental features are not considered.
(i)Animals having different levels of organisation would have been placed in same group. E.g., Sponges and Cnidarians having cellular and tissue level of organisation respectively.
(ii)Animals showing varied types of germinal layers would have been placed together, as diploblastic cnidarians and triploblastic platyhelminthes.
(iii)Animals having different body symmetry would have been placed together, as coelenterates with radial symmetry and platyhelminthes with bilateral symmetry.
(iv)There would have been no classification of animals based on with or without body cavity..
(v)Placing of oviparous and viviparous animals together.
Ans. Various steps considered to classify a specimen are:
(i)Mode of nutrition – It can be autotrophic, holozoic, saprophytic or parasitic.
(ii)Complexity of body structure – Whether the specimen is unicellular or multicellular.
(iii)Presence or absence of membrane bound organelles.
(iv)Body symmetry, i.e., the plane by which organism can be divided into two equal halves.
(v)Presence or absence of coelom, it can be acoelomates, pseudocoelomates, eucoelo- mates.
(vi)Phylogenetic relationship.
Ans. Organisms can be classified according to presence or absence of the coelom. The body cavity, which is lined by mesoderm is called coelom. Animals possessing coelom are called coelomates, e.g., annelids, molluscs, arthropods, echinoderms, hemichordates and chordates. In some animals, the body cavity is not lined by mesoderm, instead, the mesoderm is present as scattered pouches in between the ectoderm and endoderm. Such a body cavity is called pseudocoelom and the animals possessing them are called pseudocoelomates, e.g., aschelminthes. In pseudocoelomates, body cavity is derived from blastocoel of the embryo. The animals in which the body cavity is absent are called acoelomates, e.g., platyhelminthes.
4. What are the peculiar features that you find in parasitic platyhelminthes?Ans. Following are the peculiar features of parasitic platyhelminthes:
(i) The thick tegument (body covering) resistant to the host’s digestive enzymes and anti-toxins.
(ii)Adhesive organs like suckers in flukes and the hooks and suckers in tapeworms for a firm grip on or in the host’s body.
(iii)Loss of locomotory organs.
(iv)Digestive organs are absent in tapeworms because digested and semidigested food of the host is directly absorbed’ through the body surface.
(v) Reproductive system is best developed in parasitic flatworms.
(vi)Parasitic flatworms, such as liver fluke and tapeworms perform anaerobic respiration.
(vii)They possess a considerable osmotic adaptability, as they can successfully live in different media
Ans. Arthropods are most successful animals and constitute the largest group of the animal kingdom. They have conquered land, sea and air and make up over three fourth of currently known living and fossil organisms. They range in distribution from deep sea to mountain peaks. Thick, tough, non-living chitinous cuticle forms the exoskeleton which protects the organism from predators, help to withstand temperature upto 100°C or more and prevents water loss. They have ability to reproduce very fast and less time is needed for young ones to hatch from their eggs. Due to metamorphosis, there is less competition among larval and adult forms for food. Cockroaches can even survive nuclear radiations and poisoned earth. All these factors made arthropods the largest phylum among animals.
8.Water vascular system is the characteristic of which group among the following ?
(a) Porifera
(b) Ctenophora
(c) Echinodermata
(d) Chordata
soln. (c) Echinodermata
Ans. Chordates are the animals that possess notochord (a stiff, supporting rod like structure present on the dorsal side) at some stage of their lives. Phylum Chordata is divided into three Subphyla: Urochordata or tunicata, Cephalochordata and Vertebrata. Subphyla Urochordata and Cephalochordata are often referred to as protochordates and are exclusively marine. In urochordata, notochord is present only in tail of larva and disappears in adults, while in cephalochordata, it extends from head to tail region and persists throughout the life.
The members of Subphylum Vertebrata a possess notochord during the embryonic period and is replaced by a cartilaginous or bony vertebral column in the adult. Thus all vertebrates are chordates but all chordates are not vertebrates.
Ans. Bony fishes have a sac-like outgrowth, the swim bladder also called air bladder, that arises as an outgrowth from the dorsal wall of oesophagus. It is hydrostatic in function. It regulates buoyancy and helps them to swim up and down, thus preventing them from sinking. In some species air bladder also helps in respiration. It also serves as resonating chamber to produce or receive sound.
8. What are the modifications that are observed in birds that help them fly?Ans. Birds have adapted to aerial mode of life through the following modifications:
(i) Body is streamlined and spindle shaped which minimise resistance to the wind.
(ii)Body is covered with feathers. It reduces the friction, prevent loss of heat and help to maintain constant temperature.
(iii)Forelimbs are modified into wings, which help during flight.
(iv)Flight muscles are greatly developed
(v) Most of the bones are pneumatic, hollow and filled vvith air which makes the body lighter and helps in flight.
(vi)Birds are warm-blooded. They maintain a high body temperature (40° – 46°C). This is necessary for flight.
(vii)Heart is four-chambered and functions efficiently with double circulation.
(viiiJAir sacs are present which act as reservoir of air and helps in temperature regulation
(ix)Urinary bladder is absent (except in Rhea) and only one ovary is present which reduces the weight, which is essential for flight.
Ans. No, the number of eggs or young ones produced by an oviparous and viviparous mother respectively cannot be equal. Oviparous mother lays large number of eggs, as the eggs are laid outside the body, so they are not protected from predators and harsh environmental conditions, and therefore destroyed. However in viviparous mother, eggs are not laid outside, but the embryos develop inside the mother and thus are protected from the outside harsh environment, thus, the number of eggs produced are less. Therefore, the number of eggs or young ones produced by an oviparous and viviparous mother respectively cannot be equal.