Zoology
Zoology
Zoology
Paper-I
Section A
Non-chordata and chordata: Classification and relationship of varous phyla upto sub-classes;
Acoelomata and Coelomata; Protostomes and Deuterostomes, Bilateralia and Radiata; Status of
Protista, Parazoa, Onychophora and Hemichordata; Symmetry.
Protozoa: Locomotion, nutrition, reproduction; evolution of sex; General features and life history of
Paramaecium, Monocystis, Plasmodium, and Leishmania.
Coelenterata: Polymorphism, defensive structures and their mechanism; coral reefs and their
formation; metagenesis; general features and life history of Obelia and Aurelia.
Platyhelminthes: Parasitic adaptation; general features and life history of Fasciola and Taenia and their
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relation to man.
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Nemathelminthes: General features, life history and parasitic adaptation of Ascaris; nemathelminths in
relation to man.
Annelida: Coelom and metamerism; modes of life in polychaetes; general features and life history of
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nereis (Neanthes), earthworm (Pheretima) and leach (Hirudinaria).
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Arthropoda: Larval forms and parasitism in Crustacea; vision and respiration in arthropods (prawn,
cockroach and scorpion); modification of mouth parts in insects (cockroach, mosquito, housefly, honey
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bee and butterfly); metamorphosis in insects and its hormonal regulation; social organization in insects
(termites and honey bees).
Mollusca: Feeding, respiration, locomotion, shell diversiy; general features and life history of
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Echinodermata: Feeding, respiration, locomotion larval forms; general features and life history of
Asterias.
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Protochordata: Origin of chordates; general features and life history of Branchiostoma and
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Herdamania.
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Paper-I
Section B
Ecology:
1.1. Biospher: Biogeochemical cycles, green-houses effect, ozone layer and its impact; ecological
succession, biomes and ecotones.
1.2. Population, characteristics, population dynamics, population stabilization.
1.3. Conservation of natural resources- mineral mining, fisheries, aquaculture; forestry; grassland;
wildlife (Project Tiger); susainable production in agriculture-integrated pest management.
1.4. Environmental biodegradation; pollution and its impact on biosphere and its prevention.
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Ethology:
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2.1. Behaviour : Sensory filtering, responsiveness, sign stimuli, learning, instinct, habituation,
conditioning, imprinting.
2.2. Role of hormones in drive; role of pheromones in alarm spreading; crypsis, predator detection,
predator tactics, social behaviour in insects and primates; courtship (Drosophila, 3-spine stickleback
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and birds).
2.3. Orientation, navigation, homing; biological rhythms; biological clock, tidal, seasonal and circadian
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rhythms.
2.4. Methods of studying animal behaviour.
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3. Economic Zoology:
3.1. Apiculture, sericulture, lac culture, carp culture, pearl culture, prawn culture.
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3.2. Major infectious and communicable diseases (small pox, plague, malaria, tuberculosis, cholera and
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3.4. Pests of sugar cane (Pyrilla perpusiella), oil seed (Achaea janata) and rice (Sitophilus oryzae).
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Biostatistics:
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Designing of experiments; null hypothesis; correlation, regression, distribution and measure of central
tendency, chi square, student t-test, F-test (one-way & two-way F-test).
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Instrumental methods:
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Cell Biology:
1.1. Structure and function of cell andits organelles(nucleus, plasma membrane, mitochondria, Golgi
bodies, endoplasmic reticulum, ribosomes and Iysosomes), cell division (mitosis and meiosis), mitotic
spindle and mitotic apparatus, chromosome movement.
1.2. Watson-Crick model of DNA, replication of DNA, protein synthesis, transcription and
transcription factors.
Genetics:
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2.6. Regulation and gene expression in pro-and eu-karyotes.
2.7. Signal transduction; pedigree-analysis; congenital diseases in man.
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2.8. Human genome mapping; DNA finger-printing.
Evolution:
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3.1. Origin of life
3.2. Natural selection, role of mutation in evolution, mimicry, variation, isolation, speciation.
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3.3. Fossils and fossilization; evolution of horse, elephant and man.
3.4. Hardy-Weinberg Law, causes of change in gene frequency.
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4. Systematics:
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Paper-II
Section B
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1. Biochemistry:
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1.1. Structure and role of carbohydrates, fats, lipids, proteins, aminoacids, nucleic acids; saturated and
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1.4. Enzymes : types and mechanisms of action; immunoglobulin and immunity; vitamins and co-
enzymes.
1.5. Bioenergetics.
Physiology (with special refernece ot mammals):
2.1. Composition and constituents of blood; blood groups and Rh factor in man; coagulation, factors
and mechanism of coagulation; acid-base balance, thermo regulation.
2.2. Oxygen and carbon dioxide transport; haemoglobin: constituents and role in regulation.
2.3. Nutritive requirements; role of salivary glands, liver, pancreas and intestinal glands in digestion
and absorption.
2.4. Excretory products; nephron and regulation of urine formation; osmoregulation.
2.5. Types of muscles, mechanism of contraction of skeletal muscles.
2.6. Neuron, nerve impulse-its conduction and synaptic transmission; neurotransmitters. (g) Vision,
hearing and olfaction in man.
2.7. Mechanism of hormone action.
2.8. Physiology of reproduction, role of hormones and phermones.
Developmental Biology:
3.1. Differentiation from gamete to neurula stage; dedifferentiation; metaplasia, induction,
morphogenesis and morphogen; fate maps of gastrulae in frog and chick; organogenesis of eye and
heart, placenation in mammals.
3.2. Role of cytoplasm in and genetic control of development; cell lineage; causation of metamorphosis
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in frog and insects; paedogenesia and neoteny; growth, degrowth and cell death; ageing; blastogenesis;
regeneration; teratogenesis; neoplasia.
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3.3. Invasiveness of placenta; in vitro fertilization; embryo transfer, cloning.
3.4. Baer's law: evo-devo concept a.
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