Page 1
CBSE XII | Biology
Board Paper – 2015 – All India – Set 3 (Solution)
CBSE
Class XII Biology
Board Paper – 2015 – All India (Set 3)
SOLUTION
SECTION A
1. A cistron is a segment of DNA which codes for a polypeptide.
2. Drones of honey bee possess 16 chromosomes. The sperms in honey bee are produced
by mitosis.
3. Advantages of unleaded petrol in automobiles as fuel:
i. Automobiles equipped with a catalytic converter should use unleaded petrol
because lead in the petrol inactivates the catalysts of the converter.
ii. Use of unleaded petrol prevents the release of poisonous gases such as nitrous oxide
in the environment.
4. Retroviruses have RNA as genetic material. After the entrance of the virus into the body
of the host, the virus enters macrophages where its RNA genome replicates to form
viral DNA with the help of the reverse transcriptase enzyme.
5. Adenosine deaminase deficiency can be cured by enzyme replacement therapy and
bone marrow transplantation.
SECTION B
6. The combinations having divergent evolution are
i. Forelimbs of cheetah and mammals
ii. Forelimbs of whales and mammals
These two pairs exhibit divergent evolution because they have the same basic
structural plan but are different in function.
7. A liverwort is a bryophyte which is unable to complete its life cycle in a dry
environment because
i. The fertilisation of male and female gametes takes place in water.
ii. Male gametes, antherozoids, swim in water to reach the eggs for sexual
reproduction to take place.
Page 2
CBSE XII | Biology
Board Paper – 2015 – All India – Set 3 (Solution)
CBSE
Class XII Biology
Board Paper – 2015 – All India (Set 3)
SOLUTION
SECTION A
1. A cistron is a segment of DNA which codes for a polypeptide.
2. Drones of honey bee possess 16 chromosomes. The sperms in honey bee are produced
by mitosis.
3. Advantages of unleaded petrol in automobiles as fuel:
i. Automobiles equipped with a catalytic converter should use unleaded petrol
because lead in the petrol inactivates the catalysts of the converter.
ii. Use of unleaded petrol prevents the release of poisonous gases such as nitrous oxide
in the environment.
4. Retroviruses have RNA as genetic material. After the entrance of the virus into the body
of the host, the virus enters macrophages where its RNA genome replicates to form
viral DNA with the help of the reverse transcriptase enzyme.
5. Adenosine deaminase deficiency can be cured by enzyme replacement therapy and
bone marrow transplantation.
SECTION B
6. The combinations having divergent evolution are
i. Forelimbs of cheetah and mammals
ii. Forelimbs of whales and mammals
These two pairs exhibit divergent evolution because they have the same basic
structural plan but are different in function.
7. A liverwort is a bryophyte which is unable to complete its life cycle in a dry
environment because
i. The fertilisation of male and female gametes takes place in water.
ii. Male gametes, antherozoids, swim in water to reach the eggs for sexual
reproduction to take place.
CBSE XII | Biology
Board Paper – 2015 – All India – Set 3 (Solution)
8. Mutualism is the relationship between two organisms where both are benefited either
with food or shelter or substratum for attachment.
Examples:
i. Mycorrhizae are the mutualistic relationship between fungi and roots of higher
plants. The fungus helps in mineral nutrition of the plant with which it is associated
and obtains, in turn, carbohydrates from the plant.
ii. Nitrogen-fixing bacteria, Rhizobium, live in the root nodules of legumes where the
bacterium derives nutrition from the host plant but fixes the atmospheric nitrogen
and makes it available to the plants.
OR
Ex situ conservation is the conservation of selected rare plants or animals in places
outside their natural homes. Ex situ conservation of biodiversity has been employed in
i. Gene banks: These are institutes which maintain stocks of viable seeds, live growing
plants, tissue culture and frozen germplasm with the whole range of genetic
variability.
ii. Cryopreservation: Cryopreservation can maintain tissue culture, embryos, gametes,
animal cells or tissues. Endangered organisms are being cryopreserved so that they
can be revived to help in conservation.
iii. Orchards: Plants with recalcitrant seeds are grown in orchards where all possible
strains and varieties are maintained.
iv. Tissue culture: It is carried out through callus formation, embryoids, pollen grain
culture and shoot tip culture for plants which are either seedless, have recalcitrant
seeds, variable seed progeny or where clone is to be maintained.
9.
(a) Plants raised through micropropagation are termed somaclones because they are
genetically identical to the original plant from which they are grown.
(b) Advantages of micropropagation:
i. A large number of plants can be raised from a single individual plant within a
relatively short period and limited space.
ii. Virus-free healthy plants can be produced from the shoot apical meristem.
10. An anaerobic sludge digester is a large tank where the anaerobic bacteria digest the
bacteria and fungi in the sludge and produce a mixture of gases such as methane, H 2S
and CO 2.
Page 3
CBSE XII | Biology
Board Paper – 2015 – All India – Set 3 (Solution)
CBSE
Class XII Biology
Board Paper – 2015 – All India (Set 3)
SOLUTION
SECTION A
1. A cistron is a segment of DNA which codes for a polypeptide.
2. Drones of honey bee possess 16 chromosomes. The sperms in honey bee are produced
by mitosis.
3. Advantages of unleaded petrol in automobiles as fuel:
i. Automobiles equipped with a catalytic converter should use unleaded petrol
because lead in the petrol inactivates the catalysts of the converter.
ii. Use of unleaded petrol prevents the release of poisonous gases such as nitrous oxide
in the environment.
4. Retroviruses have RNA as genetic material. After the entrance of the virus into the body
of the host, the virus enters macrophages where its RNA genome replicates to form
viral DNA with the help of the reverse transcriptase enzyme.
5. Adenosine deaminase deficiency can be cured by enzyme replacement therapy and
bone marrow transplantation.
SECTION B
6. The combinations having divergent evolution are
i. Forelimbs of cheetah and mammals
ii. Forelimbs of whales and mammals
These two pairs exhibit divergent evolution because they have the same basic
structural plan but are different in function.
7. A liverwort is a bryophyte which is unable to complete its life cycle in a dry
environment because
i. The fertilisation of male and female gametes takes place in water.
ii. Male gametes, antherozoids, swim in water to reach the eggs for sexual
reproduction to take place.
CBSE XII | Biology
Board Paper – 2015 – All India – Set 3 (Solution)
8. Mutualism is the relationship between two organisms where both are benefited either
with food or shelter or substratum for attachment.
Examples:
i. Mycorrhizae are the mutualistic relationship between fungi and roots of higher
plants. The fungus helps in mineral nutrition of the plant with which it is associated
and obtains, in turn, carbohydrates from the plant.
ii. Nitrogen-fixing bacteria, Rhizobium, live in the root nodules of legumes where the
bacterium derives nutrition from the host plant but fixes the atmospheric nitrogen
and makes it available to the plants.
OR
Ex situ conservation is the conservation of selected rare plants or animals in places
outside their natural homes. Ex situ conservation of biodiversity has been employed in
i. Gene banks: These are institutes which maintain stocks of viable seeds, live growing
plants, tissue culture and frozen germplasm with the whole range of genetic
variability.
ii. Cryopreservation: Cryopreservation can maintain tissue culture, embryos, gametes,
animal cells or tissues. Endangered organisms are being cryopreserved so that they
can be revived to help in conservation.
iii. Orchards: Plants with recalcitrant seeds are grown in orchards where all possible
strains and varieties are maintained.
iv. Tissue culture: It is carried out through callus formation, embryoids, pollen grain
culture and shoot tip culture for plants which are either seedless, have recalcitrant
seeds, variable seed progeny or where clone is to be maintained.
9.
(a) Plants raised through micropropagation are termed somaclones because they are
genetically identical to the original plant from which they are grown.
(b) Advantages of micropropagation:
i. A large number of plants can be raised from a single individual plant within a
relatively short period and limited space.
ii. Virus-free healthy plants can be produced from the shoot apical meristem.
10. An anaerobic sludge digester is a large tank where the anaerobic bacteria digest the
bacteria and fungi in the sludge and produce a mixture of gases such as methane, H 2S
and CO 2.
CBSE XII | Biology
Board Paper – 2015 – All India – Set 3 (Solution)
SECTION C
11. Monohybrid cross is a cross where two forms of a single trait are hybridised. Mendel
crossed a pure tall pea plant with a pure dwarf pea plant and obtained all tall plants in
the first filial generation. The character which appeared in the F 1 generation is called
the dominant character, whereas the character which is not expressed in the F 1
generation is called the recessive character. After intercrossing the hybrids of the F 1
generation, he obtained the tall and the dwarf progeny in the ratio 3:1 (phenotypic
ratio), but the genetic ratio was 1:2:1 which is TT, Tt and tt.
12. The seeds produced without fertilisation are called apomictic seeds.
Advantages:
The embryos produced through apomixis are generally free from infection.
Disadvantages:
An apomictic embryo develops to produce several embryos inside a seed, a condition
called polyembryony, which may require a stimulus in pollination.
13.
(a) The doctor injects the preformed antitoxin into the patient’s body.
(b) The vaccine stimulates the production of antibodies against the antigen for inducing
active acquired immunity.
(c) The injection was given to prevent tetanus. It provides acquired immunity.
14. A very small sample of tissue or even a drop of blood can help determine paternity by
DNA fingerprinting. The DNA is extracted from the nuclei of cells or blood cell. The DNA
molecules are first broken with the help of an enzyme restriction endonuclease which
cuts them into fragments which contain variable number tandem repeats (VNTRs). The
fragments are separated according to size by gel electrophoresis and are multiplied by
the polymerase chain reaction (PCR) technique. They are then treated with alkaline
chemicals to split them into single-stranded DNAs and are transferred onto a nylon
membrane. An X-ray film is exposed to the nylon membrane on which the dark bands
represent the DNA fingerprints.
Page 4
CBSE XII | Biology
Board Paper – 2015 – All India – Set 3 (Solution)
CBSE
Class XII Biology
Board Paper – 2015 – All India (Set 3)
SOLUTION
SECTION A
1. A cistron is a segment of DNA which codes for a polypeptide.
2. Drones of honey bee possess 16 chromosomes. The sperms in honey bee are produced
by mitosis.
3. Advantages of unleaded petrol in automobiles as fuel:
i. Automobiles equipped with a catalytic converter should use unleaded petrol
because lead in the petrol inactivates the catalysts of the converter.
ii. Use of unleaded petrol prevents the release of poisonous gases such as nitrous oxide
in the environment.
4. Retroviruses have RNA as genetic material. After the entrance of the virus into the body
of the host, the virus enters macrophages where its RNA genome replicates to form
viral DNA with the help of the reverse transcriptase enzyme.
5. Adenosine deaminase deficiency can be cured by enzyme replacement therapy and
bone marrow transplantation.
SECTION B
6. The combinations having divergent evolution are
i. Forelimbs of cheetah and mammals
ii. Forelimbs of whales and mammals
These two pairs exhibit divergent evolution because they have the same basic
structural plan but are different in function.
7. A liverwort is a bryophyte which is unable to complete its life cycle in a dry
environment because
i. The fertilisation of male and female gametes takes place in water.
ii. Male gametes, antherozoids, swim in water to reach the eggs for sexual
reproduction to take place.
CBSE XII | Biology
Board Paper – 2015 – All India – Set 3 (Solution)
8. Mutualism is the relationship between two organisms where both are benefited either
with food or shelter or substratum for attachment.
Examples:
i. Mycorrhizae are the mutualistic relationship between fungi and roots of higher
plants. The fungus helps in mineral nutrition of the plant with which it is associated
and obtains, in turn, carbohydrates from the plant.
ii. Nitrogen-fixing bacteria, Rhizobium, live in the root nodules of legumes where the
bacterium derives nutrition from the host plant but fixes the atmospheric nitrogen
and makes it available to the plants.
OR
Ex situ conservation is the conservation of selected rare plants or animals in places
outside their natural homes. Ex situ conservation of biodiversity has been employed in
i. Gene banks: These are institutes which maintain stocks of viable seeds, live growing
plants, tissue culture and frozen germplasm with the whole range of genetic
variability.
ii. Cryopreservation: Cryopreservation can maintain tissue culture, embryos, gametes,
animal cells or tissues. Endangered organisms are being cryopreserved so that they
can be revived to help in conservation.
iii. Orchards: Plants with recalcitrant seeds are grown in orchards where all possible
strains and varieties are maintained.
iv. Tissue culture: It is carried out through callus formation, embryoids, pollen grain
culture and shoot tip culture for plants which are either seedless, have recalcitrant
seeds, variable seed progeny or where clone is to be maintained.
9.
(a) Plants raised through micropropagation are termed somaclones because they are
genetically identical to the original plant from which they are grown.
(b) Advantages of micropropagation:
i. A large number of plants can be raised from a single individual plant within a
relatively short period and limited space.
ii. Virus-free healthy plants can be produced from the shoot apical meristem.
10. An anaerobic sludge digester is a large tank where the anaerobic bacteria digest the
bacteria and fungi in the sludge and produce a mixture of gases such as methane, H 2S
and CO 2.
CBSE XII | Biology
Board Paper – 2015 – All India – Set 3 (Solution)
SECTION C
11. Monohybrid cross is a cross where two forms of a single trait are hybridised. Mendel
crossed a pure tall pea plant with a pure dwarf pea plant and obtained all tall plants in
the first filial generation. The character which appeared in the F 1 generation is called
the dominant character, whereas the character which is not expressed in the F 1
generation is called the recessive character. After intercrossing the hybrids of the F 1
generation, he obtained the tall and the dwarf progeny in the ratio 3:1 (phenotypic
ratio), but the genetic ratio was 1:2:1 which is TT, Tt and tt.
12. The seeds produced without fertilisation are called apomictic seeds.
Advantages:
The embryos produced through apomixis are generally free from infection.
Disadvantages:
An apomictic embryo develops to produce several embryos inside a seed, a condition
called polyembryony, which may require a stimulus in pollination.
13.
(a) The doctor injects the preformed antitoxin into the patient’s body.
(b) The vaccine stimulates the production of antibodies against the antigen for inducing
active acquired immunity.
(c) The injection was given to prevent tetanus. It provides acquired immunity.
14. A very small sample of tissue or even a drop of blood can help determine paternity by
DNA fingerprinting. The DNA is extracted from the nuclei of cells or blood cell. The DNA
molecules are first broken with the help of an enzyme restriction endonuclease which
cuts them into fragments which contain variable number tandem repeats (VNTRs). The
fragments are separated according to size by gel electrophoresis and are multiplied by
the polymerase chain reaction (PCR) technique. They are then treated with alkaline
chemicals to split them into single-stranded DNAs and are transferred onto a nylon
membrane. An X-ray film is exposed to the nylon membrane on which the dark bands
represent the DNA fingerprints.
CBSE XII | Biology
Board Paper – 2015 – All India – Set 3 (Solution)
15. The given equation represents the gene frequency of the total population according to
Hardy–Weinberg law. In this equation, suppose a gene has two alleles A and a and p is
the frequency of occurrence of the dominant allele A and q is the frequency of
occurrence of the recessive allele a in the parental generation.
Then according to the equation
p
2
+ 2pq + q
2
= 1,
where p
2
= frequency of occurrence of individuals with homozygous dominant alleles
(AA)
2pq = frequency of occurrence of heterozygous individuals (Aa)
q
2
= frequency of occurrence of individuals with homozygous recessive alleles (aa)
16. Potential applications of genetically modified plants:
i. GMO crops are more tolerant to abiotic stresses.
ii. They have reduced the dependency on chemical pesticides.
iii. They have enhanced the nutritional value of food such as vitamin A-enriched rice.
17. The structure of insulin consists of two short polypeptide chains – chain A and chain B
linked together by disulphide bridges. In mammals, including human beings, insulin is
synthesised as a pro-hormone which contains an extra stretch called the C peptide that
is removed during maturation to insulin. The rDNA technique was for assembling of
insulin into the mature form.
In 1983, Eli Lily, an American company, prepared two DNA sequences corresponding to
the A and B chains of human insulin and introduced them in the plasmids of E. coli to
produce insulin chains. Chains A and B were produced separately, extracted and
combined by creating disulphide bonds to form human insulin.
Page 5
CBSE XII | Biology
Board Paper – 2015 – All India – Set 3 (Solution)
CBSE
Class XII Biology
Board Paper – 2015 – All India (Set 3)
SOLUTION
SECTION A
1. A cistron is a segment of DNA which codes for a polypeptide.
2. Drones of honey bee possess 16 chromosomes. The sperms in honey bee are produced
by mitosis.
3. Advantages of unleaded petrol in automobiles as fuel:
i. Automobiles equipped with a catalytic converter should use unleaded petrol
because lead in the petrol inactivates the catalysts of the converter.
ii. Use of unleaded petrol prevents the release of poisonous gases such as nitrous oxide
in the environment.
4. Retroviruses have RNA as genetic material. After the entrance of the virus into the body
of the host, the virus enters macrophages where its RNA genome replicates to form
viral DNA with the help of the reverse transcriptase enzyme.
5. Adenosine deaminase deficiency can be cured by enzyme replacement therapy and
bone marrow transplantation.
SECTION B
6. The combinations having divergent evolution are
i. Forelimbs of cheetah and mammals
ii. Forelimbs of whales and mammals
These two pairs exhibit divergent evolution because they have the same basic
structural plan but are different in function.
7. A liverwort is a bryophyte which is unable to complete its life cycle in a dry
environment because
i. The fertilisation of male and female gametes takes place in water.
ii. Male gametes, antherozoids, swim in water to reach the eggs for sexual
reproduction to take place.
CBSE XII | Biology
Board Paper – 2015 – All India – Set 3 (Solution)
8. Mutualism is the relationship between two organisms where both are benefited either
with food or shelter or substratum for attachment.
Examples:
i. Mycorrhizae are the mutualistic relationship between fungi and roots of higher
plants. The fungus helps in mineral nutrition of the plant with which it is associated
and obtains, in turn, carbohydrates from the plant.
ii. Nitrogen-fixing bacteria, Rhizobium, live in the root nodules of legumes where the
bacterium derives nutrition from the host plant but fixes the atmospheric nitrogen
and makes it available to the plants.
OR
Ex situ conservation is the conservation of selected rare plants or animals in places
outside their natural homes. Ex situ conservation of biodiversity has been employed in
i. Gene banks: These are institutes which maintain stocks of viable seeds, live growing
plants, tissue culture and frozen germplasm with the whole range of genetic
variability.
ii. Cryopreservation: Cryopreservation can maintain tissue culture, embryos, gametes,
animal cells or tissues. Endangered organisms are being cryopreserved so that they
can be revived to help in conservation.
iii. Orchards: Plants with recalcitrant seeds are grown in orchards where all possible
strains and varieties are maintained.
iv. Tissue culture: It is carried out through callus formation, embryoids, pollen grain
culture and shoot tip culture for plants which are either seedless, have recalcitrant
seeds, variable seed progeny or where clone is to be maintained.
9.
(a) Plants raised through micropropagation are termed somaclones because they are
genetically identical to the original plant from which they are grown.
(b) Advantages of micropropagation:
i. A large number of plants can be raised from a single individual plant within a
relatively short period and limited space.
ii. Virus-free healthy plants can be produced from the shoot apical meristem.
10. An anaerobic sludge digester is a large tank where the anaerobic bacteria digest the
bacteria and fungi in the sludge and produce a mixture of gases such as methane, H 2S
and CO 2.
CBSE XII | Biology
Board Paper – 2015 – All India – Set 3 (Solution)
SECTION C
11. Monohybrid cross is a cross where two forms of a single trait are hybridised. Mendel
crossed a pure tall pea plant with a pure dwarf pea plant and obtained all tall plants in
the first filial generation. The character which appeared in the F 1 generation is called
the dominant character, whereas the character which is not expressed in the F 1
generation is called the recessive character. After intercrossing the hybrids of the F 1
generation, he obtained the tall and the dwarf progeny in the ratio 3:1 (phenotypic
ratio), but the genetic ratio was 1:2:1 which is TT, Tt and tt.
12. The seeds produced without fertilisation are called apomictic seeds.
Advantages:
The embryos produced through apomixis are generally free from infection.
Disadvantages:
An apomictic embryo develops to produce several embryos inside a seed, a condition
called polyembryony, which may require a stimulus in pollination.
13.
(a) The doctor injects the preformed antitoxin into the patient’s body.
(b) The vaccine stimulates the production of antibodies against the antigen for inducing
active acquired immunity.
(c) The injection was given to prevent tetanus. It provides acquired immunity.
14. A very small sample of tissue or even a drop of blood can help determine paternity by
DNA fingerprinting. The DNA is extracted from the nuclei of cells or blood cell. The DNA
molecules are first broken with the help of an enzyme restriction endonuclease which
cuts them into fragments which contain variable number tandem repeats (VNTRs). The
fragments are separated according to size by gel electrophoresis and are multiplied by
the polymerase chain reaction (PCR) technique. They are then treated with alkaline
chemicals to split them into single-stranded DNAs and are transferred onto a nylon
membrane. An X-ray film is exposed to the nylon membrane on which the dark bands
represent the DNA fingerprints.
CBSE XII | Biology
Board Paper – 2015 – All India – Set 3 (Solution)
15. The given equation represents the gene frequency of the total population according to
Hardy–Weinberg law. In this equation, suppose a gene has two alleles A and a and p is
the frequency of occurrence of the dominant allele A and q is the frequency of
occurrence of the recessive allele a in the parental generation.
Then according to the equation
p
2
+ 2pq + q
2
= 1,
where p
2
= frequency of occurrence of individuals with homozygous dominant alleles
(AA)
2pq = frequency of occurrence of heterozygous individuals (Aa)
q
2
= frequency of occurrence of individuals with homozygous recessive alleles (aa)
16. Potential applications of genetically modified plants:
i. GMO crops are more tolerant to abiotic stresses.
ii. They have reduced the dependency on chemical pesticides.
iii. They have enhanced the nutritional value of food such as vitamin A-enriched rice.
17. The structure of insulin consists of two short polypeptide chains – chain A and chain B
linked together by disulphide bridges. In mammals, including human beings, insulin is
synthesised as a pro-hormone which contains an extra stretch called the C peptide that
is removed during maturation to insulin. The rDNA technique was for assembling of
insulin into the mature form.
In 1983, Eli Lily, an American company, prepared two DNA sequences corresponding to
the A and B chains of human insulin and introduced them in the plasmids of E. coli to
produce insulin chains. Chains A and B were produced separately, extracted and
combined by creating disulphide bonds to form human insulin.
CBSE XII | Biology
Board Paper – 2015 – All India – Set 3 (Solution)
18. Adaptations in unfavourable conditions in the following organisms:
i. Snails: Snails undergo aestivation to avoid summer-related problems such as heat
and desiccation.
ii. Seeds: The seeds undergo dormancy to tide over adverse environmental conditions.
They reduce their metabolic activity and remain quiescent till the suitable
environmental conditions return.
iii. Bears: They undergo hibernation during winters to escape harsh winter conditions.
iv. Zooplankton: Under unfavourable conditions, zooplankton species in lakes and
ponds enter diapause which is a stage of suspended development.
v. Fungi: In fungi, various kinds of thick-walled spores are formed which help them to
survive in unfavourable conditions. The spores germinate on return of favourable
conditions.
vi. Bacteria: Bacteria form thick spores which help them to survive under unfavourable
conditions.
19. Essentials of good, effective dairy farm management practices are
i. Good breeds of dairy farm animals should be selected.
ii. Suitable environmental conditions such as adequate ventilation, suitable
temperature, sufficient light, water, air and well-drained housing accommodation
should be provided.
iii. Each animal should be fed on a balanced ration.
iv. Hygiene and proper cleanliness of animals should be included in the guidelines for
housing of animals.
v. Animals should be vaccinated at regular time intervals in order to protect them
from diseases.
vi. Regular visits by a veterinary doctor are a must.
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