Direction: Read the following Passage and Answer the Questions.
As a result, the pressure on land will increase with time and marginal lands would come under use. (ii) Secondly, the composition of the economy would undergo a change over time. In other words, the secondary and the tertiary sectors usually grow much faster than the primary sector, specifically the agricultural sector. This type of change is common in developing countries, like India. This process would result in a gradual shift of land from agricultural uses to non-agricultural uses.
Q1: What is the consequence of the pressure on land increasing over time in developing countries like India?
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Q2: How does the composition of the economy change over time in developing countries like India?
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Q3: Why is the shift of land from agricultural uses to non-agricultural uses common in developing countries?
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Direction: Read the following Passage and Answer the Questions.
India has undergone major changes within the economy over the past four or five decades, and this has influenced the land-use changes in the country. These changes between 1950–51 and 2014–15 have been shown in Fig. 3.1. There are two points that you need to remember before you derive some meaning from this figure. Firstly, the percentages shown in the figure have been derived with respect to the reporting area. Secondly, since even the reporting area has been relatively constant over the years, a decline in one category usually leads to an increase in some other category.
Q1: What is the significance of the percentages shown in Fig. 3.1 regarding land-use changes in India between 1950–51 and 2014–15?
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Q2: How has the Indian economy influenced land-use changes between 1950–51 and 2014–15?
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Q3: What has remained constant in the reporting area over the years, impacting changes in land use?
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Direction: Read the following Passage and Answer the Questions.
CPRs can be defined as community’s natural resource, where every member has the right of access and usage with specified obligations, without anybody having property rights over them. Community forests, pasture lands, village water bodies and other public spaces where a group larger than a household or family unit exercises rights of use and carries responsibility of management are examples of CPRs.
Q1: What is the definition of Common Pool Resources (CPRs) in the context provided?
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Q2: Can you provide examples of Common Pool Resources (CPRs) based on the given definition?
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Q3: What distinguishes Common Pool Resources (CPRs) from private property?
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Direction: Read the following Passage and Answer the Questions.
An estimation of the total stock of agricultural land resources (i.e. total cultivable land) can be arrived at by adding up net sown area, all fallow lands and culturable wasteland. It may be observed from Table 3.1 that over the years, there has been a marginal decline in the available total stock of cultivable land as a percentage to total reporting area. There has been a greater decline of cultivated land, in spite of a corresponding decline of cultivable wasteland.
Q1: How can the total stock of agricultural land resources be estimated?
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Q2: What has been the trend in the available total stock of cultivable land in recent years, as indicated in Table 3.1?
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Q3: What is the significance of the decline in the total stock of cultivable land and the decline in cultivated land?
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Direction: Read the following Passage and Answer the Questions.
It is clear from the above discussion that the scope for bringing in additional land under net sown area in India is limited. There is, thus, an urgent need to evolve and adopt land-saving technologies. Such technologies can be classified under two heads – those which raise the yield of any particular crop per unit area of land and those which increase the total output per unit area of land from all crops grown over one agricultural year by increasing land-use intensity. The advantage of the latter kind of technology is that along with increasing output from limited land, it also increases the demand for labour significantly. For a land scarce but labour abundant country like India, a high cropping intensity is desirable not only for fuller utilisation of land resource, but also for reducing unemployment in the rural economy.
Q1: What is the main concern regarding net sown area in India according to the passage?
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Q2: How can land-saving technologies be classified, and what are their purposes?
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Q3: Why is high cropping intensity, as mentioned in the passage, desirable for a country like India?
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Direction: Read the following Passage and Answer the Questions.
The strategy of this kind of irrigation is to provide soil moisture to maximum possible area. Productive irrigation is meant to provide sufficient soil moisture in the cropping season to achieve high productivity. In such irrigation the water input per unit area of cultivated land is higher than protective irrigation. Rainfed farming is further classified on the basis of adequacy of soil moisture during cropping season into dryland and wetland farming. In India, the dryland farming is largely confined to the regions having annual rainfall less than 75 cm.
Q1: What is the goal of the strategy behind productive irrigation?
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Q2: How does productive irrigation differ from protective irrigation in terms of water input?
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Q3: How is rainfed farming classified in India based on soil moisture adequacy during the cropping season?
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Direction: Read the following Passage and Answer the Questions.
Rice is a staple food for the overwhelming majority of population in India. Though, it is considered to be a crop of tropical humid areas, it has about 3,000 varieties which are grown in different agro-climatic regions. These are successfully grown from sea level to about 2,000 m altitude and from humid areas in eastern India to dry but irrigated areas of Punjab, Haryana, western U.P. and northern Rajasthan. In southern states and West Bengal the climatic conditions allow the cultivation of two or three crops of rice in an agricultural year. In West Bengal farmers grow three crops of rice called ‘aus’, ‘aman’ and ‘boro’. But in Himalayas and northwestern parts of the country, it is grown as a kharif crop during southwest Monsoon season.
Q1: What is the significance of rice in India's agricultural landscape?
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Q2: In which regions and altitudes is rice successfully grown in India?
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Q3: How does rice cultivation vary in different states of India, especially in states like West Bengal?
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Direction: Read the following Passage and Answer the Questions.
Wheat is the second most important cereal crop in India after rice. India produces about 12.8 per cent of total wheat production of world (2017). It is primarily a crop of temperate zone. Hence, its cultivation in India is done during winter i.e. rabi season. About 85 per cent of total area under this crop is concentrated in north and central regions of the country i.e. IndoGangetic Plain, Malwa Plateau and Himalayas up to 2,700 m altitude. Being a rabi crop, it is mostly grown under irrigated conditions. But it is a rainfed crop in Himalayan highlands and parts of Malwa plateau in Madhya Pradesh.
Q1: What is the significance of wheat in India's agricultural scenario?
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Q2: When is wheat cultivation primarily done in India, and under what conditions is it grown?
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Q3: In which regions of India is wheat cultivation concentrated, and what type of climate is suitable for its growth?
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Direction: Read the following Passage and Answer the Questions.
Maize is a food as well as fodder crop grown under semi-arid climatic conditions and over inferior soils. This crop occupies only about 3.6 per cent of total cropped area. Maize cultivation is not concentrated in any specific region. It is sown all over India exceptPunjab and eastern and north-eastern regions. The leading producers of maize are the states of Karnataka, Madhya Pradesh, Bihar, Andhra Pradesh, Telangana, Rajasthan and Uttar Pradesh. Yield level of maize is higher than other coarse cereals. It is high in southern states and declines towards central parts.
Q1: What are the typical growing conditions for maize in India?
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Q2: What percentage of the total cropped area does maize occupy in India, and is its cultivation region-specific?
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Q3: Which states are the leading producers of maize in India, and how does maize yield vary across different regions?
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Direction: Read the following Passage and Answer the Questions.
Pulses are a very important ingredient of vegetarian food as these are rich sources of proteins. These are legume crops which increase the natural fertility of soils through nitrogen fixation. India is a leading producer of pulses in the world. The cultivation of pulses in the country is largely concentrated in the drylands of Deccan and central plateaus and northwestern parts of the country. Pulses occupy about 11 per cent of the total cropped area in the country. Being the rainfed crops of drylands, the yields of pulses are low and fluctuate from year to year. Gram and tur are the main pulses cultivated in India.
Q1: Why are pulses considered important in vegetarian food, and what nutritional benefit do they offer?
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Q2: Where is the cultivation of pulses concentrated in India, and what percentage of the total cropped area do pulses occupy?
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Q3: Why do the yields of pulses in India fluctuate, and which are the primary pulses cultivated in the country?
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Direction: Read the following Passage and Answer the Questions.
Tur is the second important pulse crop in the country. It is also known as red gram or pigeon pea. It is cultivated over marginal lands and under rainfed conditions in the dry areas of central and southern states of the country. This crop occupies only about 2 per cent of total cropped area of India. Maharashtra alone contributes about one-third of the total production of tur. Other leading producer states are Uttar Pradesh, Karnataka, Gujarat and Madhya Pradesh. Per hectare output of this crop is very low and its performance is inconsistent.
Q1: What is the alternative name for tur, and where is it primarily cultivated in India?
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Q2: What percentage of the total cropped area does tur occupy in India, and which states are the leading producers of this pulse crop?
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Q3: What are the characteristics of tur cultivation in terms of output and consistency?
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Direction: Read the following Passage and Answer the Questions.
Rapeseed and mustard comprise several oilseeds as rai, sarson, toria and taramira. These are subtropical crops cultivated during rabi season in north-western and central parts of India. These are frost sensitive crops and their yields fluctuate from year to year. But with the expansion of irrigation and improvement in seed technology, their yields have improved and stabilised to some extent. About two-third of the cultivated area under these crops is irrigated. These oilseeds together occupy only about 2.5 per cent of total cropped area in the country. Rajasthan contributes about one-third production while other leading producers are Haryana and Madhya Pradesh.
Q1: What are the different types of oilseeds included in rapeseed and mustard crops, and when are these crops cultivated in India?
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Q2: What are the challenges faced by rapeseed and mustard cultivation, and how have these challenges been mitigated to some extent?
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Q3: Which states are the major producers of rapeseed and mustard in India, and what portion of the cultivated area under these crops is irrigated?
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Direction: Read the following Passage and Answer the Questions.
Jute is used for making coarse cloth, bags, sacks and decorative items. It is a cash crop in West Bengal and adjoining eastern parts of the country. India lost large jute growing areas to East Pakistan (Bangladesh) during partition. At present, India produces about three-fifth of jute production of the world. West Bengal accounts for about three-fourth of the production in the country. Bihar and Assam are other jute growing areas. Being concentrated only in a few states, this crop accounts for only about 0.5 per cent of total cropped area in the country.
Q1: What are the common uses of jute, and which regions in India are major producers of this crop?
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Q2: What is the historical context of jute cultivation in India, and how does India's jute production contribute to the global output?
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Q3: Which states in India are the primary jute growing areas, and what percentage of the total cropped area does jute cultivation occupy?
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Direction: Read the following Passage and Answer the Questions.
Tea is a plantation crop used as beverage. Black tea leaves are fermented whereas green tea leaves are unfermented. Tea leaves have rich content of caffeine and tannin. It is an indigenous crop of hills in northern China. It is grown over undulating topography of hilly areas and welldrained soils in humid and sub-humid tropics and sub-tropics. In India, tea plantation started in 1840s in Brahmaputra valley of Assam which still is a major tea growing area in the country. Later on, its plantation was introduced in the sub-Himalayan region of West Bengal (Darjeeling, Jalpaiguri and Cooch Behar districts)
Q1: What are the primary uses of tea, and how do black tea and green tea differ in their processing?
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Q2: What are the key components found in tea leaves, and under what geographical and soil conditions is tea usually grown?
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Q3: What is the historical origin of tea cultivation in India, and which regions are significant for tea plantation in the country?
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Direction: Read the following Passage and Answer the Questions.
Coffee is a tropical plantation crop. Its seeds are roasted, ground and are used for preparing a beverage. There are three varieties of coffee i.e. arabica, robusta and liberica. India mostly grows superior quality coffee, arabica, which is in great demand in International market. But India produces only about 3.17 per cent coffee of the world and ranks eighth after Brazil, Vietnam, Indonesia, Colombia, Honduras, Ethiopia and Peru in 2018. Coffee is cultivated in the highlands of Western Ghats in Karnataka, Kerala and Tamil Nadu. Karnataka alone accounts for more than two-third of total production of coffee in the country.
Q1: What kind of crop is coffee, and how is it prepared for consumption?
Ans: Coffee is a tropical plantation crop, and its seeds are roasted, ground, and used for preparing a beverage.
Q2: What are the main varieties of coffee, and which variety does India predominantly grow?
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Q3: Where is coffee cultivated in India, and how does India's coffee production rank globally?
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Direction: Read the following Passage and Answer the Questions.
During partition about one-third of the irrigated land in undivided India went to Pakistan. This reduced the proportion of irrigated area in Independent India. After Independence, the immediate goal of the Government was to increase foodgrains production by (i) switching over from cash crops to food crops; (ii) intensification of cropping over already cultivated land; and (iii) increasing cultivated area by bringing cultivable and fallow land under plough. Initially, this strategy helped in increasing foodgrains production. But agricultural production stagnated during late –1950s. To overcome this problem, Intensive Agricultural District Programme (IADP) and Intensive Agricultural Area Programme (IAAP) were launched.
Q1: What was the impact of partition on the proportion of irrigated land in Independent India?
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Q2: What were the immediate goals of the Government of Independent India to increase foodgrains production after Independence?
Ans: The immediate goals included:
Q3: What strategies were implemented to overcome agricultural production stagnation during the late 1950s in India?
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Direction: Read the following Passage and Answer the Questions.
This strategy of agricultural development paid dividends instantly and increased the foodgrains production at very fast rate. This spurt of agricultural growth came to be known as ‘Green Revolution’. This also gave fillip to the development of a large number of agro-inputs, agro-processing industries and small-scale industries. This strategy of agricultural development made the country self-reliant in foodgrain production. But Green Revolution was initially confined to irrigated areas only. This led to regional disparities in agricultural development in the country till 1970s, after which the technology spread to the Eastern and Central parts of the country.
Q1: What was the immediate outcome of the strategy of agricultural development implemented in India during the Green Revolution?
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Q2: How did the Green Revolution impact the industrial sector in India?
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Q3: What was the initial limitation of the Green Revolution in India, and how did it affect regional disparities in agricultural development?
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Direction: Read the following Passage and Answer the Questions.
Irrigation covers only about 33 per cent of the cultivated area in India. The crop production in rest of the cultivated land directly depends on rain. Poor performance of south-west monsoon also adversely affects the supply of canal water for irrigation. On the other hand, the rainfall in Rajasthan and other droughtprone areas is too meagre and highly unreliable. Even the areas receiving high annual rainfall experience considerable fluctuations. This makes them vulnerable to both droughts and floods. Drought is a common phenomenon in the low rainfall areas, which may also experience occasional floods.
Q1: What percentage of the cultivated area in India is covered by irrigation, and what is the significance of rainfall for crop production in the remaining areas?
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Q2: How does the performance of the south-west monsoon impact irrigation in India, and what challenges do drought-prone areas like Rajasthan face regarding rainfall?
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Q3: What is the common phenomenon experienced in low rainfall areas, and how can these areas occasionally become susceptible to natural disasters?
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Direction: Read the following Passage and Answer the Questions.
Indian peasantry had been exploited for a long time as there had been unequal distribution of land. Among the three revenue systems operational during British period, i.e., Mahalwari, Ryotwari and Zamindari, the last one was most exploitative for the peasants. After Independence, land reforms were accorded priority, but these reforms were not implemented effectively due to lack of strong political will. Most of the state governments avoided taking politically tough decisions which went against strong political lobbies of landlords. Lack of implementation of land reforms has resulted in continuation of inequitous distribution of cultivable land which is detrimental to agricultural development.
Q1: How was the Indian peasantry historically exploited, and which revenue system during the British period was particularly harsh for the peasants?
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Q2: What was the major obstacle in the effective implementation of land reforms in post-Independence India?
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Q3: What has been the consequence of the lack of implementation of land reforms in India, and how does it impact agricultural development?
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Direction: Read the following Passage and Answer the Questions.
There is a massive underemployment in the agricultural sector in India, particularly in the unirrigated tracts. In these areas, there is a seasonal unemployment ranging from 4 to 8 months. Even in the cropping season, work is not available throughout as agricultural operations are not labour intensive. Hence, the people engaged in agriculture do not have the opportunity to work round the year.
Q1: What is the employment scenario in the agricultural sector in India, especially in unirrigated areas?
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Q2: What causes the underemployment and seasonal unemployment in unirrigated areas of agriculture in India?
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Q3: What are the challenges faced by individuals engaged in agriculture in unirrigated tracts regarding employment?
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Direction: Read the following Passage and Answer the Questions.
One of the serious problems that arises out of faulty strategy of irrigation and agricultural development is the degradation of land resources. This is serious because it may lead to depletion of soil fertility. The situation is particularly alarming in irrigated areas. A large tract of agricultural land has lost its fertility due to alkalisation and salinisation of soils and waterlogging. Excessive use of chemicals such as insecticides and pesticides has led to their concentration in toxic amounts in the soil profile.
Q1: What is one of the serious problems arising from faulty irrigation and agricultural development strategies in India?
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Q2: Why is land degradation a serious concern, especially in irrigated areas, and what are some specific issues contributing to this problem?
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Q3: What are the consequences of land degradation and the accumulation of toxic chemicals in the soil?
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