Animal and Plant Breeding MCQ Quiz in తెలుగు - Objective Question with Answer for Animal and Plant Breeding - ముఫ్త్ [PDF] డౌన్లోడ్ కరెన్
Last updated on Mar 26, 2025
Latest Animal and Plant Breeding MCQ Objective Questions
Top Animal and Plant Breeding MCQ Objective Questions
Animal and Plant Breeding Question 1:
Sonalika and Kalyan Sona are varieties of:
Answer (Detailed Solution Below)
Animal and Plant Breeding Question 1 Detailed Solution
Concept:
- With the increase in population there is also a need for increase in food production and plant breeding has helped in that.
- Plant breeding is purposeful manipulation of plants to create new varieties having the desired qualities like-
- Giving good yield and improved quality
- being disease resistant
- better suited for cultivation
- Increased tolerance to environmental stress
- In India at around 1960s, several high yielding varieties of Rice and Wheat were developed using plant breeding.
- This led to an enormous increase in food production and this phase is referred to as Green Revolution.
Explanation:
Option 1) Wheat
- In 1963, semi-dwarf variety of wheat , Sonalika and Kalyan Sona were introduced in wheat-growing belts of India.
- Both of them were high yielding and disease resistant.
- They were developed by Norman E. Borlaug at International Centre for Wheat and Maize Improvement in Mexico.
- Hence, this option is correct.
Option 2) Rice
- Several semi dwarf variety of rice were also developed at different countries.
- Semi dwarf variety rice derived from IR-8 was developed at International Rice Research Institute (IRRI), Philippines.
- Taichung Native 1 was developed at Taiwan.
- Jaya and Ratna were the semi dwarf high yielding varieties developed in India.
- Hence, this option is incorrect.
Option 3) Millet
- Hybrid varieties of millets like maize, jowar and bajra were developed in India.
- Hybrid breeding helped in development of varieties having high yield and resistance to water stress.
- Hence, this option is incorrect.
Option 4) Tobacco
- During Green Revolution, the major focus was on development of higher varieties of food yielding crops like wheat, rice, millets, etc and not on non food crops like tobacco.
- Hence, this option is incorrect.
Hence, the correct answer is option (1).
Animal and Plant Breeding Question 2:
Which one of the following is NOT an advantage of inbreeding?
Answer (Detailed Solution Below)
Animal and Plant Breeding Question 2 Detailed Solution
The correct answer is It decreases the productivity of inbred population, after continuous inbreeding.
Concept:
- Inbreeding refers to the mating of more closely related individuals within the same breed for 4-6 generations.
- This process can expose harmful recessive genes, which can then be eliminated through selection.
- Inbreeding can lead to the accumulation of desirable traits through the elimination of less desirable genes.
- However, prolonged inbreeding can result in inbreeding depression, which decreases the overall productivity and fitness of the population.
Explanation:
- Decreases homozygosity: This statement is incorrect because inbreeding actually increases homozygosity by increasing the chances of offspring inheriting the same alleles from both parents.
- Exposes harmful recessive genes: Inbreeding exposes these genes, allowing for natural or artificial selection to eliminate them.
- Elimination of less desirable genes: Through selection, inbreeding helps in the elimination of deleterious alleles and the accumulation of superior genes.
- Decreases productivity after continuous inbreeding: Continuous inbreeding can lead to inbreeding depression, which reduces the overall productivity and fitness of the population due to the accumulation of harmful recessive traits.
Animal and Plant Breeding Question 3:
An explant is:
Answer (Detailed Solution Below)
Animal and Plant Breeding Question 3 Detailed Solution
Concept:
- Tissue culture is the method of culturing plant or animal cells, tissue, or organ in vitro.
- Here the isolated part from the target plant or animal is grown in a sterile liquid nutrient medium under controlled conditions of light, humidity, and temperature. Usually carried out in a glass container.
- Tissue culture is based on the principle of totipotency - an inherent ability of living plant or animal cells to grow, divide, redivide and give rise to a whole organism.
Explanation:
Explant -
- In the case of a plant tissue culture, an explant is any part of the plant that is taken out and grown in a sterile condition in a special nutrient medium.
- This part of the plant can give rise to a whole plant.
- Thus, the explant is a part of the plant used in tissue culture.
- The part of the plant that can be used as an explant is the leaf, stem, root, petiole, hypocotyl, cotyledon, embryo, and meristem.
- Based on the nature of the explant, tissue culture is of three types - Cell culture, Organ culture, and Embryo culture.
So the correct answer is option 3.
Animal and Plant Breeding Question 4:
Sonalika and Kalyan Sona are varieties of:
Answer (Detailed Solution Below)
Animal and Plant Breeding Question 4 Detailed Solution
Concept:
- With the increase in population there is also a need for increase in food production and plant breeding has helped in that.
- Plant breeding is purposeful manipulation of plants to create new varieties having the desired qualities like-
- Giving good yield and improved quality
- being disease resistant
- better suited for cultivation
- Increased tolerance to environmental stress
- In India at around 1960s, several high yielding varieties of Rice and Wheat were developed using plant breeding.
- This led to an enormous increase in food production and this phase is referred to as Green Revolution.
Explanation:
Option 1) Wheat
- In 1963, semi-dwarf variety of wheat , Sonalika and Kalyan Sona were introduced in wheat-growing belts of India.
- Both of them were high yielding and disease resistant.
- They were developed by Norman E. Borlaug at International Centre for Wheat and Maize Improvement in Mexico.
- Hence, this option is correct.
Option 2) Rice
- Several semi dwarf variety of rice were also developed at different countries.
- Semi dwarf variety rice derived from IR-8 was developed at International Rice Research Institute (IRRI), Philippines.
- Taichung Native 1 was developed at Taiwan.
- Jaya and Ratna were the semi dwarf high yielding varieties developed in India.
- Hence, this option is incorrect.
Option 3) Millet
- Hybrid varieties of millets like maize, jowar and bajra were developed in India.
- Hybrid breeding helped in development of varieties having high yield and resistance to water stress.
- Hence, this option is incorrect.
Option 4) Tobacco
- During Green Revolution, the major focus was on development of higher varieties of food yielding crops like wheat, rice, millets, etc and not on non food crops like tobacco.
- Hence, this option is incorrect.
Hence, the correct answer is option (1).
Animal and Plant Breeding Question 5:
The scientist associated with laws of inheritance is
Answer (Detailed Solution Below)
Animal and Plant Breeding Question 5 Detailed Solution
The correct answer is 'G.J. Mendel'.
Key Points
- Gregor Mendel, through his work on pea plants, discovered the fundamental laws of inheritance.
- He deduced that genes come in pairs and are inherited as distinct units, one from each parent.
- Mendel tracked the segregation of parental genes and their appearance in the offspring as dominant or recessive traits.
- Mendel's law of inheritance is as follows:
- Law of segregation: During gamete formation, the alleles for each gene segregate from each other so that each gamete carries only one allele for each gene.
- Law of independent assortment: Genes for different traits can segregate independently during the formation of gametes.
Animal and Plant Breeding Question 6:
Inbreeding is carried out in animal husbandry because it:
Answer (Detailed Solution Below)
Animal and Plant Breeding Question 6 Detailed Solution
Concept:
- Animal husbandry is the branch in agriculture which deals with the controlled cultivation, management and production of domestic animals for meat, eggs, milk and other food products.
- It also deals with increasing the yield of animals and improvement of qualities which are considered to be desirable by means of breeding.
- A group of animals which are related by descent and share similarities in most characters like general appearance, features, size, configuration etc., are said to belong to a breed.
- When the breeding is done between animals of the same breed it is known as inbreeding.
- When the crosses are done between different breeds, it is known as outbreeding.
- Inbreeding mainly refers to the mating of closely related individuals within the same breed for 4-6 generations.
- Superior male and superior female of a breed are identified and mated to produce superior progeny.
- Superior males and females among the progeny are identified and further mated with each other.
- This helps in improving the quality of the breed and get the desired characters in the progeny.
Explanation:
- Inbreeding increases homozygosity.
- Therefore inbreeding is necessary to evolve a pureline in any animal.
- It helps in the accumulation of the superior genes and elimination of less desired genes.
- Continuous and close inbreeding reduces fertility and also productivity. This is called inbreeding depression.
- To solve this problem, selected animals of the breeding population is mated with unrelated superior animal of the same breed.
- By using this method, the fertility and yield is usually restored.
Additional Information
Types of outbreeding -
- Out crossing-
- It is the type of breeding in which the breeding is done between individuals of same breed but have no common ancestors for 4-6 generations.
- Cross breeding-
- When superior males of one breed are mated with superior females of another breed , it is known as cross breeding.
- This method helps in the combination of the desirable qualities of two different breeds to be combined
- Interspecific hybridisation-
- Male and female animal of two different related species are mated in this method.
Thus, the correct answer is Option (3).
Animal and Plant Breeding Question 7:
A collection of all the alleles of all the genes of a crop plant is called:
Answer (Detailed Solution Below)
Animal and Plant Breeding Question 7 Detailed Solution
Concept:
- Plant breeding along with animal breeding is the means by which the food production of a country can be increased.
- Plant breeding involves the manipulation of existing varieties of the crop to obtain superior varieties of the crop with desired characteristics.
- The desired plant types are better suited for cultivation, give better yield, and are disease resistant.
- The main steps involved in plant breeding are:
- Collection of variability.
- Evaluation and selection of parents.
- Cross-hybridization among the selected parents.
- Selection and testing of superior recombinants.
- Testing, release, and commercialization of new cultivars.
Explanation:
- Option 1: Germplasm collection - CORRECT
- Germplasm collection can be defined as the entire collection of seeds/plants that have all the diverse alleles of all genes in a given crop.
- Thus germplasm collection refers to the genetic variability of a target crop.
- Genetic variability forms the basis of any breeding program.
- Option 2: Protoplasm collection - INCORRECT
- Protoplasm refers to the living part of a cell.
- It comprises two parts - cytoplasm and nucleus.
- Option 3: Herbarium - INCORRECT
- An herbarium is a taxonomic acid that helps in the identification of a plant species.
- An herbarium is a storehouse that comprises collected plant species that are dried, pressed and preserved on sheets.
- Option 4: Somaclonal collection - INCORRECT
- Somaclonal collection refers to all the variations that occur in a plant species that are produced by plant tissue culture.
So the correct answer is option 1.
Animal and Plant Breeding Question 8:
One of the major Basmati rice-producing States in our country is
Answer (Detailed Solution Below)
Animal and Plant Breeding Question 8 Detailed Solution
- Basmati rice has been mostly grown in the traditional areas of the north and north western parts of the Indian sub-continent.
- It is a variety of long, slender-grained aromatic rice.
- The flavour of basmati rice is due to the aroma compound 2-acetyl-1-pyrroline.
- Natural levels of this aromatic chemical compound in basmati rice is 0.09 ppm, i.e. 12 times higher in non-basmati rice varieties, which gives basmati its characteristic aroma and flavour.
- The Indian varieties of Basmati are- P3 Punjab, type III Uttar Pradesh, hbc-19 Safidon, 386 Haryana, Kasturi, Mahi Suganda, Pusa 1121, Pusa 1718, Pusa 1509, Pusa 1692, etc.
- Indian Agricultural Research Institute (IARI), Delhi, used conventional plant breeding to produce a semi-dwarf hybrid variety of basmati namely Pusa Basmati-1.
- The hybrid has most of the good features of traditional basmati such as grain elongation, fragrance, and alkali content.
Explanation:
- India accounts for over 70% of the world's basmati rice production.
- One of the major Basmati rice-producing states in our country is Uttar Pradesh.
- The other states of basmati rice production in India are in the states of Punjab, Haryana, Himachal Pradesh, Delhi, Uttarakhand, and Bihar.
- The finest basmati rice is grown on either side of the Indus Valley in India.
- In India, over 7,76,000 hectares of Basmati rice are now being cultivated.
Hence, the correct option is (3) Uttar Pradesh.
Animal and Plant Breeding Question 9:
New breed of sheep is developed by ________.
Answer (Detailed Solution Below)
Animal and Plant Breeding Question 9 Detailed Solution
Concept:
- Animal breeding aims at increasing the yield of animals and improving the desirable quality of the produce.
- A breed refers to a group of animals that are related by descent and are similar in most characteristics like general appearance, features, size, configuration, etc.
- Animal breeding can be done by either inbreeding or outbreeding.
Important Points
Inbreeding -
- It refers to the mating of more closely related individuals within the same breed for 4-6 generations.
- This helps in increasing homozygosity, which is required for maintaining pure-lines.
- It helps in accumulation of superior genes and elimination of less desirable genes.
- However, it may also lead to inbreeding depression, as the harmful genes might become more exposed.
Outbreeding -
- It is the breeding of unrelated animals and are of 3 types:
- Out-crossing -
- It is the mating of animals within the same breed but having no common ancestors on either side of pedigree for up to 4-6 generations.
- The offspring is called as an out-cross.
- Cross-breeding -
- It is a mating between two different breeds.
- In this process, the superior male of one breed is mated with a superior female of another breed.
- It produces the desirable qualities of 2 different breeds.
- Hisardale is the breed of sheep obtained from cross-breeding Bikaneri ewes and Marino rams.
- Interspecific Hybridization -
- Male and female animals of 2 different, but related species are mated.
- Example - Mule (Male donkey + Female Horse).
Hence, the correct answer is option 1.
Animal and Plant Breeding Question 10:
A practice of animal breading in which superior male of one breed is mated with superior female of another breed is called:
Answer (Detailed Solution Below)
Animal and Plant Breeding Question 10 Detailed Solution
Concept:
- Animal breeding aims at increasing the yield of animals and improving the desirable quality of the produce.
- A breed refers to a group of animals that are related by descent and are similar in most characteristics like general appearance, features, size, configuration, etc.
- Animal breeding can be done by either inbreeding or outbreeding.
Important Points
Inbreeding -
- It refers to the mating of more closely related individuals within the same breed for 4-6 generations.
- This helps in increasing homozygosity, which is required for maintaining pure-lines.
- It helps in accumulation of superior genes and elimination of less desirable genes.
- However, it may also lead to inbreeding depression, as the harmful genes might become more exposed.
Outbreeding -
- It is the breeding of unrelated animals and are of 3 types:
- Out-crossing -
- It is the mating of animals within the same breed but having no common ancestors on either side of pedigree for up to 4-6 generations.
- The offspring is called as an out-cross.
- Cross-breeding -
- It is a mating between two different breeds.
- In this process, the superior male of one breed is mated with a superior female of another breed.
- It produces the desirable qualities of 2 different breeds.
- Example - Hisardale is a breed of sheep (Bikaneri ewes + Marino rams).
- Interspecific Hybridization -
- Male and female animals of 2 different, but related species are mated.
- Example - Mule (Male donkey + Female Horse).
Hence, from the above explanation we can say that the correct answer is Cross-breeding.