BiologyNCERT Class 12 22 PYQs

Organisms and PopulationsMind Map

Visual interactive concept map for Organisms and Populations — NEET Biology, NCERT Class 12. Covers 4 concept branches with sub-concepts, formulas, PYQ links, and AI explanations on every node.

Organisms & EnvironmentPopulation AttributesPopulation GrowthSpecies Interactions
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Organisms and Populations mind map?

4 concept branches · 14 formulas · 20 diagrams · NCERT Class 12 Biology

Core FocusChapter Overview & Analysis

Organisms and Populations: Complete NCERT Map

This chapter studies how organisms live in their environment and how populations change with time. Ecology is studied at organism, population, community, ecosystem and biome levels, but this chapter mainly focuses on organisms and populations. At the organism level, you learn how temperature, water, light and soil affect survival and how organisms regulate, conform, migrate, suspend or adapt. At the population level, you study density, natality, mortality, age structure and sex ratio. Population growth is explained using exponential and logistic models, including carrying capacity. The chapter ends with species interactions such as mutualism, competition, predation, parasitism, commensalism and amensalism, which are high-yield NEET topics.

High-Yield Study Highlights

  • The chapter links individual survival strategies with population-level dynamics.
  • NEET frequently tests examples: kangaroo rat, Allen's rule, brood parasitism, Gause's principle and logistic growth.
  • A population, not an individual, has attributes like birth rate, death rate, sex ratio and age distribution.
  • Environmental resistance converts ideal exponential growth into realistic logistic growth.
  • Predation, parasitism and competition are negative interactions for at least one species, whereas mutualism benefits both.
1

Organisms & Environment

An organism survives only within a range of environmental conditions. Ecology explains how organisms interact with abiotic factors such as temperature, water, light and soil. Temperature affects enzyme activity and metabolism; water determines distribution, especially in deserts and oceans; light controls photosynthesis and biological rhythms; soil affects plant growth through pH, mineral composition and water-holding capacity. Organisms respond to environmental stress in four main ways: regulate, conform, migrate or suspend activity. Adaptations are inherited features that improve survival and reproduction, such as thick cuticle in desert plants or haemoglobin changes at high altitude. Ecological niche means the functional role and position of a species in its habitat.

2

Population Attributes

A population is a group of individuals of the same species living in a defined area at a particular time. Unlike individuals, populations have attributes such as density, natality, mortality, age structure and sex ratio. Population density is the most useful attribute because it indicates population size or biomass per unit area or volume. Natality increases population by births, while mortality decreases it by deaths. Age structure divides individuals into pre-reproductive, reproductive and post-reproductive groups and helps predict whether a population is expanding, stable or declining. Sex ratio affects reproductive potential. NEET often asks interpretation of population pyramids and factors that increase or decrease population density.

3

Population Growth

Population growth explains how the number of individuals changes with time. In ideal conditions with unlimited food, space and no predators, a population grows exponentially, producing a J-shaped curve. The equation is dN/dt = rN, where r is intrinsic rate of natural increase. In nature, resources are limited, so growth becomes logistic and forms an S-shaped curve. The environment imposes a carrying capacity, K, which is the maximum population size that can be supported. Logistic growth is considered more realistic. Life history variation describes how organisms differ in reproductive strategy, such as producing many small offspring or few well-cared offspring, depending on selection pressures.

4

Species Interactions

No species lives completely alone; organisms interact for food, shelter, reproduction and space. Species interactions are classified by their effect on each partner using signs: benefit (+), harm (-) or no effect (0). Mutualism benefits both species, such as lichens and mycorrhizae. Competition harms both because they use the same limited resource. Predation benefits the predator and harms the prey, but also controls prey populations and drives evolution. Parasitism benefits the parasite and harms the host, often without immediate killing. Commensalism benefits one and does not affect the other. Amensalism harms one while the other remains unaffected. NEET questions commonly test examples and sign combinations.

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