


BOTANY
PAPER – I
1. Microbiology and Plant Pathology:
Structure and reproduction/multiplication of viruses, viroids, bacteria, fungi and mycoplasma;
Applications of microbiology in agriculture, industry, medicine and in control of soil and
water pollution; Prion and Prion hypothesis.
Important crop diseases caused by viruses, bacteria, mycoplasma, fungi and nematodes;
Modes of infection and dissemination; Molecular basis of infection and disease
resistance/defence; Physiology of parasitism and control measures; Fungal toxins; Modelling
and disease forecasting; Plant quarantine.
2. Cryptogams:
Algae, fungi, lichens, bryophytes, pteridophytes—structure and reproduction from
evolutionary viewpoint; Distribution of Cryptogams in India and their ecological and
economic importance.
3. Phanerogams:
Gymnosperms:—Concept of Progymnosperms ; Classification and distribution of
gymnosperms; Salient features of Cycadales, Ginkgoales, Coniferales and Gnetales, their
structure and reproduction; General account of Cycadofilicales, Bennettitales and Cordaitales;
Geological time scale; Type of fossils and their study techniques.
Angiosperms: Systematics, anatomy, embryology, palynology and phylogeny.
Taxonomic hierarchy; International Code of Botanical Nomenclature; Numerical taxonomy
and chemotaxonomy; Evidence from anatomy, embryology and palynology.
Origin and evolution of angiosperms; Comparative account of various systems of
classification of angiosperms; Study of angiospermic families—Mangnoliaceae,
Ranunculaceae, Brassicaceae, Rosaceae, Fabaceae, Euphorbiaceae, Malvaceae,
Dipterocarpaceae, Apiaceae, Asclepiadaceae, Verbenaceae, Solanaceae, Rubiaceae,
Cucurbitaceae, Asteraceae, Poaceae, Arecaceae, Liliaceae, Musaceae and Orchidaceae.
Stomata and their types; Glandular and non-glandular trichomes; Unusual secondary growth;
Anatomy of C3 and C4 plants; Xylem and phloem differentiation; Wood anatomy.
Development of male and female gametophytes, pollination, fertilization; Endosperm—its
development and function; Patterns of embryo development; Polyembroyony and apomixes;
Applications of palynology; Experimental embryology including pollen storage and test-tube
fertilization.
4. Plant Resource Development:
Domestication and introduction of plants; Origin of cultivated plants; Vavilov’s centres of
origin; Plants as sources for food, fodder, fibre, spices, beverages, edible oils, drugs,
narcotics, insecticides, timber, gums, resins and dyes, latex, cellulose, starch and its products;
Perfumery; Importance of Ethnobotany in Indian context; Energy plantations; Botanical
Gardens and Herbaria.
5. Morphogenesis:
Totipotency, polarity, symmetry and dfferentiation; Cell, tissue, organ and protoplast culture;
Somatic hybrids and Cybrids; Micropropagation; Somaclonal variation and its applications;
Pollen haploids, embryo rescue methods and their applications.
PAPER – II
1. Cell Biology:
Techniques of cell biology; Prokaryotic and eukaryotic cells—structural and ultrastructural
details; Structure and function of extracellular matrix (cell wall), membranes-cell adhesion,
membrane transport and vesicular transport; Structure and function of cell organelles
(chloroplasts, mitochondria, ER, dictyosomes ribosomes, endosomes, lysosomes,
peroxisomes); Cytoskelaton and microtubules; Nucleus, nucleolus, nuclear pore complex;
Chromatin and nucleosome; Cell signalling and cell receptors; Signal transduction; Mitosis
and meiosis; Molecular basis of cell cycle; Numerical and structural variations in
chromosomes and their significance; Chromatin organization and packaging of genome;
Polytene chromosomes;B-chromosomes—structure, behaviour and significance.
2. Genetics, Molecular Biology and Evolution:
Development of genetics; Gene versus allele concepts (Pseudoalleles); Quantitative genetics
and multiple factors; Incomplete dominance, polygenic inheritance, multiple alleles; Linkage
and crossing over; Methods of gene mapping, including molecular maps (idea of mapping
function); Sex chromosomes and sex-linked inheritance, sex determination and molecular
basis of sex differentiation; Mutations (biochemical and molecular basis); Cytoplasmic
inheritance and cytoplasmic genes (including genetics of male sterility).
Structure and synthesis of nucleic acids and proteins; Genetic code and regulation of gene
expression; Gene silencing; Multigene families; Organic evolution—evidences, mechanism
and theories. Role of RNA in origin and evolution.
3. Plant Breeding, Biotechnology and Biostatistics:
Methods of plant breeding – introduction, selection and hybridization (pedigree, backcross,
mass selection, bulk method); Mutation, polyploidy, male sterility and heterosis breeding;
Use of apomixes in plant breeding; DNA sequencing; Genetic engineering—methods of
transfer of genes; Transgenic crops and biosafety aspects; Development and use of molecular
markers in plant breeding; Tools and techniques—probe, southern blotting, DNA
fingerprinting, PCR and FISH.
Standard deviation and co-efficient of variation (CV); Tests of significance (Z-test, t-test and
chi-square test); Probability and distributions (normal, binomial and Poisson); Correlation
and regression.
4. Physiology and Biochemistry:
Water relations, mineral nutrition and ion transport, mineral deficiencies; Photosynthesis –
photochemical reactions; photophosphorylation and carbon fixation pathways; C3, C4 and
CAM pathways; Mechanism of phloem transport; Respiration (anerobic and aerobic,
including fermentation) – electron transport chain and oxidative phosphorylation;
Photorespiration; Chemiosmotic theory and ATP synthesis; Lipid metabolism; Nitrogen
fixation and nitrogen metabolism; Enzymes, coenzymes; Energy transfer and energy
conservation; Importance of secondary metabolites; Pigments as photoreceptors (plastidial
pigments and phytochrome); Plant movements; Photoperiodism and flowering, vernalization,
senescence; Growth substances—their chemical nature, role and applications in agrihorticulture;
Growth indices, growth movements; Stress physiology (heat, water, salinity,
metal); Fruit and seed physiology; Dormancy, storage and germination of seed; Fruit ripening
– its molecular basis and manipulation.
5. Ecology and Plant Geography:
Concept of ecosystem; Ecological factors; Concepts and dynamics of community; Plant
succession; Concept of biosphere; Ecosystems; Conservation; Pollution and its control
(including phytoremediation); Plant indicators; Environment (Protection) Act.
Forest types of India—Ecological and economic importance of forests, afforestation,
deforestation and social forestry; Endangered plants, endemism, IUCN categories, Red Data
Books; Biodiversity and its conservation; Protected Area Network; Convention on Biological
Diversity; Farmers’ Rights and Intellectual Property Rights; Concept of Sustainable
Development; Biogeochemical cycles; Global warming and climatic change; Invasive
species; Environmental Impact Assessment; Phytogeographical regions of India.
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