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Environment & Ecology

UPSC CSE — GS Paper III

Mock Tests

MCQs on biodiversity, ecology, environmental conventions, climate change, protected areas, and Indian environmental legislation for UPSC CSE Prelims GS Paper III.

Key Topics

Biodiversity Hotspots IUCN Red List Ramsar Convention Paris Agreement Montreal Protocol CBD & Nagoya Protocol National Parks vs Sanctuaries Food Chains Carbon Credits EIA Wildlife Protection Act

Environment & Ecology carries 10–15 questions in UPSC Prelims — one of the fastest growing sections. International conventions (Ramsar, CBD, CITES, Paris) are asked almost every year.

About Environment & Ecology for UPSC CSE

These mock tests cover the Environment & Ecology syllabus for UPSC CSE Prelims — ecology concepts, biodiversity, climate change conventions, protected areas, and environmental laws.

What is the difference between National Parks, Wildlife Sanctuaries, and Biosphere Reserves?

National Park — Highest protection level. No human activity (including grazing, forestry) is permitted. Boundaries fixed by law and cannot be altered by State government without Parliament approval. Examples: Jim Corbett, Kaziranga, Sundarbans. Wildlife Sanctuary — Some human activities (grazing, forestry) may be permitted with permission. State government can alter boundaries. Primarily for protection of one or more species. Examples: Gir, Chilika. Biosphere Reserve — UNESCO designation. Has three zones: Core zone (strictly protected), Buffer zone (research and limited use), Transition zone (sustainable human activity). Examples: Nilgiri (first in India, 1986), Sundarban, Gulf of Mannar. India has 18 Biosphere Reserves; 12 are in UNESCO's World Network.

What are the key international environment conventions tested in UPSC?

Must-know conventions: Ramsar Convention (1971) — Wetlands of International Importance; India has 75+ Ramsar sites. CITES (1973) — Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species; three appendices based on threat level. Montreal Protocol (1987) — phasing out ozone-depleting substances (CFCs, HCFCs). Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD, 1992) — Nagoya Protocol (2010) on Access and Benefit Sharing from genetic resources. UNFCCC (1992) — Framework convention; led to Kyoto Protocol (1997) and Paris Agreement (2015). Paris Agreement (2015) — limit global warming to 1.5°C above pre-industrial levels; NDCs (Nationally Determined Contributions) submitted by each country.

What are biodiversity hotspots and which ones are in India?

A Biodiversity Hotspot (concept by Norman Myers) is a region with: (1) at least 1,500 endemic plant species, and (2) has lost at least 70% of its original vegetation. There are 36 global hotspots. India has parts of four: Western Ghats & Sri Lanka (extends along India's west coast — rich in endemics, UNESCO World Heritage), Eastern Himalayas (Indo-Burma hotspot — NE India), Indo-Burma (parts of NE India), and Sundaland (Andaman & Nicobar Islands). Western Ghats is one of the most species-rich hotspots globally and is frequently asked in UPSC.

What are the IUCN Red List categories?

IUCN Red List has 9 categories (from most to least threatened): Extinct (EX) — no known individuals; Extinct in Wild (EW) — survives only in captivity; Critically Endangered (CR) — extremely high risk of extinction; Endangered (EN) — very high risk; Vulnerable (VU) — high risk; Near Threatened (NT) — close to qualifying as threatened; Least Concern (LC) — widespread and abundant; Data Deficient (DD) — insufficient information; Not Evaluated (NE). UPSC frequently asks about specific animals — e.g., Bengal Tiger (Endangered), Snow Leopard (Vulnerable), Giant Panda (Vulnerable, recently downlisted), Cheetah (Vulnerable).