NEET · Biology — Ecology & Environment · Japan
Biology — Ecology & Environment for the NEET Exam — Japanese candidates
5% of the NEET test plan. Ecosystems, population ecology, biodiversity, ecological succession, environmental issues, and conservation — approximately 10% of NEET Biology. Calibrated for Japanese candidates.
Behind every published pass rate is a distribution of which topics caused most of the failures. This is one of those topics. Biology — Ecology & Environment sits at roughly 5% of the National Eligibility cum Entrance Test content distribution — Ecology is a high-scoring topic for NEET aspirants willing to invest one focused week. Questions are factual and NCERT-based, with very few calculation-heavy problems. Biodiversity data (hotspots, species richness), ecological pyramids, and environmental issues (ozone depletion, global warming) are near-guaranteed questions in every NEET paper. Pass rates for the NEET are published annually by the awarding body and vary by cohort and locale. For Japanese candidates preparing for NEET, the calibration of study to local context matters: TOEIC is the dominant English credential in Japan. JLPT is taken by both inbound foreign workers and Japanese students seeking Japanese-language certification.
Common failure modes
These are the patterns that cause most candidates to lose marks on this topic. Recognising them in advance is half the work.
- !Confusing ecological pyramids of number vs biomass vs energy — the pyramid of energy is always upright; others can be inverted
- !Misidentifying the India-specific biodiversity hotspots (Western Ghats and Eastern Himalayas are the two Indian hotspots)
- !Confusing primary succession (starts on bare rock) with secondary succession (starts on disturbed but soil-containing land)
- !Mixing up in situ vs ex situ conservation — zoos and seed banks are ex situ; national parks are in situ
Study tips
- 1Read NCERT Class 12 Chapters 13 (Organisms and Populations), 14 (Ecosystem), 15 (Biodiversity and Conservation), and 16 (Environmental Issues) in sequence.
- 2Memorise the 35 biodiversity hotspots worldwide; know that India has two (Western Ghats + Sri Lanka, and Indo-Burma region including Eastern Himalayas).
- 3Make a table of ecological pyramids: upright vs inverted, which model (grassland, forest, aquatic) shows each shape.
- 4For environmental issues, know the numerical data: ozone depletion by CFCs, CO₂ level changes, BOD in water pollution. NEET sometimes asks specific values.
- 5Learn the major national parks, sanctuaries, and biosphere reserves in India — 1–2 questions appear on these in most NEET papers.
- 6日本の受験者の方は、NEET の各セクションにおいて時間配分の練習が最も重要です — 模擬試験を本番と同じ条件で繰り返してください。
Sample NEET Biology — Ecology & Environment questions
These sample items mirror the format and difficulty of real NEET questions. Practice with thousands more on the free Koydo question bank.
- 1
Which of the following ecological pyramids is always upright and never inverted?
- APyramid of numbers
- BPyramid of biomass in an aquatic ecosystem
- CPyramid of energyCorrect
- DPyramid of numbers in a parasitic food chain
Why this answer?
The pyramid of energy is always upright because energy decreases at each successive trophic level (10% rule — only 10% is transferred). Pyramids of number and biomass can be inverted (e.g., many insects on a single tree; phytoplankton biomass below zooplankton in some aquatic systems).
- 2
In situ conservation of biodiversity involves:
- AMaintaining organisms in zoological parks
- BPreserving seeds in gene banks
- CConserving organisms in their natural habitat (e.g., national parks)Correct
- DTissue culture of endangered plants
Why this answer?
In situ conservation means protecting biodiversity within the natural ecosystem and habitat — examples include wildlife sanctuaries, national parks, biosphere reserves, and sacred groves. Ex situ conservation (zoos, seed banks, botanical gardens, tissue culture) protects organisms outside their natural habitat.
- 3
Ozone depletion in the stratosphere is primarily caused by:
- ACarbon dioxide (CO₂)
- BChlorofluorocarbons (CFCs)Correct
- CNitrous oxide (N₂O)
- DMethane (CH₄)
Why this answer?
CFCs (chlorofluorocarbons) release Cl· radicals in the stratosphere under UV radiation. These Cl· radicals catalytically destroy ozone: Cl· + O₃ → ClO· + O₂. One CFC molecule can destroy thousands of ozone molecules. This is directly from NCERT Class 12 Chapter 16.
Frequently asked questions
How many Ecology questions appear in NEET?
Is environmental science (pollution, global warming) tested in NEET?
What is the NEET pass rate for Japanese candidates?
How long should Japanese candidates study Biology — Ecology & Environment for the NEET?
Practice NEET (UG) free with Koydo.
Physics, Chemistry, Biology — NCERT-aligned, with PYQs since 2013.
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Regulatory citation: NTA NEET-UG Information Bulletin — Biology syllabus: Ecology and Environment (Class 12 Unit 10, Chapters 13–16).