wiz-icon
MyQuestionIcon
MyQuestionIcon
1
You visited us 1 times! Enjoying our articles? Unlock Full Access!
Question

It can be inferred from the passage that when aspen groves experience a "disturbance", such a disturbance

A
leads to a hormonal imbalance within an aspen clone
Right on! Give the BNAT exam to get a 100% scholarship for BYJUS courses
B
provides soil conditions that are favorable for new shoots
No worries! We‘ve got your back. Try BYJU‘S free classes today!
C
thins out aspen groves that have become overly dense
No worries! We‘ve got your back. Try BYJU‘S free classes today!
D
suppresses the formation of too many new aspen stems
No worries! We‘ve got your back. Try BYJU‘S free classes today!
E
protects aspen groves by primarily destroying coniferous trees rather than aspens
No worries! We‘ve got your back. Try BYJU‘S free classes today!
Open in App
Solution

The correct option is A leads to a hormonal imbalance within an aspen clone
It is given directly that, disturbances makes the cells give out signals that make a hormonal imbalance. This is given in option (a).

flag
Suggest Corrections
thumbs-up
0
similar_icon
Similar questions
Q. The defoliation of millions of acres of trees by massive infestations of gypsy moth caterpillars is a recurring phenomenon in the north-eastern United States. In studying these outbreaks, scientists have discovered that affected trees fight back by releasing toxic chemicals, mainly phenols, into their foliage. These noxious substances limit caterpillars’ growth and reduce the number of eggs that female moths lay. Phenols also make the eggs smaller, which reduces the growth of the following year’s caterpillars. Because the number of eggs a female moth produces is directly related to her size, and because her size is determined entirely by her feeding success as a caterpillar, the trees’ defensive mechanism has an impact on moth fecundity.
The gypsy moth is also subject to attack by the nucleopolyhedrosis virus, or wilt disease, a particularly important killer of the caterpillars in outbreak years. Caterpillars contract wilt disease when they eat a leaf to which the virus, encased in a protein globule, has become attached. Once ingested by a caterpillar, the protein globule dissolves, releasing thousands of viruses, or virions, that after about two weeks multiply enough to fill the entire body cavity. When the caterpillar dies, the virions are released to the outside, encased in a new protein globule synthesized from the caterpillar’s tissues and ready to be picked up by other caterpillars.
Knowing that phenols, including tannins, often act by associating with and altering the activity of proteins, researchers focused on the effects on caterpillars of ingesting the virus and leaves together. They found that on tannin-rich oak leaves, the virus is considerably less effective at killing caterpillars than when it is on aspen leaves, which are lower in phenols. In general, the more concentrated the phenols in tree leaves, the less deadly the virus. Thus, while highly concentrated phenols in tree leaves reduce the caterpillar population by limiting the size of caterpillars and, consequently, the size of the female’s egg cluster, these same chemicals also help caterpillars survive by disabling the wilt virus. Forest stands of red oaks, with their tannin-rich foliage, may even provide caterpillars with safe havens from disease. In stands dominated by trees such as aspen, however, incipient gypsy moth outbreaks are quickly suppressed by viral epidemics.
Further research has shown that caterpillars become virtually immune to the wilt virus as the trees on which they feed respond to increasing defoliation. The trees’ own defences raise the threshold of caterpillar vulnerability to the disease, allowing populations to grow denser without becoming more susceptible to infection. For these reasons, the benefits to the caterpillars of ingesting phenols appear to outweigh the costs. Given the presence of the virus, the trees’ defensive tactic apparently has backfired.
Q. It can be inferred from the passage that wilt disease virions depend for their survival on
View More
Join BYJU'S Learning Program
similar_icon
Related Videos
thumbnail
lock
Abscisic Acid
BIOLOGY
Watch in App
Join BYJU'S Learning Program
CrossIcon