Succession: Previous Year Questions with Solutions

medium CBSE NEET 2 min read

Previous year questions are the best investment of your study time. For ecological succession, the same concepts cycle through CBSE, NEET, and JEE papers with small tweaks. We will walk through a representative PYQ below.


Question

In a pond undergoing hydrosere, biomass doubles every 5 years. If starting biomass is 100 kg, what is it after 20 years?

(Adapted from recent board and entrance exam patterns on ecological succession.)


Solution — Step by Step

This PYQ tests your grip on primary vs secondary succession, sere, pioneer community, climax community. Before solving, name the concept — that alone earns method marks in board exams.

Write down every number with its unit. Circle what is asked. Skipping this step is why students misread easy PYQs as “tricky”.

Use the standard formula or definition relevant to ecological succession. The examiner is not trying to trap you — they want to see you execute the textbook method cleanly.

1600 kg. Units are mandatory. A correct number without units loses the unit mark.

The answer is 1600 kg. NEET 2022 asked for the pioneer species on bare rock (lichens) vs bare water (phytoplankton).


Why This Works

PYQ patterns in ecological succession repeat because the NCERT syllabus is fixed and examiners pick from a limited pool of testable concepts. Once you have solved 30-40 PYQs, you will recognise the question before you finish reading it.

NEET 2022 asked for the pioneer species on bare rock (lichens) vs bare water (phytoplankton).


Alternative Method

Some PYQs can be solved by elimination — rule out the obviously wrong MCQ options first, then pick the best remaining choice. This is a lifesaver when you are stuck on a concept but can eliminate two bad options using general biology sense.


Common Mistake

Students read the PYQ solution, nod “yes makes sense”, and move on without re-solving it themselves three days later. Passive reading does not build recall. Re-solve every PYQ from scratch at least twice before the exam.

Keep a PYQ logbook. For each question, note the date solved, whether you got it right, and the concept tested. Review the “got wrong” column every weekend.

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