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Chapter 4 of 22
Study Plan

Forest and Wildlife Resources

Meghalaya Board · Class 10 · Social Science

Step-by-step guide to study Forest and Wildlife Resources in Meghalaya Board Class 10 Social Science. Topics to cover, practice strategy, and time allocation.

51 questions20 flashcards5 concepts

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A diagram illustrating the concept of biodiversity and how humans and other living organisms form a complex, interdependent ecological web, highlighting the role of plants, animals, and microorganisms
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Study Plan

1
Day 1–2

Learn the Theory

Read the textbook chapter carefully. Note down definitions, formulas, and key concepts.

2
Day 3

Practice Problems

Solve textbook exercises and additional practice questions. There are 51 questions available for this chapter.

3
Day 4

Revise & Test

Revise key formulas and concepts without looking at notes. Take a practice quiz to test your understanding. Mark weak areas for re-revision.

4
Day 7

Spaced Revision

Revisit Forest and Wildlife Resources after a week. Use flashcards for quick recall. Solve previous year questions from this chapter.

What to Focus On

  • Biodiversity = variety of all life forms and the ecosystems they create.
  • India is among the world's 12 mega-biodiversity nations.
  • All living organisms form a complex ecological web in which humans are just one part.

  • India has ~47,000 plant species and ~90,000 animal species.
  • India holds about 8% of the world's total species.
  • Many species are yet to be discovered.

  • Conservation preserves ecological diversity and genetic resources.
  • Indian Wildlife (Protection) Act was enacted in 1972.
  • The Act banned hunting and restricted trade in wildlife.

Common Mistakes to Avoid

Reserved Forests are open for public use and collection of forest produce, while Protected Forests are the most strictly conserved.

Project Tiger was launched to save tigers only as an animal species, and had no broader ecological significance.

Conservation of forests and wildlife is solely the government's responsibility and local communities only harm the environment.

Memory Tips

Biodiversity — all living forms are interdependent in a web

Indian Wildlife (Protection) Act — implemented in 1972

Three types of forests: Reserved, Protected, Unclassed

Reserved forests = more than half of total forest land

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Frequently Asked Questions

What are the important topics in Forest and Wildlife Resources for Meghalaya Board Class 10 Social Science?
Key topics in Forest and Wildlife Resources include Forest and Wildlife Resources — Complete Concept Map, Forest and Wildlife Resources - Chapter Overview, Forest and Wildlife Resources - Full Chapter Concept Map. These are the concepts Meghalaya Board Class 10 examiners draw on most — study them first, then practise related questions.
How to score full marks in Forest and Wildlife Resources — Meghalaya Board Class 10 Social Science?
Understand the core concepts first, then work through the 51 practice questions available for this chapter. Revise formulas and definitions regularly, and use flashcards for quick recall before the exam.

Sources & Official References

Content is aligned to the official syllabus. Refer to the board website for the latest curriculum.

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Quizzes, flashcards, AI doubt-solver and a step-by-step study plan for Meghalaya Board Class 10 Social Science.