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You will see the latest JAMB syllabus for Biology this year and also download a Free PDF copy to know the topics where all your JAMB Biology questions will be asked from.
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Take note.
Expect about 40 questions in your JAMB Biology exam from different topics under these 5 sections of the JAMB Biology syllabus:
Table of Sections
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VARIETY OF ORGANISMS
1. Living organisms:
- a. Characteristics
- b. Cell structure and functions of cell components
- c. Level of organization
- i. Cell e.g. euglena and paramecium,
- ii. Tissue, e.g. epithelial tissues and hydra
- iii. Organ, e.g. onion bulb
- iv. Systems, e.g. reproductive, digestive and excretory
- v. Organisms e.g. Chlamydomonas
2. Evolution among the following:
- a. Monera (prokaryotes), e.g. bacteria and blue green algae.
- b. Protista (protozoans and protophyta), e.g. Amoeba, Euglena and Paramecium
- c. Fungi, e.g. mushroom and Rhizopus.
- d. Plantae (plants)
- i. Thallophyta (e.g. Spirogyra)
- ii. Bryophyta (mosses and liveworts) e.g. Brachmenium and Merchantia.
- iii. Pteridophyta (ferns) e.g. Dryopteris.
- iv. Spermatophyta (Gymnospermae and Angiospermae)
- – Gymnosperms e.g. Cycads and conifers.
- – Angiosperms (monocots, e.g. maize; dicots, e.g. water leaf).
- e. Animalia (animals)
- i. Invertebrates
- – coelenterate (e.g. Hydra)
- – Platyhelminthes (flatworms) e.g. Taenia
- – Nematoda (roundworms)
- – Annelida (e.g. earthworm)
- – Arthropoda e.g. mosquito, cockroach, housefly, bee, butterfly
- – Mollusca (e.g. snails)
- ii. Multicellular animals (vertebrates)
- – pisces (cartilaginous and bony fish)
- – Amphibia (e.g. toads and frogs)
- – Reptilia (e.g. lizards, snakes and turtles)
- – Aves (birds)
- – Mammalia (mammals)
- i. Invertebrates
3.a Structural/functional and behavioural adaptations of organism.
- b. adaptive colouration and its functions
- c. Behavioural adaptations in social animals.
- d. Structural adaptations in organism.
FORM AND FUNCTIONS
1.
- a. Internal structure of a flowering plant
- i. Root
- ii. Stem
- iii. Leaf
- b. Internal structure of a mammal.
2. Nutrition
- a. Modes of nutrition
- i. Autotrophic
- ii. Heterotrophic
- b. Types of nutrition
- c. Plant nutrition
- i. Photosynthesis
- ii. Mineral requirements (macro and micro-nutrients).
- d. Animal nutrition
- i. Classes of food substances; carbohydrates, proteins, fats and oils, vitamins, mineral salts and water.
- ii. Food tests (e.g. starch, reducing sugar, protein, oil, fat etc.
- iii. The mammalian tooth (structures, types and functions)
- iv. Mammalian alimentary canal.
- v. Nutrition process (ingestion, digestion, absorption, and assimilation of digested food.
3. Transport
- a. Need for transportation
- b. Materials for transportation.
- Excretory products, gases, manufactured food, digested food, nutrient, water and hormones).
- c. Channels for transportation.
- i. Mammalian circulatory system (heart, arteries, veins, and capillaries).
- ii Plant vascular system (phloem and xylem).
- d. Media and processes of mechanism for transportation.
4. Respiration
- a. Respiratory organs and surfaces.
- b. The mechanism of gaseous exchange in:
- i. Plants
- ii. Mammals
- c. Aerobic respiration.
- d. Anaerobic respiration.
5. Excretion
- a. Types of excretory structures: contractile vacuole, flamecell, nephridium, Malpighian tubule, kidney, stoma and lenticel.
- b. Excretory mechanisms:
- i. Kidneys
- ii. lungs
- iii. skin
- c. Excretory products of plants.
6. Support and movement.
- a. Tropic, tactic, nastic and sleep movements in plants.
- b. supporting tissues in animals.
- c. Types and functions of the skeleton
- i. Exoskeleton.
- ii. Endoskeleton.
- iii. Functions of the skeleton in animals.
7. Reproduction
- a. A sexual reproduction.
- i. Fission as in Paramecium.
- ii. Budding as in yeast.
- iii. Natural vegetative propagation.
- iv. Artificial vegetative propagation.
- b. sexual reproduction in flowering plants.
- i. Floral parts and their functions.
- ii. Pollination and fertilization.
- iii. products of sexual reproduction.
- c. Reproduction in mammals.
- i. structures and functions of the male and female reproductive organs.
- ii. Fertilization and development. (Fusion of gametes).
8. Growth.
- a. meaning of growth.
- b. Germination of seeds and condition necessary for germination of seeds.
9. Co-ordination and control.
- a. Nervous coordination:
- i. the components, structure and functions of the central nervous system;
- ii. The components and functions of the peripheral nervous systems;
- iii. Mechanism of transmission of impulses;
- iv. Reflex action.
- b. The sense organs.
- i. skin (tactile).
- ii. nose (olfactory).
- iii. tongue (taste).
- iv. eye (sight).
- v. ear (auditory).
- c. Hormonal control.
- i. animal hormonal system
- – pituitary.
- – thyroid.
- – parathyroid.
- – adrenal gland.
- – pancreas.
- – gonads.
- ii. Plant hormones (phytohormones) animal.
- i. animal hormonal system
- d. Homeostasis.
- i. Body temperature regulation.
- ii. Salt and water regulation.
ECOLOGY
1. Factors affecting the distribution of Organisms
- i. Abiotic.
- ii. Biotic.
2. Symbiotic interactions of plants and animals.
- (a) Energy flow in the ecosystem: food chains, food webs and trophic levels.
- (b) Nutrient cycling in nature.
- i. carbon cycle.
- ii. water cycle.
- iii. Nitrogen cycle.
3. Natural Habitats.
- (a) Aquatic (e.g. ponds, streams, lakes seashores and mangrove swamps).
- (b) Terrestrial/arboreal (e.g. tree-tops of oil palm, abandoned farmland or a dry grassy (savanna) field, and burrow or hole.
4. Local (Nigerian) Biomes).
- a. Tropical rainforest.
- b. Guinea savanna (southern and northern).
- c. Sudan Savanna.
- d. Desert.
- e. Highlands of montane forests and grasslands of the Obudu, Jos, Mambilla Plateau.
5. The Ecology of Populations:
- (a) Population density and overcrowding.
- (b) Adaptation for survival.
- i. Factors that bring about competition.
- ii. Intra and inter-specific competition.
- iii. Relationship between competition and succession.
- (c) Factors affecting population sizes:
- i. Biotic (e.g. food, pest, disease, predation, competition, reproductive ability).
- ii. Abiotic (e.g. temperature, space, light, rainfall, topography, pressure, pH) etc.
- (d) Ecological succession.
- i. primary succession.
- ii. secondary succession.
6. Soil.
- (a) (i) characteristics of different types of soil (sandy, loamy, clayey).
- i. soil structure.
- ii. porosity, capillarity and humus content.
- iii. Components of the soil.
- i. inorganic.
- ii. organic.
- iii. soil organisms.
- iv. soil air.
- v. soil water
- iv. Soil fertility:
- i. loss of soil fertility.
- ii. renewal and maintenance of soil fertility.
7. Humans and Environment.
- (a) Diseases:
- (i) Common and endemic diseases.
- ii. Easily transmissible diseases and disease syndrome such as:
- – poliomyelitis
- – cholera
- – tuberculosis
- – sexually transmitted disease/syndrome (gonorrhea, syphilis, AIDS, etc).
- b. Pollution and its control.
- (i) sources, types, effects and methods of control.
- (ii) Sanitation and sewage.
- (c) Conservation of Natural Resources.
- (d) Game reserves and National parks.
HEREDITY AND VARIATION
1. Variation In Population.
- a. Morphological variations in the physical appearance of individuals.
- (i) size (height, weight).
- (ii) Colour (skin, eye, hair, coat of animals, scales and feathers.
- (iii) Fingerprints.
- b. Physiological variation.
- (i) Ability to roll tongue.
- (ii) Ability to taste phenylthiocarbamide (PTC).
- (iii) Blood groups.
- c. Application of discontinuous variation in crime detection, blood transfusion and determination of paternity.
2. Heredity.
- a) Inheritance of characters in organisms;
- i. Heritable and non-heritable characters.
- b) Chromosomes – the basis of heredity;
- (i) Structure.
- (ii) Process of transmission of hereditary characters from parents to offspring.
- c) Probability in genetics and sex determination.
- d) Application of the principles of heredity in:
- i) Agriculture.
- (ii) Medicine.
- e. Sex – linked characters e.g. baldness, haemophilia, colour blindness, etc.
EVOLUTION
1. Theories of evolution.
- a) Lamarck’s theory.
- b) Darwin’s theory.
- c) organic theory.
2. Evidence of evolution.
Source: JAMB IBASS
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