| 1. | Theodosius Dobzhansky |
| 2. | Ernst Mayr |
| 3. | James Watson |
| 4. | Stephen Jay Gould |
| 1. | Growth | 2. | Reproduction |
| 3. | Consciousness | 4. | Movement |
ICBN stands for
| 1. | Indian Congress of Biological Name |
| 2. | International Code of Botanical Nomenclature |
| 3. | International Congress of Biological Name |
| 4. | Indian Code of Botanical Nomenclature |
ICZN stands for
| 1. | International Code of Zoosporic Nomenclature |
| 2. | International Code of Zygotic Nomenclature |
| 3. | International Code of Zoological Nomenclature |
| 4. | International Code of Zoosporangia Nomenclature |
Binomial nomenclature seems to be difficult because a scientific name is derived from
| 1. | English | 2. | Sanskrit |
| 3. | Latin | 4. | French |
Established procedures to assign a scientific name are
| 1. | Acceptable to biologists of USA |
| 2. | Acceptable to biologists of India |
| 3. | Acceptable to biologists of Germany |
| 4. | Acceptable to biologists of all over world. |
| 1. | Ecology | 2. | Morphology |
| 3. | Taxonomy | 4. | Cytology |
| 1. | Trinomial nomenclature, Aristotle |
| 2. | Binomial nomenclature, Linnaeus |
| 3. | Binomial nomenclature, Darwin |
| 4. | Uninominal nomenclature, Mendel |
indica is-
| 1. | Specific epithet of mango |
| 2. | Specific epithet of Indus valley species |
| 3. | Specific epithet of wheat ( indian species) |
| 4. | Specific epithet of Rice ( indian species) |
| 1. | Biological names are Romanised or derived from Greek irrespective of their origin. |
| 2. | The first word in a biological name represents the genus while the second component denotes the specific epithet. |
| 3. | Both the words in a biological name, when handwritten, are separately underlined, or printed in italics to indicate their Latin origin. |
| 4. | The first word denoting the genus starts with a capital letter while the specific epithet starts with a small letter. |