 
  
                              Agriculture
Syllabus for UPSC
Candidates
who choose UPSC agriculture optional subject in the civil services exam will find
that the syllabus is interesting and relevant to the issues faced by farmers in
the country. The subject is relatively easier to prepare for candidates who are
coming from remote areas. They have access to traditional knowledge and can
understand farmers’ issues better. In this article, we provide you with the
detailed UPSC syllabus for Agriculture optional and also the Agriculture Optional
Syllabus PDF for Civil Services Examination. For UPSC Syllabus, check the
linked article.
UPSC Agriculture Optional Paper I Syllabus
·      
Ecology and its relevance to man, natural resources,
their sustainable management, and conservation. Physical and social environment
as factors of crop distribution and production. Agroecology, cropping pattern
as indicators of environments. Environmental pollution and associated hazards
to crops, animals, and humans. Climate change – international conventions and
global initiatives. Greenhouse effect and global warming. Advance tools for
ecosystem analysis – Remote sensing (RS) and Geographic Information Systems
(GIS).
·      
Cropping patterns in different agro-climatic zones of
the country. Impact of high-yielding and short-duration varieties on shifts in
cropping patterns. Concepts of various cropping and farming systems. Organic
and Precision farming. Package of practices for production of important
cereals, pulses, oilseeds, fibers, sugar, commercial and fodder crops.
·      
Important features and scope of various types of
forestry plantations such as social forestry, agroforestry, and natural
forests. Propagation of forest plants. Forest products. Agroforestry and value
addition. Conservation of forest flora and fauna.
·      
Weeds, their characteristics, dissemination, and
association with various crops; their multiplications; cultural, biological,
and chemical control of weeds. Soil- physical, chemical, and biological
properties. Processes and factors of soil formation. Soils of India, Mineral
and organic constituents of soils and their role in maintaining soil
productivity. Essential plant nutrients and other beneficial elements in soils
and plants. Principles of soil fertility, soil testing and fertilizer
recommendations, integrated nutrient management. Biofertilizers. Losses of
nitrogen in the soil, nitrogen-use efficiency in submerged rice soils, nitrogen
fixation in soils. Efficient phosphorus and potassium use. Problem soils and
their reclamation. Soil factors affecting greenhouse gas emissions.
·      
Soil conservation, integrated watershed management.
Soil erosion and its management. Dryland agriculture and its problems.
Technology for stabilizing agriculture production in rain-fed areas. Water-use
efficiency about crop production, criteria for scheduling irrigations,
ways, and means of reducing runoff losses of irrigation water. Rainwater
harvesting. Drip and sprinkler irrigation. Drainage of waterlogged soils,
quality of irrigation water, the effect of industrial effluents on soil, and water
pollution. Irrigation projects in India.
·      
Farm management, scope, importance and
characteristics, farm planning. Optimum resource use and budgeting. Economics
of different types of farming systems. Marketing management – strategies for
development, market intelligence. Price fluctuations and their cost; the role of
cooperatives in agricultural economy; types and systems of farming and factors
affecting them. Agricultural price policy. Crop Insurance.
·      
Agricultural extension, its importance, and role,
methods of evaluation of extension programs, socio-economic survey, and status
of big, small, and marginal farmers and landless agricultural laborers.
Training programs for extension workers. Role of Krishi Vigyan Kendra’s (KVK)
in the dissemination of Agricultural technologies. Non-Government Organization
(NGO) and self-help group approach for rural development.
UPSC Agriculture Optional Paper II Syllabus
·      
Cell structure, function, and cell cycle. Synthesis,
structure, and function of genetic material. Laws of heredity. Chromosome
structure, chromosomal aberrations, linkage and cross-over, and their
significance in recombination breeding. Polyploidy, euploids, and aneuploidy.
Mutations – and their role in crop improvement. Heritability, sterility and
incompatibility, classification and their application in crop improvement.
Cytoplasmic inheritance, sex-linked, sex-influenced and sex-limited characters.
·      
History of plant breeding. Modes of reproduction,
selfing, and crossing techniques. Origin, evolution, and domestication of crop
plants, a center of origin, the law of homologous series, crop genetic resources
conservation, and utilization. Application of principles of plant breeding, improvement
of crop plants. Molecular markers and their application in plant improvement.
Pure-line selection, pedigree, mass, and recurrent selections, combining
ability, its significance in plant breeding. Heterosis and its exploitation.
Somatic hybridization. Breeding for disease and pest resistance. Role of
interspecific and intergeneric hybridization. Role of genetic engineering and
biotechnology in crop improvement. Genetically modified crop plants.
·      
Seed production and processing technologies. Seed
certification, seed testing, and storage. DNA fingerprinting and seed
registration. Role of public and private sectors in seed production and
marketing. Intellectual Property Rights (IPR) issues, WTO issues, and its impact
on Agriculture.
·      
Principles of Plant Physiology concerning plant
nutrition, absorption, translocation, and metabolism of nutrients. Soil – water-
plant relationship.
·      
Enzymes and plant pigments; photosynthesis- modern
concepts and factors affecting the process, aerobic and anaerobic respiration;
C3, C4, and CAM mechanisms. Carbohydrates, protein, and fat metabolism. Growth
and development; photoperiodism and verbalization. Plant growth substances and
their role in crop production. Physiology of seed development and germination;
dormancy. Stress physiology – draught, salt, and water stress.
·      
Major fruits, plantation crops, vegetables, spices, and
flower crops. Package practices of major horticultural crops. Protected
cultivation and high-tech horticulture. Post-harvest technology and value
addition of fruits and vegetables. Landscaping and commercial floriculture.
Medicinal and aromatic plants. Role of fruits and vegetables in human
nutrition.
·      
Diagnosis of pests and diseases of field crops,
vegetables, orchards, and plantation crops and their economic importance.
Classification of pests and diseases and their management. Integrated pest and
disease management. Storage pests and their management. Biological control of
pests and diseases. Epidemiology and forecasting of major crop pests and
diseases. Plant quarantine measures. Pesticides, their formulation, and modes of
action.
·      
Food production and consumption trends in India. Food
security and growing population – vision 2020. Reasons for grain surplus.
National and international food policies. Production, procurement, distribution
constraints. Availability of food grains, per capita expenditure on food.
Trends in poverty, Public Distribution System and Below Poverty Line
population, Targeted Public Distribution System (PDS), policy implementation in
context to globalization. Processing constraints. Relation of food production
to National Dietary Guidelines and food consumption pattern. Food-based dietary
approaches to eliminate hunger. Nutrient deficiency – Micro nutrient deficiency:
Protein Energy Malnutrition or Protein Calorie Malnutrition (PEM or PCM), Micronutrient deficiency and HRD in context of work capacity of women and children.
Food grain productivity and food security.


 
    
    
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