Skip to main content

Cordova Learning Science class07 Chapter Plant and animal Fibre



B. Fill in the blanks:
1. Alpaca is generally found in South America.

2. Silk and wool fibres are obtained from animals.

3. Silk is obtained from cocoons of silkworm.

4. Natural fibres are obtained from plants and animals.

6. The fewer the burrs, the better is the wool.

7. The eggs are warmed to a suitable temperature in an oven

8. During the period of spinning of its cocoon, a silkworm is transformed into Pupa.

C. State whether the following statements are True (T) or False (F). Rewrite the false statements correctly:

1. Silk is obtained from cocoons of silkworms. (T)

2. The process of washing the fleece of sheep to remove dust, dirt, sweat and grease is
called shearing.


False Scouring.

3. The rearing of silkworms for obtaining silk is called sericulture. T

4. The damaged or waste cocoons are used to produce raw silk. F
Spun silk

D. Very Short Answer Questions:

1. What is the process of removing the burrs from fleece called?

Ans. Combing

2. Name any two breeds of sheep found in India.

Ans. Merino ,Lohi

3. Name the process of removing hair from the body of a sheep.

Ans. Shearing

4. Name the sheep which is found in Gujarat and whose wool is used in hosiery.

Ans. Patanwadi

6. Which country leads the world in silk production?

Ans. China

5. What is the process of taking out threads from the cocoon called?

Ans. reeling the silk

7. Name two wool-yielding animals.

Ans. Sheep, goat, yak and camel.

E. Short Answer Type-I Questions:

1. What is meant by rearing of sheep?

Ans. The raising and breeding of domestic sheep is called rearing of sheep.

Sheep are raised principally for their meat (lamb and mutton), milk (sheep's milk), and
fiber (wool)

2. What is throwing?

Ans. Throwing is the process of twisting and doubling the single raw silk fibres into
usable thread after reeling and cleaning.

3. Why does shearing not hurt the sheep?

Ans. Shearing doesn't usually hurt a sheep. It's just like getting a haircut.

4. What is meant by scouring?

Ans. The sheared skin with hair is thoroughly washed in tanks to remove grease, dust
and dirt. This is called scouring.

5. What is cocoon?

Ans. A cocoon is a soft covering that an insect spin with silky thread to protect itself.

F. Short Answer Type-I Questions:
1. What is meant by selective breeding? What is its purpose?

Ans. Selective breeding is a kind of artificial selection in which two different kind of
breed are crossed to develop new organisms with desirable characteristics. For example
native breeds (female) crossed with exotic breed (male).

2. What is silk? How do we get silk from cocoon?

Ans. Silk is a kind of animal which are soft and lustrous.

The cocoons are kept under the sun or boiled or exposed to steam. The silk fibres
separate out.

3. (a) What are raw silk and spun silk?

(b) On burning silk, it gives out the smell of burning hair. Give reason.

Ans. (a) Silk fibre obtain from cocoon and twisted to make stronger thread is called raw
silk. Silk fibre obtain from damaged cocoon is called spun silk.

(b) On burning silk gives out the smell of burning hair as it is made up of protein

4. With the help of a flow chart only, describe the life cycle of a silkworm.

5. (a) What is sorter's disease?

Ans. People working in wool industry sometimes they get infected by a bacterium called
anthrax, which causes a fatal blood disease called sorter’s disease

(b) Name two Indian breeds of sheep and also mention the quality of wool produced.

Ans. (i) Deccani sheep breed - low grade fibres, mostly used for the manufacturing rough
blankets (Kambals).

(ii) Gaddi Sheep Breed - wool is fine and lustrous and it is used for manufacturing of
high quality kulu shawls and blankets.

6. (a) Why do wool yielding animals have a thick coat of hair on their bodies?

Ans. wool yielding animals have a thick coat of hair on their bodies so that sheep can
withstand with cold weather.

(b) The process of removing hair from the body of sheep is called shearing. Why is
shearing done in summers?

Ans. Sheep are usually found in hilly and cold region. Shearing of sheep done in
summers because sheep can survive without their protective coat of hair.

G. Long Answer Questions:

1. Write the various steps involved in the production of silk cloth from silk moth.

Ans. a. Incubation: The silk moth eggs are warmed to a temperature suitable for
hatching. This is known as incubation.

b. Rearing: After hatching, the silkworms are fed on mulberry leaves for six weeks, and
the worms eat almost continuously and increase in size.

c. Spinning: Branches of trees or shrubs are placed in their rearing houses. The worms
climb these branches and make their cocoons out of one continuous thread.

d. Reeling: The cocoons are first boiled or treated in ovens, killing the insects by heat.
The silk fibre is then obtained from the cocoons by a delicate process known as reeling.
This fibre woven into cloth.

2. Describe the process of wool production.
Ans. The different processes involved in wool production are shearing, scouring, grading,
dyeing, and drying.

Shearing: The process of removal of the fleece from an animal is called shearing.

Scouring: The sheared hair is washed properly to remove dirt, dust, and grease. The
process of removing dirt, dust, and grease from the sheared hair is called scouring.

Grading : the wool is sorted on the basis of length, colour, texture

Dyeing: As the natural colour of fleece is white, brown, or black, the sheared wool is
dyed in different colours.

Drying : In this process, containers of wool are put through rollers to squeeze out as
much water as possible. Then the wool is weighed and packed into bales. The bales are
transported to the mills where they are processed further for making cloth

3. Discuss various varieties of natural silk.
Ans. Eri silk – it may be white or brick-red ;

Muga silk - golden-yellow silk thread which is very attractive and strong.

Mulberry silk – it contributes to around 90 percent of the world silk production.

Tasar silk - copperish colour mainly used for furnishings and interiors.

H. HOTS (Higher Order Thinking Skills) Questions:

1. How is selective breeding advantageous for us?

Ans. selective breeding increase the production by selecting best variety of animals.

2. Why are animal activists against the silk production?

Ans. Animal activists are against the present process of getting silk from the cocoon
because in this process the pupa are killed in a cruel way by boiling them in water.

For more chapters visit 7th science

​7th_ch-4 Natural fiber solution living Science Download File

Class7 Chapter 02 Nutrition in Plants (Cordova Science) Download

Class7 Chapter 02 Nutrition in Animals Cordova Science Download

Comments

CBSE ADDA :By Jsunil Sir : Your Ultimate Destination for CBSE Exam Preparation and Academic Insights

Class 10 Chapter 02 Acid Bases and Salts NCERT Activity Explanation

NCERT Activity Chapter 02 Acid Bases and Salt Class 10 Chemistry Activity 2.1 Indicator Acid Base Red litmus No Change Blue Blue Litmus Red No change Phenolphthalein Colourless Pink Methyl Orange Pink   Yellow Indictors are substance which change colour in acidic or basic media. Activity 2.2 There are some substances whose odour changes in in acidic or basic media. These are called olfactory indicators. Like onion vanilla, onion and clove. These changes smell in basic solution. Activity 2.3 Take about 5 mL of dilute sulphuric acid in a test tube and add few pieces of zinc granules to it. => You will observe bubbles of hydrogen gas on the surface of zinc granules. Zn + H2SO4 --> ZnSO4 + H2 => Pass the Hydrogen gas through the soap solution. Bubbles formed in the soap solution as Hydrogen gas it does not get dissolved in it

CBSE I NCERT 10th Numerical Problem solved Reflection and reflection of light

Q. 1. A concave mirror of focal length 20cm is placed 50 cm from a wall. How far from the wall an object be placed to form its real image on the wall?  Solution: V= -50 cm F= -20cm From mirror formula 1/u = 1/f – 1/v = -1/20+ 1/50 = - 3/100  U = - 33.3 cm Therefore, the distance of the object from the wall x =  50 – u X = 50 – 33.3 = 16.7 cm. Q.2. An object is placed at a distance of 40cm from a concave mirror of focal length 15cm. If the object is displaced through a distance of 20 cm towards the mirror, By how much distance is the image displaced? Answer: Here f = - 15 cm, u = - 40 cm Now 1/f = 1/u + 1/v Then 1/v = 1/f – 1/u Or V= uf/u-f =( - 40 x -15)/25 = -24 cm Then object is displaced towards the mirror let u1 be the distance object from the Mirror in its new position. Then u1 = -(40-20) = -20cm If the image is formed at a distance u1 from the mirror then v1 = u1f/u1-f = -20X-15/-20+15 = -60 cm. = - 20 x-15/-20+15 = -60 cm. Therefor

Class 10 Metal and Non MetalsChapter 03 NCERT Activity Solutions

X Class 10 NCERT Activity Explanation Class 10 Metals and Non Metals Activity 3.1 Page No. 37 Take samples of iron, copper, aluminium and magnesium. Note the appearance of each sample. They have a shining surface. Clean the surface of each sample by rubbing them with sand paper and note their appearance again. They become more shiny. => Freshly cut Metal have shiny surface Activity 3.2 Page No. 37 Take small pieces of iron, copper, aluminium, and magnesium. Try to cut these metals with a sharp knife and note your observations. They are very hard to cut. Hold a piece of sodium metal with a pair of tongs and try to cut it with a knife. Sodium can be cut easily with knife. Hence K and Na are soft metal cut with knife Activity 3.3 Page No. 38 Take pieces of iron, zinc, lead and copper try to strike it four or five times with a hammer. These metals are beaten into thin sheet on hammering. This property of metal is called malleability and metals are called malleable. Activity 3.4 Page

Living science ratna sagar class 6 solutions

Ratna sagar living science 6 answers by jsunil. Class6 Living science solution Term-1 Living Science Solution chapter-1 Source of food Download File Living Science Solution chapter-2 Component of food Download File Living Science Solution chapter-3 Fibre to fabric Download File Living Science Sol ch-4 Sorting of material into group Download File Living Science Soln ch-5 Separation of substance Download File Living Science Solution chapter-6 Change around Us Download File Living Science Solution ch-7 Living and Non Living Download File Living Science Solution ch-8 Getting to Know Plants Download File Living Science Sol ch-9 The Body and Its movements Download File Visit given link for full answer Class6 Living science solution Term-II

Electricity numerical for class 10 CBSE Trend Setter 50 Problems

1. The current passing through a room heater has been halved. What will happen to the heat produced by it? 2. An electric iron of resistance 20 ohm draws a current of 5 amperes. Calculate the heat produced in 30 seconds. 3. An electric heater of resistance 8 ohm takes a current of 15 A from the mains supply line. Calculate the rate at which heat is developed in the heater. 4. A resistance of 40 ohms and one of 60 ohms are arranged in series across 220 volt supply. Find the heat in joules produced by this combination in half a minute. 5. A resistance of 25 ohm is connected to a 12 V battery. Calculate the heat energy in joules generated per minute. 6. 100 joules of heat is produced per second in a 4 ohm resistor. What is the potential difference across the resistor? 7. An electric iron is connected to the mains power supply of 220 V. When the electric iron is adjusted at minimum heating’ it consumes a power of 360 W but at ‘maximum heating’ it takes a power of 840 W. Ca