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2026 Statistics

Key Facts: UP Forest Guard Exam

100 MCQs

Total questions in the official written main exam

UPSSSC Scheme

120 Minutes

Total duration allowed to solve the written main exam

UPSSSC Guidelines

0.25 Marks

Deduction for each incorrect MCQ answer

UPSSSC Guidelines

₹25

Standard processing fee for all candidate categories

Fee Regulations

Valid PET

Must have qualified UPSSSC PET to apply for this main exam

Eligibility Criteria

UPSSSC Forest Guard written exam is a 100 MCQ test (forestry/wildlife, UP GK, math/biology, and computers) over 120 minutes with 0.25 negative marking. Candidates must have a valid PET scorecard.

Sample UP Forest Guard Practice Questions

Try these sample questions to test your UP Forest Guard exam readiness. Each question includes a detailed explanation. Start the interactive quiz above for the full 100+ question experience with AI tutoring.

1What is the primary objective of the Joint Forest Management (JFM) program in India?
A.To exclude local communities from forest conservation and hand over management to private firms
B.To involve local communities in the protection and management of degraded forests alongside the forest department
C.To clear forest lands for agricultural expansion and cash crop cultivation
D.To declare all state forests as strictly closed biosphere reserves without any human activity
Explanation: Joint Forest Management (JFM) is a partnership mechanism between local communities and the forest department to protect and manage degraded forests. It aims at sustainable forest management while meeting the biomass needs of local people. This program was formally launched following the National Forest Policy of 1988.
2In which year was the Wildlife (Protection) Act enacted in India to safeguard animal and plant species?
A.1952
B.1972
C.1980
D.1986
Explanation: The Wildlife (Protection) Act was enacted by the Parliament of India in 1972. It provides a legal framework for the protection of various species of wild animals and plants, the management of their habitats, and the regulation of trade in wild animals and products derived from them.
3Which is the oldest National Park in India, established in 1936 to protect the endangered Bengal tiger?
A.Gir National Park
B.Kaziranga National Park
C.Jim Corbett National Park
D.Kanha National Park
Explanation: Jim Corbett National Park, located in Uttarakhand, was established in 1936 as Hailey National Park. It is the oldest national park in India and was the first to come under the Project Tiger initiative in 1973.
4Which group of organisms occupies the first trophic level in a forest ecosystem?
A.Herbivores
B.Primary Carnivores
C.Green plants
D.Decomposers
Explanation: Green plants (producers) occupy the first trophic level in an ecosystem. They convert solar energy into chemical energy through photosynthesis, forming the energy base for all other levels.
5What is meant by an 'endemic species' in ecological terms?
A.A species that is found globally in almost all ecosystems
B.A species that is imported from another country and becomes invasive
C.A species that is confined to a specific geographical region and not found anywhere else
D.A species that has gone completely extinct in the wild
Explanation: An endemic species is one that is naturally unique and restricted to a defined geographical area, such as an island, state, or nation. Examples in India include the Nilgiri Tahr and the Lion-tailed Macaque.
6Which gas is the most significant contributor to the anthropogenic greenhouse effect globally?
A.Methane
B.Carbon dioxide
C.Nitrous oxide
D.Ozone
Explanation: Carbon dioxide (CO2) is the primary greenhouse gas emitted through human activities, mainly the burning of fossil fuels and deforestation. While other gases have higher global warming potentials, the sheer volume of CO2 emissions makes it the largest driver of global warming.
7According to the National Forest Policy of 1988, what percentage of the total geographical area of India should be under forest or tree cover?
A.21%
B.33%
C.45%
D.50%
Explanation: The National Forest Policy of 1988 set a national goal to bring at least one-third (33%) of the total land area of the country under forest or tree cover. For hilly and mountainous regions, the target is higher, at 66%, to prevent soil erosion and land degradation.
8Under which Schedule of the Wildlife (Protection) Act, 1972, are animals accorded the highest level of legal protection, with severe penalties for violations?
A.Schedule I
B.Schedule III
C.Schedule V
D.Schedule VI
Explanation: Schedule I of the Wildlife (Protection) Act, 1972, provides absolute protection to endangered species. Offences against these species attract the highest penalties under the law. Examples include the Royal Bengal Tiger, Snow Leopard, and One-horned Rhinoceros.
9What does the 'Ten Percent Law' of energy transfer in a food chain state?
A.Only 10% of solar energy is captured by primary producers.
B.Only 10% of the energy at a trophic level is transferred to the next higher level.
C.Respiration consumes exactly 10% of the energy at each trophic level.
D.Decomposers return 10% of the energy back to the producers.
Explanation: Introduced by Raymond Lindeman in 1942, the Ten Percent Law states that during the transfer of energy from organic food from one trophic level to the next, only about 10% of the energy is stored as flesh. The remaining 90% is lost during transfer, broken down in respiration, or lost to incomplete digestion.
10Which national park is famous for being the world's only floating national park, characterized by floating decomposed plant materials called 'Phumdis'?
A.Keibul Lamjao National Park
B.Namdapha National Park
C.Sirohi National Park
D.Nokrek National Park
Explanation: Keibul Lamjao National Park, located in Manipur, is situated on Loktak Lake. It is the only floating national park in the world and is the last natural habitat of the endangered Sangai (brow-antlered deer).

About the UP Forest Guard Exam

The UPSSSC Forest Guard & Wildlife Guard written examination is conducted for recruitment to forest and wildlife departments in Uttar Pradesh. The test contains 100 MCQs to be solved in 120 minutes: 30 on subject-related forestry and environment, 30 on Uttar Pradesh GK, 25 on basic mathematics and biology, and 15 on computers. This practice test contains exactly 100 questions aligned with the official weights. Step-by-step explanations and wrong-option rationales are provided for every question to help you avoid the 0.25 negative marking penalty.

Questions

100 scored questions

Time Limit

120 minutes

Passing Score

Cut-off based merit selection

Exam Fee

₹25 (All Categories) (Uttar Pradesh Subordinate Services Selection Commission (UPSSSC))

UP Forest Guard Exam Content Outline

30%

Forestry & Wildlife

Forest policy, conservation, national parks, ecology, environment protection laws, and climate change.

30%

Uttar Pradesh GK

UP state history, geography, tourism, demographic statistics, forest cover, and state schemes.

25%

Mathematics & Biology

Arithmetic calculations, numbers, biology basics (tissues, nutrition, environment).

15%

Computer & IT

Windows, MS Office, basic hardware, networking, and new technology developments.

How to Pass the UP Forest Guard Exam

What You Need to Know

  • Passing score: Cut-off based merit selection
  • Exam length: 100 questions
  • Time limit: 120 minutes
  • Exam fee: ₹25 (All Categories)

Keys to Passing

  • Complete 500+ practice questions
  • Score 80%+ consistently before scheduling
  • Focus on highest-weighted sections
  • Use our AI tutor for tough concepts

UP Forest Guard Study Tips from Top Performers

1Focus on the environmental protection acts, wildlife protection acts, and forest conservation rules.
2Thoroughly review UP-specific GK, particularly the latest forest report (ISFR) for Uttar Pradesh.
3Solve intermediate biology questions on cells, tissues, ecosystems, and human physiology.
4Practice basic computer questions on internet terminology and MS Word/Excel shortcut keys.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is there negative marking in the UP Forest Guard Exam?

Yes, there is a negative marking of 0.25 marks (1/4th of a mark) for every incorrect answer.

What are the eligibility requirements for UP Forest Guard?

Candidates must have passed Class 12 (Intermediate) and must hold a valid UPSSSC PET scorecard. The age limit is 18 to 40 years.

What is the written exam pattern for UP Forest Guard?

The exam is an offline objective test of 100 MCQs for 120 minutes. It covers Forestry & Wildlife (30 Qs), UP GK (30 Qs), Math & Biology (25 Qs), and Computers (15 Qs).

What is the physical fitness test (PET) requirement?

For male candidates: run/walk 25 km with a weight of 10 kg in 4 hours. For female candidates: run/walk 14 km in 4 hours (no weight). Both are qualifying in nature.