NCERT Solutions for Class 11 Biology Chapter 7: Structural Organisation in Animals (NCERT 2026–27)
These Class 11 Biology Chapter 7 solutions cover Structural Organisation in Animals, the chapter that introduces how cells, tissues, organs and organ systems work together, and then studies the morphology and anatomy of the frog (Rana tigrina) as a representative vertebrate. Every NCERT exercise question is reproduced verbatim and answered in clear, exam-ready prose for session 2026–27.
Class 11 Biology Chapter 7 Solutions – Overview
In unicellular organisms a single cell performs every function, but in multicellular animals these tasks are shared among groups of cells, showing division of labour. A group of similar cells with intercellular substances forms a tissue; all complex animals are built from only four basic tissue types — epithelial, connective, muscular and neural. Tissues combine to form organs (stomach, lung, heart, kidney), and two or more organs working together form an organ system (digestive, respiratory, etc.). The chapter then explores the morphology (external form) and anatomy (internal organs) of the frog, Rana tigrina — a cold-blooded amphibian of phylum Chordata — covering its skin, body divisions, and its digestive, respiratory, circulatory, excretory, nervous and reproductive systems. The end-of-chapter Exercises contain two questions, both solved fully below.
Key Concepts & Definitions
Tissue: a group of similar cells along with intercellular substances that together perform a specific function.
Four basic tissues: epithelial, connective, muscular and neural — the building blocks of all organs.
Organ & organ system: tissues organise into organs; organs interacting for a common function form an organ system.
Poikilotherm (cold-blooded): an animal like the frog whose body temperature varies with the environment.
Aestivation & hibernation: summer sleep and winter sleep in deep burrows to escape extreme heat and cold.
Camouflage / mimicry: protective colour change that hides the frog from enemies.
Cutaneous & pulmonary respiration: gas exchange through the moist skin (in water) and through the lungs (on land).
Hepatic portal & renal portal systems: special venous links between liver–intestine and kidney–lower body respectively.
Ureotelic animal: the frog excretes nitrogenous waste mainly as urea.
Sexual dimorphism: males bear vocal sacs and a copulatory pad on the first digit of the forelimb; females do not.
NCERT Exercises — Solutions
Questions below are reproduced verbatim from the NCERT textbook (Reprint 2026–27). Answers are original and exam-ready.
1. Draw a neat diagram of digestive system of frog.
2. Mention the function of the Ureters in frog.
Extra Practice Questions
Short Answer Type Questions
Q1. Why is the alimentary canal of the frog short?
Q2. Distinguish between cutaneous and pulmonary respiration in a frog.
Q3. What is meant by sexual dimorphism in frogs? Give the male features.
Q4. Name the heart chambers of a frog and the structures associated with it.
Q5. Why is the frog called a ureotelic animal?
Long Answer Type Questions
Q1. Describe the digestive system of the frog, including its digestive glands.
Q2. Explain the circulatory system of the frog.
Q3. Give an account of the nervous system and sense organs of the frog.
MCQs & Assertion–Reason
1. The common Indian frog belongs to the species:
(a) Rana esculenta (b) Rana tigrina (c) Bufo melanostictus (d) Hyla arborea
2. The number of basic tissue types in complex animals is:
(a) two (b) three (c) four (d) five
3. The heart of a frog has:
(a) two atria and two ventricles (b) one atrium and one ventricle (c) two atria and one ventricle (d) one atrium and two ventricles
4. Summer sleep in a frog is called:
(a) hibernation (b) aestivation (c) camouflage (d) metamorphosis
5. In water, the frog respires mainly through its:
(a) lungs (b) gills (c) skin (d) buccal cavity
6. The bilobed structure used by the frog to capture prey is the:
(a) tympanum (b) tongue (c) nictitating membrane (d) cloaca
7. The frog excretes its nitrogenous waste mainly as:
(a) ammonia (b) uric acid (c) urea (d) amino acids
8. The special venous connection between the liver and the intestine is the:
(a) renal portal system (b) hepatic portal system (c) sinus venosus (d) conus arteriosus
9. The testes of a male frog are attached to the kidneys by a double fold of peritoneum called:
(a) mesentery (b) mesorchium (c) pericardium (d) peritoneum
10. A mature female frog can lay how many ova at a time?
(a) 100–200 (b) 500–1000 (c) 2500–3000 (d) 10000–12000
For each Assertion–Reason question, choose: (A) Both true and the Reason correctly explains the Assertion; (B) Both true but the Reason is not the correct explanation; (C) Assertion true, Reason false; (D) Assertion false, Reason true.
A-R 1. Assertion: The frog is called a cold-blooded animal.
Reason: The body temperature of the frog varies with the temperature of its environment.
A-R 2. Assertion: In the male frog the ureter acts as a urinogenital duct.
Reason: In the male, the ureter carries both urine and sperms to the cloaca.
A-R 3. Assertion: The alimentary canal of the frog is long.
Reason: The frog is a carnivore that feeds mainly on insects.
A-R 4. Assertion: The skin of the frog helps in respiration.
Reason: The skin is moist and highly vascularised, allowing exchange of gases by diffusion.
A-R 5. Assertion: The RBCs of the frog lack a nucleus.
Reason: The RBCs of the frog contain the red pigment haemoglobin.
Common Mistakes to Avoid
Watch out for these
- Writing that the frog’s heart has four chambers — it has three (two atria, one ventricle).
- Saying frog RBCs are non-nucleated — frog RBCs are nucleated (unlike mammalian RBCs).
- Confusing the hepatic portal system (liver–intestine) with the renal portal system (kidney–lower body).
- Confusing aestivation (summer sleep) with hibernation (winter sleep).
- Forgetting that in the male the ureter is a urinogenital duct, while in the female the ureter and oviduct open separately.
- Calling the frog warm-blooded — it is a poikilotherm (cold-blooded).
How to score full marks in this chapter
For diagram questions, draw a clean line diagram and label every part neatly — for the digestive system, show the alimentary canal as one continuous tube plus the liver, gall bladder and pancreas. For the frog’s organ systems, learn the exact sequence (digestive: mouth → cloaca; circulatory: three-chambered heart with sinus venosus and conus arteriosus). Always state the male vs female difference for the ureter, and remember key facts that examiners love: Rana tigrina, three-chambered heart, nucleated RBCs, ureotelic, hepatic vs renal portal systems, and 2500–3000 ova.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is Class 11 Biology Chapter 7 about?
Chapter 7, Structural Organisation in Animals, explains how cells, tissues, organs and organ systems are organised in multicellular animals, and then studies the morphology and anatomy of the frog (Rana tigrina), including its digestive, respiratory, circulatory, excretory, nervous and reproductive systems.
How many questions are there in the NCERT exercise of Chapter 7?
The end-of-chapter Exercises contain two questions: drawing the digestive system of the frog, and stating the function of the ureters. Both are solved fully on this page, along with extra practice questions, MCQs and Assertion–Reason questions.
What is the function of the ureters in a frog?
The ureters carry urine from the kidneys to the cloaca. In the male they act as urinogenital ducts carrying both urine and sperms, while in the female they carry only urine and open into the cloaca separately from the oviducts.
Are these Class 11 Biology Chapter 7 solutions free?
Yes. All solutions are free and follow the official NCERT Biology textbook for session 2026–27.
