ANIMAL HUSBANDRY AND VETERINARY SCIENCE OPTIONAL PAPER-1 SYLLABUS

Choosing the right optional subject for the UPSC IAS Mains can be crucial to your success. If you have a background in Animal Husbandry and Veterinary Science or a keen interest in the field, this optional subject could be a strategic choice. This post provides a comprehensive guide to the syllabus, along with tips on how to prepare effectively.

Nutrition:

  1. Partitioning of food energy within the animal. Direct and indirect calorimetry. Carbon—nitrogen balance and comparative slaughter methods. Systems for expressing the energy value of foods in ruminants, pigs, and poultry. Energy requirements for maintenance, growth, pregnancy, lactation, egg, wool, and meat production.
  2. Latest advances in protein nutrition. Energy protein inter-relationships. Evaluation of protein quality. Use of NPN compounds in ruminant diets. Protein requirements for maintenance, growth, pregnancy, lactation, egg, wool, and meat production.
  3. Major and trace minerals—Their sources, physiological functions, and deficiency symptoms. Toxic minerals. Mineral interactions. Role of fat-soluble and water-soluble vitamins in the body, their sources, and deficiency symptoms.
  4. Feed additives—methane inhibitors, probiotics, enzymes, antibiotics, hormones, oligosaccharides, antioxidants, emulsifiers, mold inhibitors, buffers, etc. Use and abuse of growth promoters like hormones and antibiotics—latest concepts.
  5. Conservation of fodders. Storage of feeds and feed ingredients. Recent advances in feed technology and feed processing. Anti-nutritional and toxic factors present in livestock feeds. Feed analysis and quality control. Digestibility trials—direct, indirect, and indicator methods. Predicting feed intake in grazing animals
  6. Advances in ruminant nutrition. Nutrient requirements. Balanced rations. Feeding of calves, pregnant, work animals, and breeding bulls. Strategies for feeding milch animals during different stages of the lactation cycle. Effect of feeding on milk composition. Feeding of goats for meat and milk production. Feeding of sheep for meat and wool production.
  7. Swine Nutrition. Nutrient requirements. Creep, starter, grower, and finisher rations. Feeding of pigs for lean meat production. Low-cost rations for swine.
  8. Poultry nutrition. Special features of poultry nutrition. Nutrient requirements for meat and egg production. Formulation of rations for different classes of layers and broilers.

Physiology:

  1. Physiology of blood and its circulation, respiration; and excretion. Endocrine glands in health and disease.
  2. Blood constituents.—Properties and functions cell formation—Haemoglobin synthesis and chemistry-plasma proteins production, classification and properties, coagulation of blood; Haemorrhagic disorders—anti-coagulants—blood groups—Blood volume—Plasma expanders-Buffer systems in blood. Biochemical tests and their significance in disease diagnosis.
  3. Circulation.—Physiology of heart, cardiac cycle, heart sounds, heart beat, electrocardiograms. Work and efficiency of heart—effect of ions on heart function-metabolism of cardiac muscle, nervous and chemical regulation of heart, the effect of temperature and stress on heart, blood pressure and hypertension, osmotic regulation, arterial pulse, vasomotor regulation of circulation, shock. Coronary and pulmonary circulation, Blood-Brain barrier Cerebrospinal fluid-circulation in birds.
  4. Respiration.—Mechanism of respiration, Transport, and exchange of gases-neural control of respiration-Chemo-receptors-hypoxia-respiration in birds.
  5. Excretion.—Structure and function of kidney-formation of urine-methods of studying renal function renal regulation of acid-base balance: physiological constituents of urine-renal failure-passive venous congestion-Urinary secretion in chicken-Sweat glands and their function. Bio-chemical test for urinary dysfunction.
  6. Endocrine glands.—Functional disorders—their symptoms and diagnosis. Synthesis of hormones, mechanism and control of secretion—hormonal receptors-classification and function
  7. Endocrine glands.—Functional disorders—their symptoms and diagnosis. Synthesis of hormones, mechanism and control of secretion—hormonal receptors-classification and function.
  8. Growth and Animal Production.—Prenatal and postnatal growth, maturation, growth curves, measures of growth, factors affecting growth, conformation, body composition, meat quality.
  9. Physiology of Milk Production, Reproduction, and Digestion.—Current status of hormonal control of mammary development, milk secretion, and milk ejection. Male and Female reproductive organs, their components, and functions. Digestive organs and their functions.
  10. Environmental Physiology.—Physiological relations and their regulation; mechanisms of adaptation, environmental factors and regulatory mechanisms involved in animal behavior, climatology— various parameters and their importance. Animal ecology. Physiology of behavior. Effect of stress on health and production.

Reproduction:

  1. Semen quality.—Preservation and Artificial Insemination—Components of semen, composition of spermatozoa, chemical and physical properties of ejaculated semen, factors affecting semen in vivo and in vitro. Factors affecting semen production and quality, preservation, composition of diluents, sperm concentration, and transport of diluted semen. Deep freezing techniques in cows, sheep, goats, swine, and poultry. Detection of oestrus and time of insemination for better conception. Anoestrus and repeat breeding.

Livestock Production and Management:

  1. Commercial Dairy Farming.—Comparison of dairy farming in India with advanced countries. Dairying is under mixed farming and as specialized farming, as well as economic dairy farming. Starting of a dairy farm, Capital and land requirement, organization of the dairy farm. Opportunities in dairy farming, factors determining the efficiency of dairy animal. Herd recording, budgeting cost of milk production, pricing policy; Personnel Management. Developing Practical and Economic rations for dairy cattle; supply of greens throughout the year, feed and fodder requirements of Dairy Farm. Feeding regimes for young stock and bulls, heifers and breeding animals; new trends in feeding young and adult stock; Feeding records.
  2. Commercial meat, egg, and wool production.—Development of practical and economic rations for sheep, goats, pigs, rabbits, and poultry. Supply of greens, fodder, and feeding regimes for young and mature stock. New trends in enhancing production and management. Capital and land requirements and socio-economic concept.
  3. Feeding and management of animals under drought, flood, and other natural calamities.

Genetics and Animal Breeding:

  1. History of animal genetics. Mitosis and Meiosis: Mendelian inheritance; deviations to Mendelian genetics; Expression of genes; Linkage and crossing over; Sex determination, sex influenced and sex limited characters; Blood groups and polymorphism; Chromosome aberrations; Cytoplasmic inheritance, Gene and its structure; DNA as a genetic material; Genetic code and protein synthesis; Recombinant DNA technology. Mutations, types of mutations, methods for detecting mutations and mutation rate, Transgenesis.
  2. Population Genetics Applied to Animal Breeding—Quantitative Vs. Qualitative traits; Hardy Weinberg Law; Population Vs. Individual; Gene and genotypic frequency; Forces changing gene frequency; Random drift and small populations; Theory of path coefficient; Inbreeding, methods of estimating inbreeding coefficient, systems of inbreeding; Effective population size; Breeding value, estimation of breeding value, dominance and epistatic deviation; Partitioning of variation; Genotype X environment correlation and genotype X environment interaction; role of multiple measurements; Resemblance between relatives.
  3. Breeding Systems.—Breeds of Livestock and Poultry. Heritability, repeatability, and genetic and phenotypic correlations, their methods of estimation and precision of estimates; Aids to selection and their relative merits; Individual, pedigree, family and within family selection; Pregnancy testing; Methods of selection; Construction of selection indices and their uses; Comparative evaluation of genetic gains through various selection methods; Indirect selection and correlated response; Inbreeding, outbreeding, upgrading, cross-breeding and synthesis of breeds; Crossing of inbred lines for commercial production; Selection for general and specific combining ability; Breeding for threshold characters. Sire index.

Extension:

  1. Basic philosophy, objectives, concept, and principles of extension. Different methods were adopted to educate farmers in rural conditions. Generation of technology, its transfer, and feedback. Problems and constraints in transfer of technology. Animal husbandry programs for rural development.

ANIMAL HUSBANDRY AND VETERINARY SCIENCE OPTIONAL PAPER-2 SYLLABUS

Anatomy, Pharmacology and Hygiene:

  1. Histology and Histological Techniques: Paraffin embedding technique of tissue processing and H.E. staining—Freezing microtomy—Microscopy Bright field microscope and electron microscope. Cytology-structure of cell organelles and inclusions; cell division-cell types—Tissues and their classification-embryonic and adult tissues—Comparative histology of organs—Vascular, Nervous, digestive, respiratory, musculoskeletal, and urogenital systems—Endocrine glands—Integuments— sense organs.
  2. Embryology.—Embryology of vertebrates with special reference to aves and domestic mammals gametogenesis-fertilization-germ layers-fetal membranes and placentation-types of the placenta in domestic mammals-Teratology-twins and twinning-organogenesis-germ layer derivatives endodermal, mesodermal and ectodermal derivatives.
  3. Bovine Anatomy.—Regional Anatomy: Paranasal sinuses of OX— surface anatomy of salivary glands. Regional anatomy of infraorbital, maxillary, mandi-tubuloalveolar, mental, and corneal nerve block. Regional anatomy of paravertebral nerves, pudendal nerve, median, ulnar and radial nerve tibial, fibular and digital nerves—Cranial nerves-structures involved in epidural anesthesia superficial lymph nodes-surface anatomy of visceral organs of thoracic, abdominal and pelvic cavities-comparative-features of locomotor apparatus and their application in the biomechanics of mammalian body.
  4. Anatomy of Fowl.—Musculo-skeletal system-functional anatomy in relation to respiration and flying, digestion, and egg production.
  5. pharmacology and therapeutics drugs.—Cellular level of pharmacodynamics and pharmacokinetics. Drugs acting on fluids and electrolyte balance. Drugs acting on the Autonomic nervous system. Modern concepts of anesthesia and dissociative anesthetics. Autocoids. Antimicrobials and principles of chemotherapy in microbial infections. Use of hormones in therapeutics—chemotherapy of parasitic infections. Drug and economic concerns in the Edible tissues of animals—chemotherapy of Neoplastic diseases. Toxicity due to “insecticides, plants, metals, non-metals, zootoxins, and mycotoxins”.
  6. Veterinary Hygiene with reference to water, air, and habitation.—Assessment of pollution of water, air, and soil—Importance of climate in animal health—effect of environment on animal function and performance relationship between industrialization and animal agriculture—animal housing requirements for specific categories of domestic animals viz. pregnant cows and sows, milking cows, broiler birds—stress, strain and productivity in relation to animal habitation.

Animal Diseases:

  1. Etiology, epidemiology pathogenesis, symptoms, post-moretem lesions, diagnosis, and control of infectious diseases of cattle, sheep and goat, horses, pigs and poultry.
  2. Etiology, epidemiology, symptoms, diagnosis, treatment of production diseases of cattle, horse, pig and poultry.
  3. Deficiency diseases of domestic animals and birds.
  4. Diagnosis and treatment of non-specific conditions like impaction, Bloat, Diarrhoea, Indigestion, dehydration, stroke, poisoning.
  5. Diagnosis and treatment of neurological disorders.
  6. Principles and methods of immunization of animals against specific diseases—hard immunity—disease-free zones—‘zero’ disease concept—chemoprophylaxis.
  7. Anesthesia.—local, regional and general-prosthetic medication. Symptoms and surgical interference in fractures and dislocation. Hernia, choking abomasal displacement—Caesarian operations. Rumenotomy—Castrations.
  8. Disease investigation techniques.—Materials for laboratory investigation—Establishment. Animal Health Centres—Disease-free zone.

Veterinary Public Health:

  1. Zoonoses.—Classification, definition, role of animals and birds in prevalence and transmission of zoonotic diseases—occupational zoonotic diseases.
  2. Epidemiology.—Principle, definition of epidemiological terms, application of epidemiological measures in the study of diseases and disease control. Epidemiological features of air, water, and foodborne infections. OIE regulation, WTO, sanitary and phytosanitary measures.
  3. Veterinary Jurisprudence.—Rules and Regulations for improvement of animal quality and prevention of animal diseases—State and Central Rules for prevention of animal and animal product borne diseases—S.P. C.A.—Veterolegal cases—Certificates—Materials and Methods of collection of samples for vetero-legal investigation.

Milk and Milk Products Technology:

  1. Market Milk.—Quality, testing, and grading of raw milk. Processing, packaging, storing, distribution, marketing defects and their control. Preparation of the following milk: Pasteurized, standardized, toned, double-toned, sterilized, homogenized, reconstituted, recombined, and flavored milk. Preparation of cultured milk, cultures and their management, yogurt, Dahi, Lassi, and Srikhand. Preparation of flavored and sterilized milk. Legal standards. Sanitation requirements for clean and safe milk and for the milk plant equipment.
  2. Milk Products Technology.—Selection of raw materials, processing, storing, distributing, and marketing milk products such as Cream, Butter, Ghee, Khoa, Channa, Cheese, condensed, evaporated, dried milk and baby food, ice cream and Kulfi; by-products, whey products, buttermilk, lactose, and casein. Testing, grading, and judging milk products—BIS and Agmark specifications, legal standards, quality control nutritive properties. Packaging processing and operational control. Costing of dairy products.

Meat Hygiene and Technology:

  1. Meat Hygiene: Ante mortem care and management of food animals, stunning, slaughter, and dressing operations; abattoir requirements and designs; Meat inspection procedures and judgment of carcass meat cuts—grading of carcass meat cuts—duties and functions of Veterinarians in wholesome meat production
  2. Hygienic methods of handling the production of meat.—Spoilage of meat and control measures— Post-slaughter physicochemical changes in meat and factors that influence them—Quality improvement methods—Adulteration of meat and detection—Regulatory provisions in Meat trade and Industry.
  3. Physical and chemical characteristics of meat.—Meat emulsions—Methods of preservation of meat—Curing, canning, irradiation, packaging of meat and meat products, processing and formulations.
  4. By-products.—Slaughterhouse by-products and their utilization—Edible and inedible by-products—Social and economic implications of proper utilization of slaughterhouse by-products— Organ products for food and pharmaceuticals.
  5. Poultry Products Technology.—Chemical composition and nutritive value of poultry meat, preslaughter care and management. Slaughtering techniques, inspection, and preservation of poultry meat and products. Legal and BIS standards.
  6. Structure composition and nutritive value of eggs Microbial spoilage. Preservation and maintenance. Marketing of poultry meat, eggs, and products.
  7. Rabbit/Fur Animal Farming.—Rabbit meat production. Disposal and utilization of fur and wool and recycling of waste by-products. Grading of wool.

Preparation Tips for Animal Husbandry and Veterinary Science

  1. Understand the Basics: A strong foundation in the basics of animal husbandry and veterinary science is crucial. Refer to standard textbooks and research papers to deepen your understanding.
  2. Regular Revision: Regularly revising the concepts, especially the scientific terms and processes, will help in retention and recall during the exam.
  3. Practical Application: Focus on the practical application of concepts, as this will help in answering case study-based questions in the exam.
  4. Answer Writing Practice: Practice writing detailed answers with diagrams where applicable, as diagrams can enhance the quality of your answers.
  5. Current Developments: Stay updated on the latest developments in the field, such as advancements in animal breeding, disease control measures, and new veterinary drugs.

Related Sources

  1. Latest UPSC Prelims Syllabus
  2. Latest UPSC Mains Syllabus
  3. Complete List of the Latest UPSC Optional Subjects
  4. UPSC Agriculture Optional Syllabus
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