JEE and NEET occasionally sneak tricky questions into respiration in organisms that look simple but have one hidden step. These cost rank more than the hard questions because students think they will be easy and rush.
Question
An earthworm respires through skin at 0.02 mL O₂/cm²/min. Surface area is 50 cm². How much oxygen is absorbed in 30 minutes?
(Adapted from JEE/NEET PYQ patterns — typical level of a tricky application question.)
Solution — Step by Step
The “trick” in this question is that students jump to the arithmetic without setting up the correct relation. Read twice, write the data, then start computing.
This is where most students lose the mark — they guess the formula from pattern recognition instead of thinking about what is physically happening in respiration in organisms.
Answer: 30 mL O₂
Plug the answer back into the problem. Does it make biological sense? If a population answer is negative or a percentage is above 100, you have made an error somewhere.
The answer is 30 mL O₂. The trick was recognising that the question tests cutaneous, tracheal, gill, and lung respiration across taxa, not a simpler relation.
Why This Works
JEE/NEET setters love questions that look like easy numericals but actually test whether you can identify the concept first. If you misidentify the concept, you pick the wrong formula and get a confidently wrong answer. That is the worst outcome — you do not even know you messed up.
The fix: spend 10 seconds naming the concept before touching the equation. Those 10 seconds save about 4 marks on average.
Alternative Method
You can verify by dimensional analysis — check that your answer has the correct units. If the units do not match what is asked, you have used the wrong formula somewhere.
Common Mistake
Rushing. Tricky questions in respiration in organisms are tricky precisely because they reward careful reading. Students who “speed-solve” lose 2-3 questions per paper to these traps. Slow down on the questions that look easy — that is exactly where the traps live.
In JEE/NEET, mark a question with a dot if something feels off during first read. Return to dotted questions after the first pass — your subconscious often spots the trick on second look.