Quizzes, Unit 7
___ is often measured as a measure of salinity.
Chloride
___ is the process of removing salt from ocean water.
Desalination
_____ countries generally have high standards and regulations for water quality.
Developed
___ irrigation uses less water.
Drip
___ is a measure of possible disease in water
Fecal coliform
__ aquifers receive little to no recharge.
Fossil
Industries can use less water by ___.
recycling wastewater
Groundwater is a _____ resource.
renewable
If trees in the ___ are removed, water temperatures can increase in streams.
riparian zone
Soil erosion leads to an increase of ___ pollution in water.
suspended solids
According to the WHO, 1 out of ______ people are affected by water scarcity
3
Of all the water that falls as precipitation ___% is quickly evaporated or taken up by trees and other plants.
50
Since 1900, _____% of the earth's wetlands have been lost.
50
People are currently using _____ % of all the accessible fresh water contained in rivers, lakes, and underground aquifers.
54
In developing countries, _____% of industrial wastes are dumped directly into the water without being treated.
70
Approximately ___% of trash in the ocean originally came from land.
80
What percentage of water can be lost to evaporation from overhead sprinklers?
80%
Approximately ___% of oil spills come from human activities.
85
______ is the number-one way people use fresh water.
Agriculture
___ uses the process of diffusion through a membrane to desalinate water.
Reverse osmosis
Clean Water Act Marine Protection, Research, and Sanctuaries Act Safe Drinking Water Act Water Quality Act
This law was passed with the goal of making all surface water from natural sources safe for swimming and fishing by 1983. It banned point-source pollution in surface water after 1985. The act also required that metals be removed from wastewater. Originally passed in 1972 and amended in 1988, this legislation allows the EPA to control toxic waste and sewage dumping in U.S. waters. The SWA, passed in 1975 and amended in 1996, centers around protecting both surface water and groundwater from pollution. This legislation promotes science-based standards for water quality. It also increases the public's right to know what is in their water, as well as providing money and assistance to improve infrastructure for water systems. This legislation supports state and local regions in cleaning polluted runoff. It provides money (on loan) for communities to build new wastewater treatment plants, as well as money to protect estuaries.
_____ is the lack of clean or available water resources to meet water usage demands in a region.
Water scarcity
parameter siltation synergy
a measurable factor to describe something the settling of very small particles such as silt and clay a relationship when two or more things work together for a greater effect as a whole than by themselves
reservoir watershed
a natural or artificial place to store water a region that drains into a certain water body
If two people share ___, then one can deplete his neighbor's water by withdrawing too much water from his own well.
an aquifer
A tourist stepping on coral can cause ___.
coral bleaching
Algae blooms are most often caused by ___.
cultural eutrophication
Select the solutions for increasing freshwater availability. Select all that apply.
desalination transporting water building infrastructure
Many other parameters are measured based on their effect on which parameter?
dissolved oxygen
biodegradable cultural eutrophication eutrophication wastewater
materials that can be broken down by living organisms into different chemical compounds eutrophication caused by human activities the result of excess nutrients in an aquatic ecosystem, which causes excess plant and algae growth water that contains the waste from homes and industries
Contaminated runoff entering a stream is an example of ___.
nonpoint-source pollution
Fossil water is a _____ resource.
nonrenewable
Which parameter greatly affects the toxicity level of other parameters?
pH
An industry piping contaminated water directly in the ocean is an example of ___.
point-source pollution
Water scarcity is highly linked to __
poverty
permeability porosity recharge unconfined aquifer
the measure of how well water can move through the pores in a substance a measure of how many holes are in a substance water added to aquifers through precipitation an aquifer in which the water infiltrates the ground directly above the aquifer
bioremediation coral bleaching photodegradation sedimentation
the process of introducing bacteria and other living organisms that essentially eat oil, helping it break down faster the result of algae that live on coral being damaged or destroyed the process of the sun breaking down plastics into smaller pieces the settling of materials at the bottom of a liquid
Hot industrial wastewater is a type of ___ pollution
thermal
Too much ___ can lead to a decrease in photosynthesis in aquatic life.
turbidity
A(n) ___ aquifer is most easily polluted.
unconfined
A(n) ___ aquifer is most easily recharged.
unconfined
aquifer confined aquifer fossil water groundwater
underground rocks and formations that are able to hold groundwater an aquifer with a surface that keeps water from infiltrating, so the water must enter the aquifer at a point farther away water trapped in ancient aquifers formed 12,000 years or more ago water that has infiltrated below the ground
The amount of water it took to grow the wheat in a sack of grain is known as ___.
virtual water
The usable fresh water people need is found in ____.
watersheds