Comprehension Quiz: Water Scarcity

Question: The majority of freshwater resources are devoted to industrial uses.
Answer: About 70 percent of all freshwater resources are devoted to agriculture.
Question: Aquifers recharge readily and are difficult to deplete.
Answer: Aquifers can be easy to deplete, for often they recharge only slowly, if they recharge at all. It is estimated that one-third of the world’s largest aquifer systems are in distress because of overexploitation.
Question: Drought is always the root cause of water scarcity.
Answer: Drought is not always the root cause of water scarcity. Water scarcity can occur even when water resources are plentiful.
Question: Water scarcity can be caused by the economic undervaluing of water as a finite resource.
Answer: When people believe water has little economic value and is of infinite supply, they tend to waste it, and they also leave water resources unregulated (or under-regulated). The result can be water scarcity.
Question: Which of these is not a proposed solution to water scarcity?
Answer: Though groundwater resources are commonly overutilized, a ban on their exploitation is unfeasible. Wetland restoration, improved irrigation practices, and wastewater utilization, however, are practical solutions to water scarcity that are currently in use.
Question: The ecosystems that surround cities can reduce the quality and abundance of water available to humans.
Answer: The preservation and restoration of ecosystems that naturally collect, filter, store, and release water, such as wetlands and forests, is a key strategy in the fight against water scarcity.
Question: Which of these is an example of economic water scarcity?
Answer: Economic water scarcity is due to a lack of water infrastructure in general or to poor management of water resources where infrastructure is in place.
Question: Global warming is expected to increase water scarcity.
Answer: Changes in weather patterns due to global warming are expected to exacerbate water scarcity in many places around the world.
Question: Wealthy countries do not suffer from water scarcity.
Answer: Many countries and major cities worldwide, both wealthy and poor, face increasing water scarcity in the 21st century.
Question: Physical water scarcity can be seasonal.
Answer: Seasonal water scarcity frequently affects people who live in arid or semiarid environments.
Lake Mead is seen in the distance behind a dead creosote bush in an area of dry, cracked earth that used to be underwater near where the Lake Mead Marina was once located on June 12, 2021 in the Lake Mead National Recreation Area, Nevada.
Science

Comprehension Quiz: Water Scarcity

10 Questions