Test Bank 6th Edition Water Chapter.12 - Environmental Change 6e | Test Bank Dearden by Philip Dearden. DOCX document preview.
CHAPTER TWELVE
Water
Multiple Choice Questions
- Canada has ________ of the world’s total flow of renewable freshwater.
- 1.9 per cent
- 6.5 per cent
- 20 per cent
- 12 per cent
- ________ countries are expected to face “extremely high” levels of water stress in 2020, 2030, and 2040.
- 33
- 167
- 14
- 67
- Wetlands cover about ________ per cent of the land and freshwater surface of the globe.
- 10
- 2
- 4
- 6
- In Canada, 98 per cent of the surface water available for human use is held by ________.
- groundwater
- wetlands
- rivers
- lakes
- About ________ of Canada is covered by lakes and rivers.
- 12 per cent
- 7 per cent
- 20 per cent
- 3 per cent
- ________ holds the highest volume of water in Canada.
- The Mackenzie River
- The Fraser River
- The Ottawa River
- The Assiniboine River
- Renewable supplies of water are defined as ________.
- flows associated with precipitation or snowmelt
- water found in liquid form within a country’s jurisdiction
- groundwater sources
- any supply of water found within a country’s jurisdiction
- ________ of Canada’s water flows northward to the Arctic, where few people live.
- 5 per cent
- 10 per cent
- 20 per cent
- 60 per cent
- In Canada there are more than ________ large dams.
- 777
- 600
- 333
- 900
- What James Bay, Churchill Falls, and the Columbia and Nechako Rivers have in common is that ________.
- all have been the sources of energy generating projects
- all have been the subject of major land claim agreements between Indigenous peoples and the Canadian government
- all are located in Quebec
- all have experienced limited environmental impacts
- ________ was involved in spearheading the James Bay Project.
- Robert Bourassa
- René Levesque
- Gilles Duceppe
- Jean Charést
- The James Bay Project was built using the ________.
- James Bay River
- La Grande River
- Churchill River
- Saguenay River
- The Cree people of northern Quebec were forced to stop fishing in reservoirs created as part of the James Bay Project due to ________.
- increased water temperatures
- high bacterial content in the fish
- high mercury levels in the fish
- social problems brought about by the project
- Mercury in reservoirs comes from ________.
- nearby upland terrestrial soils
- bacterial decomposition of organic material
- dam effluents
- dam construction debris
- Supporters of exporting water from Canada to the United States argue that ________.
- Canada has more water than it needs to meet its foreseeable needs
- water can be considered another resource with value and exchanged on the open market
- there are economic benefits from sales and employment in construction of pipelines
- All of the above
- The Great Lakes Charter between relevant provinces and states in Canada and the US declared that ________.
- each province and state had jurisdiction to withdraw and divert water from the Lakes without requiring consent from Great Lakes states or provinces
- there are no comments in the Charter related to water diversion
- each jurisdiction can divert up to 5 per cent of water within each Lake for use within its own jurisdiction, but consent is required to export water outside the jurisdictions border
- no jurisdiction would start a new diversion or increase an existing one involving more than 5 million gallons per day without seeking the consent of all Great Lakes states or provinces
- ________ is an example of a non-point source of pollution.
- Agricultural run-off
- A sewage outfall pipe
- A manufacturing plant’s waste disposal pipe
- All of the above
- Tertiary wastewater treatment includes the removing of ________.
- insoluble materials
- chemical and nutrient contaminants
- bacterial impurities from water
- All of the above
- ________ of waste flows into municipal waste systems originated in households.
- 65 per cent
- 82 per cent
- 18 per cent
- 11 per cent
- ________ is released into water bodies in the greatest quantity in Canada.
- Manganese
- Ammonia
- Mercury
- Zinc
- Diffuse pollution in water bodies can be defined as a problem associated with ________.
- negative impacts on ecosystem and human health
- behavior of individuals driven by inappropriate values, beliefs, and attitudes
- environmental degradation and the economic costs imposed on downstream users
- All of the above
- The International Joint Commission is a ________ institution.
- bilateral
- trilateral
- multilateral
- unilateral
- PLUARG was created to assess ________.
- pollution in the Great Lakes
- annual drought in the Prairie provinces
- bacterial contamination of a municipal water system in Saskatchewan
- flooding in the James Bay area
- The SWEEP program involved many programs, including ________.
- development of Heritage Rivers
- reduction of phosphorus loading to Lake Erie
- mitigating problems arising from hydroelectric development projects
- sewage treatment
- ________ of the global population use fewer than 50 litres of water for each person daily.
- Two-thirds
- One-sixth
- Two-fifth
- One-quarter
- ________ has the highest per capita water use.
- India and Japan
- Switzerland and Sweden
- the United Kingdom and China
- Canada and the United States
- The minimum water requirement of a normal healthy adult in an average temperate climate is ________.
- 3 L per week
- 300 L per week
- 3 L per day
- 30 L per day
- About ________ Canadians rely on groundwater for drinking water.
- 6 million
- 12 million
- 9 million
- 3 million
- The town of Walkerton, Ontario, made national headlines in May 2000 because ________.
- Escherischia coli bacteria contaminated the town’s water supply system
- mercury contaminated the area’s groundwater
- a cryptosporidium parasite contaminated the area’s groundwater
- the main water supply for the town dried up due to drought
- As of June 2018, there were ___________ long-term drinking water advisories in place for First Nations communities across Canada, excluding British Columbia.
- 82
- 72
- 37
- 26
- The First Nations Water Management Strategy aimed to achieve improvements in the quality and safety of drinking water on First Nation reserves by ________.
- building and upgrading water systems to meet standards
- developing comprehensive policies, guidelines, and standards
- educating on-reserve residents about drinking water issues
- All of the above
- ________ aims to improve water use efficiency by challenging basic patterns of consumption.
- Supply management
- The virtual water
- The soft path
- Demand management
- This statement is NOT related to the concept of virtual water: ________.
- “virtual water” refers to the volume of water used in the production of a product
- it is calculated as the difference between inputs and outputs of groundwater systems
- this concept grew out of recognition of the importance of water for agriculture and food production
- nations can preserve domestic water resources by importing water intensive products
- The “virtual water” strategy has limitations, including that ________.
- a nation may be reluctant to become dependent on other countries for food needs
- poor nations may not have the foreign currency to purchase food products requiring significant water inputs
- local farmers may lose their livelihoods if type of crops grown shifts
- All of the above
- Water footprints track ________.
- direct and indirect water use by a consumer or product
- direct water use by a consumer or product
- indirect water use by a consumer or product
- virtual water use by a consumer or product
- Flood plains are ________.
- flat areas that are permanently submerged
- level land alongside a river or lake that may be submerged by floodwaters
- lands flooded only as the result of hurricanes
- annual deposits of silt along the banks of a river
- ________ caused over 80 deaths and millions of dollars in damage in Toronto in 1954.
- The Lake Ontario tornado
- Hurricane Hazel
- Cyclone Sally
- The Humber River floods
- ________ is NOT a structural approach to reduce flood damage.
- An upstream dam
- Land-use zoning
- Deepening of river channels
- A protective dike or levee
- ________ of Canadian households are at risk from either riverine or overland flooding.
- 19 per cent
- 25 per cent
- 15 per cent
- 13 per cent
- The areas of Canada most vulnerable to drought are ________.
- the Prairies, northern Quebec, and New Brunswick
- the Prairies, Ontario, and eastern Manitoba
- the Prairies, Alberta, and northern Saskatchewan
- the Prairies, southern Ontario, and interior BC
- Palliser’s Triangle is located in ________.
- Newfoundland and Labrador
- Alberta, Saskatchewan, and Manitoba
- British Columbia, Alberta, and Saskatchewan
- New Brunswick, Nova Scotia, and Quebec
- ________ is common in Palliser’s Triangle.
- Hurricane damage
- Drought
- Water pollution
- Flooding
- Water levels in Lake Athabasca are likely to be lower in the future due to ________.
- lower levels of alpine-sourced river discharge
- climate change
- extraction for use in the Alberta tar sands
- water diversion
- ________ are authorized to formally designate a river as a heritage river.
- Federal and provincial/territorial governments
- Community members
- Landowners
- All of the above
- The designation of the Grand River as a Canadian heritage river in 1994 was a landmark event because ________.
- most of its lands were owned by the Crown
- it was the first Canadian heritage river to be designated
- most of its lands were owned privately
- most of its lands were included within the national park system
- The Grand River’s archaeological sites tell the story of ________ years of human history.
- 11,000
- 5,000
- 1,000
- 9,000
- The Great Lakes Water Quality Agreement ________.
- had a main objective to reduce phosphorus-loading in Lakes Erie and Ontario
- was signed in 1972 between the United State and Canada
- was amended in 1978, 1983, and 1987
- All of the above
- Water ethics ________.
- are supported by the Canadian government
- are principles to guide behaviour regarding water access
- have been firmly established by the UN human rights council as legally binding
- ensure industrial water extraction rights
- Countries opposed to a resolution for water to be recognized as a basic human right include ________.
- Spain
- Canada
- Germany
- All of the above
- Canada has opposed recognition of water as a basic human right because ________.
- of concerns that Canadian sovereignty over its own water is ambiguous under NAFTA
- of the limited inclusion of other basic necessities in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights
- of the decreased liability related to many small communities under boil-water advisories
- the Canadian government already believes it has a moral duty to share water with less water-rich areas
True or False Questions
Violent conflict over access to water resources is highly unlikely in the near future.
Countries that are assessed as having an extremely high level of baseline water stress automatically experience scarcity.
Canada diverts more water for hydroelectric power generation than any other country.
Hydroelectric power generation provides “clean energy” because it causes no negative environmental impacts.
Reservoir creation makes mercury more available to the food chain.
Exporting water to other countries can be easily halted if the exporting country experiences shortages or drought conditions.
Managing point-source pollution is more challenging than managing “non-point-source pollution.”
PLUARG studies did not provide credible scientific evidence of non-point source pollutants entering Lake Erie.
Canadians are among the highest per capita consumers of water.
More Canadians get their drinking water from wells than from municipal water treatment plants.
The Walkerton crisis began when farmers who applied manure to local fields did not follow proper practices.
Providing safe drinking water in Northern and remote communities is challenging due to the operation cost and difficulty in keeping qualified operators.
Supply management is the traditional approach to water security and involves developing a new supply source.
Flood plains are created by major flooding events.
The best flood protection strategies include a mix of both structural and non-structural approaches.
Droughts are defined using only meteorological measures based on precipitation levels.
The Grand River has been designated as a Canadian heritage river.
There are still serious threats to the biological and chemical integrity of the Great Lakes ecosystem.
Water will never become a traded commodity under NAFTA.
The UN has designated water as a basic human right.
Short Answer Questions
- What are the reasons for creating water diversions in Canada?
- What is the James Bay and Northern Quebec Agreement? What prompted its creation?
- Describe the different levels of wastewater treatment in Canada.
- What does Environment Canada recommend in order to reduce water use in the home, and what are the three rules of water conservation?
- What was SWEEP? Why was it developed? What was its purpose?
- What is the multi-barrier approach to drinking water management?
- What is virtual water and how can it help meet food security needs?
- Why do humans tend to settle near lakes and rivers?
- What is the difference between structural and non-structural approaches to flood management? Give two examples of each approach.
- What is the difference between a hydrological drought and a meteorological drought?