Q1: What are the different forms of water mentioned in the chapter?
Ans: Water exists in three forms: liquid (like rain or river water), solid (like ice or snow), and vapour (like steam or clouds). These forms change based on temperature, such as ice melting into liquid or water evaporating into vapour.
Q2: Why is freshwater important for living beings?
Ans: Freshwater is essential for drinking, growing crops, and daily activities. It supports life for people, animals, birds, and plants, as most of Earth's water is salty and unfit for these purposes.
Q3: Explain the water cycle briefly.
Ans: The water cycle is the constant movement of water where heat turns liquid water into vapour, forming clouds. When cooled, it falls as rain or snow, returning to rivers, lakes, and oceans.
Q4: What is groundwater, and how is it accessed?
Ans: Groundwater is water stored deep underground after rain seeps through soil and rocks. It is accessed by digging wells, borewells, tube wells, or handpumps for human use.
Q5: How does the shape of the land affect river flow?
Ans: Rivers flow from higher to lower ground, following the land's slopes and curves. They may spread out or collect in areas, forming lakes or valleys, as shown in activities like the mustard seed experiment.
Q6: Name some animals adapted to live in freshwater.
Ans: Animals like the fishing cat with webbed paws, the water scorpion with a breathing tube, and the pond heron with long legs are adapted to freshwater. They have features for swimming, breathing, or catching prey.
Q7: What are the types of plants found in water bodies?
Ans: Water plants include edge plants like reeds, rooted floating plants like lotus, and free-floating plants like water hyacinth. These adaptations help them survive in aquatic environments.
Q8: Why do some areas have less groundwater recharge?
Ans: In cities with cemented surfaces, rainwater cannot seep into the soil easily, reducing recharge. Open areas, trees, and soak pits help water return underground.
Q9: Describe an activity showing water forms.
Ans: Place ice in a steel glass; droplets form on the outside from air moisture condensing. This shows solid ice melting to liquid and vapour turning back to liquid.
Q10: How do aquatic plants like lotus stay healthy?
Ans: Aquatic plants have waxy coatings on leaves to make them waterproof, preventing excess water entry. This protects them from damage in wet environments.
Q1: Explain the importance of the water cycle and how it sustains life on Earth.
Ans: The water cycle is crucial as it recycles water continuously through evaporation, condensation, and precipitation.
Q2: Discuss the challenges of freshwater availability and ways to conserve it.
Ans: Most Earth water is salty, leaving limited freshwater for all life.
Q3: Describe adaptations of animals and plants in freshwater habitats.
Ans: In freshwater, animals like fishing cats have webbed paws for swimming, while pond herons use long legs to catch fish.
Q4: How does water shape the land and influence river paths in India?
Ans: Water flows from mountains to seas, carving valleys and forming deltas.
Q5: What role do human activities play in affecting water bodies, and how can we protect them?
Ans: Human actions like pollution, deforestation, and concretisation reduce water quality and recharge, harming aquatic life.
14 videos|234 docs|10 tests
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1. Why is water considered the essence of life? | ![]() |
2. What are the different states of water and how do they occur? | ![]() |
3. How does water cycle contribute to the environment? | ![]() |
4. What are some common sources of water pollution? | ![]() |
5. Why is it important to conserve water? | ![]() |