Question detail

How does acid rain damage plants?

Try the question, check the answer, then read the explanation to understand the curriculum point.

At a glance

Question

Type

exam_style

Style

Topic

Common atmospheric pollutants and their sources

Question

How does acid rain damage plants?

Answer

Acid rain can damage plants by leaching essential nutrients from the soil and directly harming plant tissues. The increased acidity can disrupt the pH balance necessary for nutrient uptake, leading to stunted growth and reduced crop yields.

Explanation

A strong answer should directly address the approved learning objective to describe how acid rain can damage plants, aquatic ecosystems and buildings. This question belongs to Properties and effects of atmospheric pollutants within Common atmospheric pollutants and their sources, so the response should use that exact curriculum context rather than a generic statement. The answer is correct when it names the key idea, explains the link to acid rain, and keeps the wording specific to AQA GCSE revision.

Common mistake

Misunderstanding Acid Rain Effects

Students often think that acid rain only affects buildings and does not impact plants or aquatic ecosystems.

Emphasize that acid rain can damage not only buildings but also harm plants by leaching nutrients from the soil and disrupt aquatic ecosystems by altering pH levels.

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