WRM3701 ADVANCED SCENARIO-BASED PRACTICE
Q&A WITH PRECISIVE RATIONALES EXAM |LATEST
UPDATE A+
1. A municipality's main reservoir has fallen below 20% capacity after two
years of drought. Engineers must determine whether restrictions are
sufficient or whether emergency supply sources are needed. What factor
should be evaluated first?
A. Reservoir color
B. Dam wall age only
C. Remaining yield and projected demand
D. Number of employees
Explanation: Comparing available supply with projected demand is the first step in
drought response planning.
2. A new housing development increases the impervious area of a catchment
from 25% to 55%. What is the most likely impact?
A. Lower flood peaks
B. Increased groundwater recharge
C. Higher runoff volumes and flood risk
D. Reduced drainage requirements
Explanation: Impervious surfaces reduce infiltration and increase runoff.
3. During a flood event, a detention basin successfully reduces downstream
peak discharge by 30%. This process is known as:
A. Erosion control
B. Flow attenuation
,C. Sediment transport
D. Water abstraction
Explanation: Detention structures attenuate flood peaks by temporarily storing
runoff.
4. A groundwater aquifer supplies a town's drinking water. Monitoring
indicates annual abstraction exceeds recharge. What is the long-term
consequence?
A. Improved water quality
B. Declining groundwater levels
C. Increased aquifer storage
D. Reduced pumping costs
Explanation: Unsustainable abstraction eventually depletes groundwater reserves.
5. A water utility records frequent pipe bursts in high-pressure zones. Which
intervention is most appropriate?
A. Increase pressure further
B. Reduce maintenance activities
C. Implement pressure management measures
D. Eliminate storage reservoirs
Explanation: Excessive pressure contributes directly to pipe failures.
6. Engineers are selecting a site for a new reservoir. Which factor is most
critical?
A. Nearby shopping centers
B. Building colors
C. Catchment yield and storage potential
D. Number of roads
, Explanation: Reservoir viability depends on reliable inflows and suitable storage
conditions.
7. A flood warning system predicts severe flooding 24 hours in advance. The
greatest benefit is:
A. Elimination of flood damage
B. Improved preparedness and emergency response
C. Reduced rainfall intensity
D. Increased reservoir yield
Explanation: Early warning allows evacuation and mitigation actions.
8. During a water audit, engineers discover that 28% of treated water never
reaches customers. This is known as:
A. Environmental flow
B. Groundwater recharge
C. Non-revenue water
D. Flood routing
Explanation: Non-revenue water includes physical and apparent losses.
9. A river downstream of a dam experiences ecological decline due to reduced
flows. Which measure should be implemented?
A. Increase abstraction
B. Reduce releases further
C. Establish environmental flow releases
D. Remove monitoring stations
Explanation: Environmental flows support aquatic ecosystems.
Q&A WITH PRECISIVE RATIONALES EXAM |LATEST
UPDATE A+
1. A municipality's main reservoir has fallen below 20% capacity after two
years of drought. Engineers must determine whether restrictions are
sufficient or whether emergency supply sources are needed. What factor
should be evaluated first?
A. Reservoir color
B. Dam wall age only
C. Remaining yield and projected demand
D. Number of employees
Explanation: Comparing available supply with projected demand is the first step in
drought response planning.
2. A new housing development increases the impervious area of a catchment
from 25% to 55%. What is the most likely impact?
A. Lower flood peaks
B. Increased groundwater recharge
C. Higher runoff volumes and flood risk
D. Reduced drainage requirements
Explanation: Impervious surfaces reduce infiltration and increase runoff.
3. During a flood event, a detention basin successfully reduces downstream
peak discharge by 30%. This process is known as:
A. Erosion control
B. Flow attenuation
,C. Sediment transport
D. Water abstraction
Explanation: Detention structures attenuate flood peaks by temporarily storing
runoff.
4. A groundwater aquifer supplies a town's drinking water. Monitoring
indicates annual abstraction exceeds recharge. What is the long-term
consequence?
A. Improved water quality
B. Declining groundwater levels
C. Increased aquifer storage
D. Reduced pumping costs
Explanation: Unsustainable abstraction eventually depletes groundwater reserves.
5. A water utility records frequent pipe bursts in high-pressure zones. Which
intervention is most appropriate?
A. Increase pressure further
B. Reduce maintenance activities
C. Implement pressure management measures
D. Eliminate storage reservoirs
Explanation: Excessive pressure contributes directly to pipe failures.
6. Engineers are selecting a site for a new reservoir. Which factor is most
critical?
A. Nearby shopping centers
B. Building colors
C. Catchment yield and storage potential
D. Number of roads
, Explanation: Reservoir viability depends on reliable inflows and suitable storage
conditions.
7. A flood warning system predicts severe flooding 24 hours in advance. The
greatest benefit is:
A. Elimination of flood damage
B. Improved preparedness and emergency response
C. Reduced rainfall intensity
D. Increased reservoir yield
Explanation: Early warning allows evacuation and mitigation actions.
8. During a water audit, engineers discover that 28% of treated water never
reaches customers. This is known as:
A. Environmental flow
B. Groundwater recharge
C. Non-revenue water
D. Flood routing
Explanation: Non-revenue water includes physical and apparent losses.
9. A river downstream of a dam experiences ecological decline due to reduced
flows. Which measure should be implemented?
A. Increase abstraction
B. Reduce releases further
C. Establish environmental flow releases
D. Remove monitoring stations
Explanation: Environmental flows support aquatic ecosystems.