yes. its acid you dickweed
By decreasing pH levels in lakes and species habitat.
It decreases the ph
No, it is not possible.
Acid rain can lower the pH of lakes, making them more acidic. This change in pH can be harmful to aquatic life, as many species are sensitive to even slight changes in acidity. Acid rain can also leach harmful metals from soils, further impacting the health of the lake ecosystem.
Clean rain has a ph of 5.6, while the ph of acid rain is 4.2-4.4.
Acid rain can lower the pH of water bodies, making them more acidic. This can harm aquatic life like fish, plants, and algae by damaging their gills, affecting reproduction, and disrupting the food chain. It can also leach toxic metals from soils into water, further impacting aquatic organisms.
When acid rain enters lakes and rivers, it can turn the lake or river acidic if there is enough acid rain. This can kill the fish and anything living in the water. It can cause some of the aluminum in the surrounding soil to enter the water, which is also very toxic. Some types of plants are able to survive in water or soil of an acidic pH while others cannot.
The acid in the stomach has a lower pH than that of 'acid rain'. Therefore much more acidic.
the answer is pH 7
The pH level of acid rain is typically below 5.6, which is the pH of normal rainwater. Acid rain forms when sulfur dioxide and nitrogen oxides mix with water vapor in the atmosphere, creating sulfuric acid and nitric acid.
It affects the fish because the acid in the rain affects thye PH scale in the water that they live in. Hope it helped
Alkaline substances (some are metals) to neutralise the waters pH.