In a book, Conceptual Physics by Benjamin Corral, it was given that when water falls down from a tap, it is a case of conservation of mass. They said that this is because water is thick when just comes out of the tap and then as it falls it becomes thinner and thinner.
The stream of water is fatter near the mouth of the faucet, and skinnier lower down. This can be understood using conservation of mass. Since water is being neither created nor destroyed, the mass of the water that leaves the faucet in one second must be the same as the amount that flows past a lower point in the same time interval. The water speeds up as it falls, so the two quantities of water can only be equal if the stream is narrower at the bottom.
How is it an example of conservation of mass?