- Lake Victoria
Infobox_lake
lake_name = Lake Victoria
image_lake = Topography of Lake Victoria.png
image_bathymetry =
caption_bathymetry =
coords = coord|1|S|33|E|type:waterbody|display=inline,title
outflow =White Nile River
catchment = 184,000 km²
238,900 km² basin
basin_countries =Tanzania Uganda Kenya
length = 337 km
width = 250 km
area = 68,800 km²
depth = 40 m
max-depth = 83 m
volume = 2,750 km³
shore = 3,440 km
elevation = 1,133 m
residence_time =
islands = 3,000 (Ssese Islands Uganda)
islands_category = Islands of Lake Victoria
cities =Bukoba , TanzaniaMwanza , TanzaniaKisumu , KenyaKampala , UgandaEntebbe , UgandaLake Victoria or Victoria Nyanza (also known as Ukerewe and Nalubaale) is one of the Great Lakes of
Africa .Lake Victoria is 68,800 square kilometres (26,560 mi²) in size, making it the continent's largest
lake , the largest tropical lake in the world, and the second widestfresh water lake in the world [cite web
url=http://www.ilec.or.jp/database/afr/afr-05.html
title=LAKE VICTORIA
publisher=www.ilec.or.jp
accessdate=2008-07-14
last=
first=] in terms of surface area (third largest if one considersLake Michigan-Huron as a single lake). Being relatively shallow for its size, with a maximum depth of 84 m (276 ft) and a mean depth of 40 m (131 ft), Lake Victoria ranks as the seventh largest freshwater lake by volume, containing 2,750 cubic kilometres (2.2 millionacre-feet ) of water. It is the source of the longest branch of the River Nile, theWhite Nile , and has awater catchment area of 184,000 square kilometres (71,040 mi²). It is a biological hotspot with great biodiversity. The lake lies within an elevatedplateau in the western part of Africa'sGreat Rift Valley and is subject to territorial administration byTanzania ,Uganda andKenya . The lake has a shoreline of 3,440 km (2138 miles), and has more than 3,000island s, many of which are inhabited. These include theSsese Islands in Uganda, a large group of islands in the northwest of the lake that are becoming a popular destination for tourists.Lake Victoria is relatively young; its current basin formed only 400,000 years ago, when westward-flowing rivers were dammed by an upthrown crustal block. [Reader, John. Africa. Washington, D.C.: National Geographic Society, 2001. p. 227] The lake's shallowness, limited
river inflow, and large surface area relative to its volume make it vulnerable toclimate change s; cores taken from its bottom show that Lake Victoria has dried up completely three times since it formed. [Reader, p. 228] These drying cycles are probably related to pastice age s, which are times when precipitation declined globally. [Reader, p. 228] The lake last dried out 17,300 years ago, and filled again beginning 14,700 years ago; the fantasticadaptive radiation of its nativecichlids has taken place in the short period of time since then. [Reader, p. 228]Exploration history
The first recorded information about Lake Victoria comes from
Arab traders plying the inland routes in search ofgold ,ivory , other precious commodities andslaves . An excellentmap , known as the Al Idrisi map from the calligrapher who developed it and dated from the 1160s, clearly depicts an accurate representation of Lake Victoria, and attributes it as the source of the Nile.The lake was first sighted by a European in 1858 when the British explorer
John Hanning Speke reached its southern shore while on his journey withRichard Francis Burton to explore central Africa and locate the Great Lakes. Believing he had found the source of the Nile on seeing this "vast expanse of open water" for the first time, Speke named the lake after Queen Victoria. Burton, who had been recovering from illness at the time and resting further south on the shores ofLake Tanganyika , was outraged that Speke claimed to have proved his discovery to have been the true source of theNile , which Burton regarded as still unsettled. A very public quarrel ensued, which not only sparked a great deal of intense debate within the scientific community of the day, but much interest by other explorers keen to either confirm or refute Speke's discovery.Fact|date=July 2008The famous British
explorer andmissionary David Livingstone failed in his attempt to verify Speke's discovery, instead pushing too far west and entering theRiver Congo system instead. [cite web
url=http://www.jambokenya.com/jambo/location/victoria.htm
title=Kenya, Africa - Lake Victoria in Kenya
publisher=www.jambokenya.com
accessdate=2008-07-14
last=
first=] It was ultimately theWelsh-American explorerHenry Morton Stanley , on an expedition funded by theNew York Herald newspaper, who confirmed the truth of Speke's discovery, circumnavigating the lake and reporting the great outflow atRipon Falls on the lake's northern shore.Introduction of fish species
The
ecosystem s of Lake Victoria and its surroundings have been badly affected by human influence. In 1954, theNile perch ("Lates niloticus") was first introduced into the lake's ecosystem in an attempt to improve fishery yields of the lake. Introduction efforts intensified during the very early-1960s. The species was present in small numbers until the early to mid-1980s, when it underwent a massive population expansion and came to dominate the fish community and ecology of the world's largest tropical lake. Also introduced was theNile tilapia ("Oreochromis niloticus"), now an important food fish for local consumption. The Nile perch ("Lates niloticus") proved ecologically and socioeconomically devastating. Together with pollution born ofdeforestation and overpopulation (of both people and domestic animals), the Nile perch has brought about a massive transformation in the lake's ecosystem and to the disappearance of hundreds of endemichaplochromine cichlid species. Many of these are now presumed to be entirelyextinct . A number of other species areextinct in the wild , with populations being maintained inzoo s and aquaria, e.g. as part of the Association of Zoos and Aquarium'sSpecies Survival Plan for these species. Some species which wereextirpated from Lake Victoria itself, are known to survive in nearby smaller so-called satellite lakes, such asLake Kyoga ,Lake Edward andLake Albert .Also vanished from Lake Victoria is one of two native species of
tilapia (another kind ofcichlid fish), theSingidia tilapia or "ngege" ("Oreochromis esculentus"). The "ngege" is superior in taste and texture to Nile tilapia, but it does not grow as fast or as large and produces fewer young. "Ngege" and some representatives of haplochromine diversity survive in minute swamp ponds and lakes that dot the Lake Victoria Basin. The initial good returns on Nile perch catches, at their peak delivering export revenues of several hundred million dollars a year, have diminished dramatically due to poor enforcement of fisheries regulations. The proceeds from Nile perch sales remain an important economic engine in the region, but the resulting wealth is very poorly distributed and the overall balance sheet on the Nile perch introduction to Lake Victoria is well into the redFact|date=April 2008 despite the enormous value of the perch landings as an export commodity.The three countries bordering Lake Victoria—Uganda, Kenya and Tanzania —have agreed in principle to the idea of a tax on Nile perch exports, proceeds to be applied to various measures to benefit local communities and sustain the fishery. However, this tax has not been put into force, enforcement of fisheries and environmental laws generally are lax, and the Nile perch fishery remains in essence a mining operation.
Currently, the Nile perch is being overfished. Populations of a few endemic cichlid species have increased again, particularly one to three species of zooplankton-eating, herring-like cichlids ("
Yssichromis ") that school with the abundant nativeSilver Cyprinid ("Rastrineobola argentea"), known locally as "dagaa" (Tanzania), "omena" (Kenya) or "mukene" (Uganda). In 1996 The World Bank funded a project to restore and sustain the ecology of Lake Victoria and its fisheries, called LVEMP (Lake Victoria Environmental Management Project).Meanwhile, the
European Union invested another large sum in fisheries infrastructure and monitoring. One product of these foreign aid programmes has been the training of a new generation ofEast African aquatic ecologists, conservation professionals, and fisheries scientists. There has also been an increase in the fishery research institutes of the lake.Water lely invasion
The water lely "
Eichhornia crassipes ", a native of the tropicalAmericas , was introduced byBelgian colonists toRuanda to beautify their holdings and then advanced by natural means to Lake Victoria where it was first sighted in 1988.cite web
url=http://www.spiegel.de/politik/ausland/0,1518,534060,00.html
title=Kenia: Die grüne Pest - Politik - SPIEGEL ONLINE - Nachrichten
publisher=www.spiegel.de
accessdate=2008-07-14] There, without any natural enemies, it has become an ecological plague, suffocating the lake, diminishing the fish reservoir, and hurting the local economies. By forming thick mats of vegetation it causes difficulties to transportation, fishing, hydroelectric power generation and drinking water supply. By 1995, 90% of theUganda n coastline was covered by the plant. With mechanical and chemical control of the problem seeming unlikely, the mottled water hyacinth weevil "Neochetina eichhorniae " was bred and released with good results. On theKenya n site, however, neglect has led to significant economic impact making it difficult to reach the harbour ofKisumu , hurting fishing, and threatening the water supply.Nalubaale Dam
The only outflow for Lake Victoria is at
Jinja ,Uganda , where it forms theVictoria Nile . The water originally drained over a natural rock weir. In 1952, British colonial engineers blasted out the weir and reservoir. A standard for mimicking the old rate of outflow called the "agreed curve" was established, setting the maximum flow rate at 300 to 1,700 cubic meters per second (392 - 2,224 yd³/sec) depending on the lake's water level.In 2002, Uganda completed a second
hydroelectric complex in the area, withWorld Bank assistance. By 2006 the water levels in Lake Victoria had reached an 80-year low, and Daniel Kull, an independent hydrologist living inNairobi ,Kenya , calculated that Uganda was releasing about twice as much water as is allowed under the agreement, [cite web
url=http://www.newscientist.com/article.ns?id=mg18925384.100
title=Uganda pulls plug on Lake Victoria - earth - 09 February 2006 - New Scientist
publisher=www.newscientist.com
accessdate=2008-07-14
last=
first=] and was the primary culprit in recent drops in the lake's level. At 55,372 cubic meters per second (35,000 yrd³), more than double the maximum agreed curve, it would take a year to drain 110.75 cubic kilometres (89,500acre-feet ) from the lake. That is approximately 4% of the lake's volume.Transportation
Since the 1900s
Lake Victoria ferries have been an important means of transport betweenUganda ,Tanzania andKenya . The main ports on the lake areKisumu ,Mwanza ,Bukoba ,Entebbe ,Port Bell and Jinja. The steamerMV Bukoba sank in the lake on October 3rd, 1995 with a loss of nearly 1,000 lives in one of Africa's worst maritime disasters.ee also
*
African Great Lakes
*Rift Valley lakes
*List of world's largest lakes
*"Darwin's Nightmare " (documentary dealing with the damage that has been caused by Nile perch introduction)References
External links
* [http://www.ugpulse.com/articles/daily/homepage.asp?ID=306 Decreasing levels of Lake Victoria Worry East African Countries]
* [http://www.ppl.nl/index.php?option=com_wrapper&view=wrapper&Itemid=82 Bibliography on Water Resources and International Law] Peace Palace Library
* [http://www.newscientist.com/article.ns?id=mg18925384.100 New Scientist article] on Uganda's violation of the agreed curve for hydroelectric water flow.
* [http://internationalrivers.org/en/node/1056| Dams Draining Lake Victoria] Institutions of theEast African Community
* [http://eachq.org:8020/lvdp/ Lake Victoria Basin Information Resources Database]
* [http://www.eac.int/lvdp/ Lake Victoria Development Programme]
* [http://www.lvfo.org/ Lake Victoria Fisheries Organisation]
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