Lake Kyoga

Coordinates: 1°30′N 33°0′E / 1.500°N 33.000°E / 1.500; 33.000
Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Lake Kyoga
Soroti
References[1][2]

Lake Kyoga or Lake Kioga (literally 'the place of bathing' in

Great Lakes
system, it is not itself considered a great lake.

Rivers and lakes of Uganda.
Click image to enlarge.

The lake reaches a depth of about 5.7 metres, and most of it is less than 4 metres deep.

water hyacinth.[3] The papyrus also forms floating islands
that drift between a number of small permanent islands. Extensive wetlands fed by a complex system of streams and rivers surround the lakes.

Its extensions include; Lake Kwania, Lake Bisina, lake Bugondo and Lake Opeta.[3]

Fauna and fishing

Haplochromis latifasciatus is one of the many cichlid species found only in the Lake Kyoga system

Lake Victoria sardine and marbled lungfish. Many of the haplochromine cichlids are endemic, but very closely related to the Lake Victoria species,[4][5] and showing a similar level of diversity in terms of feeding.[6] The Kyoga cichlids include both described species like Haplochromis latifasciatus and H. worthingtoni, and undescribed like H. sp. "Kyoga flameback" and H. sp. "ruby".[7] As in Lake Victoria, the Kyoga cichlids have been decimated by the introduced Nile perch and some species are already extinct. Because Kyoga generally is shallow and swampy, some subsections—"satellite lakes"—are isolated to various degrees from the main lake. The number of surviving haplochromine cichlids in each subsection is directly related to the status of the Nile perch. Despite being the largest by far, less than 50 haplochromine species survive in the main section where the Nile perch is common. In comparison, the much smaller satellite lakes Lemwa, Nyaguo and Nawampasa lack Nile perch, but at least 50 haplochromine species survive in each of the first two, and at least 60 in the last. Conversely, the small satellite lakes Nakuwa and Nyasala where Nile perch is abundant have less than 30 and 5 surviving haplochromines respectively.[4][5] This also means that fishing in the Lake Kyoga system has gradually shifted from once targeting many native species, to now primarily targeting the native Lake Victoria sardine, the introduced Nile perch and introduced Nile tilapia[8] (the two native tilapias, the Singida and Victoria, have become very rare, except in some satellite lakes).[5] In 2006, only 4% of catches were haplochromine cichlids.[8]

Flora

Lake Kyoga has flora that includes; Pistia stratiodes (Water Lettuce), Cyperus Papyrus, Hyppo Grass, water Lily.[9]

References

  1. ^ a b "Lake Kyoga". World Lakes Database. 1999. Archived from the original on 4 February 2015. Retrieved 4 February 2015.
  2. ^ a b Lake Kyoga at the Encyclopædia Britannica
  3. ^ a b c d "Govt starts irrigation schemes in Serere". Monitor. 2024-05-13. Retrieved 2024-05-21.
  4. ^ .
  5. ^ .
  6. .
  7. ^ Bauman, K. "African Cichlids from the Lake Victoria basin". Retrieved 25 September 2019.
  8. ^ .
  9. ^ "GNF - Lake Kyoga". www.globalnature.org. Retrieved 2024-05-21.
  • DWD (2002) El Niño preparedness for Lake Kyoga and other flood prone areas of Uganda. Directorate of Water Development. Ministry of Water, Lands and Environment, Entebbe, Uganda.
  • ILM (2004) Support to the Management of Sudd Blockage on Lake Kyoga. Produced for the Integrated Lake Management Project by Environmental Impact Assessment Centre of Finland, EIA Ltd. (online PDF version)
  • Twongo, T. (2001) The Fisheries and environment of Kyoga Lakes. Fisheries Resources Research Institute (FIRRI), Jinja, Uganda.

External links