People and economy

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Also known as: Great Lakes

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Although not all the shores of Lake Victoria are well settled, the lands marginal to the lake are among the most densely populated in Africa. The best-known groups inhabiting these marginal lands are the Ganda, Soga, Luhya, Luo, Sukuma, and Haya, all of whom, except for the Luo (who are Nilo-Saharan speakers), are Bantu-speaking. The eastern margins of Lake Kivu reflect the high population density of Rwanda, and the lowlands at the northern and southern ends of Lake Nyasa are also well populated. In general, though, the shores of the Eastern and Western Rift lakes are sparsely settled.

Resource exploitation

Fish constitute one of the major resources of the East African lakes, but the degree of exploitation varies considerably from lake to lake. Uganda, for example, possesses a large freshwater-fishing industry, while production from Kenya is appreciably lower. The potential of Lake Rudolf, well stocked with Nile perch, has been only partially realized, whereas to the south the waters of the much smaller Lake Baringo have been more strongly exploited. Black bass and several species of Tilapia, both of which were introduced, form the basis of the commercial fishery of Lake Naivasha; the lake is also a popular weekend resort for Nairobi residents, many of whom are attracted by the sport fishing. At Lake Magadi, on the other hand, soda ash, which is among Kenya’s leading mineral exports, is extracted and refined.

The strongly developed Ugandan fishery of Lake Kyoga is largely based on introduced Nile perch, and, although Lake Victoria is considered to be essentially a Tilapia fishery, there are also important catches of other species, including Nile perch. The fisheries of Lake Victoria are important as a source of protein for the rural and urban population living in the vicinity. The Luo and the Sese Islanders have shown a marked interest in the industry, which is practiced by independent fishermen, who typically use planked canoes with outboard motors.

Another important resource at Lake Victoria is hydroelectric power. The Nalubaale and Kiira power stations, located at Owen Falls at Jinja, provide electricity for use in Uganda and Kenya. In addition, the Nalubaale Dam enhances the potential of Lake Victoria as a storage reservoir for the Nile River. The Lake Victoria region has great potential for economic growth, although greater cooperation between its bordering states is needed to realize this potential.

The varied fish life of Lake Albert includes Nile perch and two genera of tiger fish, of which one, Alestes, provides two-thirds of the total weight landed on the Uganda shores of the lake. It is believed, however, that the total catch is below the maximum sustainable yield of the lake. A tourist attraction adjacent to Lake Albert is the Murchison Falls (Kabalega) National Park, which extends down to the narrowing outlet at the northern end of the lake.

water glass on white background. (drink; clear; clean water; liquid)
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Water and its Varying Forms

Lakes Edward and George support remarkably fertile fisheries. The DRC shores of Lake Edward are within the Virunga National Park, while the Ugandan portion of the lake lies within the Queen Elizabeth (Ruwenzori) National Park. Close to the northeastern shore of Lake Edward, Lake Katwe, which lies in one of the numerous shallow craters within the Edward-George branch of the Western Rift, is a source of salt.

The fisheries potential of Lake Kivu is more limited than that of the other lakes of the Western Rift, but a large quantity of natural gas is obtained from the lake each year. Tourist attractions are available, and, at the outlet of the lake below Bukavu, DRC, a hydroelectric station on the Ruzizi River provides power to Bujumbura in Burundi on the northern shores of Lake Tanganyika.

As a whole, the borderlands of Lake Tanganyika are characterized by underdevelopment, although peasant fishermen operate in the northern part of the lake, where fisheries are dominated by the exploitation of dagaa. There is a secondary output from other species, but, in the absence of shallow marginal waters, Tilapia do not form a significant proportion of the catch. Despite the changes in water level to which it is liable and its remoteness from markets, Lake Rukwa is third to Lakes Victoria and Tanganyika among the freshwater fisheries of Tanzania.

In the northern waters of Lake Nyasa the fish caught include catfish and some species of carp, whereas in the southern part of the lake shallow sheltered waters provide a good habitat for Tilapia and for Labeo mesops (a species of carp). The majority of the fishermen also practice subsistence agriculture, except on Likoma Island. Commercial fishing, however, has intensified the demand upon the inshore species and thereby resulted in a reduction of the fish population.

Transportation

Most of the East African lakes are reasonably accessible by road and air. Among the major lakes, however, Rudolf remains the least accessible by road. With the exception of Lake Albert, the main lakes of Uganda are well served by surface communications. There are fairly good road communications to Lake Kivu, but considerable stretches of the shores of Lakes Tanganyika and Nyasa have no proper roads. Scheduled inland-waterway services have been developed on Lakes Victoria, Tanganyika, and Nyasa; elsewhere, as on Lake Kivu, there are launch services. Otherwise, canoes and, to a small extent, dhows transport people and goods.

Fluctuations of the lake level and changing economic conditions have brought about the closure of a number of ports on Lake Victoria. The main ports in use are Kisumu in Kenya; Musoma, Mwanza, and Bukoba in Tanzania; and Port Bell (serving the Kampala metropolitan area) and Jinja in Uganda. Entebbe, Uganda, which is no longer a lake port, has an international and regional airport; there is also an international airport at Bujumbura, Burundi’s port on Lake Tanganyika. Lake services, including those from rail-ferry terminals at Jinja, Kisumu, and Mwanza, operate on Victoria; all three have rail connections with the maritime ports. On Lake Tanganyika a rail line connects Kigoma, Tanzania—terminus of the rail line from the Tanzanian capital of Dar es Salaam—with the Zambian port of Mpulungu. In the DRC a company based at the railway port of Kalemi maintains links with Kigoma, Bujumbura, and Kalundu (for the town of Uvira). Malawi’s railway system provides services on Lake Nyasa and has rail connections with Beira and Nacala on the coast of Mozambique, and, through Salima, the cities of Blantyre and Lilongwe are also connected by rail. Important ports on Lake Nyasa included Itungi, Likoma, Nkhata Bay, Nkhotakota, Chilumba, and Karonga, and people along the lakeshore continue to depend on lake transport.

Study and exploration

Following in the track of earlier Arab trading expeditions, the British explorers Richard Burton and John Hanning Speke reached the eastern shore of Lake Tanganyika in 1858. It was there, at Ujiji, that David Livingstone, the Scottish explorer-missionary who had pioneered the Shire River route to Lake Nyasa in 1859, was met by the Welsh explorer Henry Morton Stanley in 1871, after which the two subsequently made a reconnaissance of the northern part of the lake. The lake had been explored in greater detail by Edward Daniel Young of the Royal Navy; he led an 1867 expedition in search of Livingstone, who at that time was presumed to have died. Then, in 1874, in the course of his east–west traverse of the continent, the English traveler Verney Lovett Cameron explored the Lukuga River outlet on the western shore of Tanganyika.

While Burton remained at Tabora in 1858, Speke journeyed northward and became the first European to view the waters of Lake Victoria. In 1862, after he returned to East Africa with a fellow countryman, James Augustus Grant, Speke stood above the Ripon Falls, which he proclaimed as the source of the Nile. The details of the Lake Victoria shoreline were filled in by Stanley when he circumnavigated the lake in 1875.

Meanwhile another Englishman, Samuel White Baker, and his wife, Florence, had approached the East African lakes from the north, reaching Lake Albert in 1864. In 1888–89 Stanley, in company with Mehmed Emin Pasha, the German explorer, traced the Semliki River to its source in Lake Edward. Finally, in 1894, a German explorer, Adolf von Götzen, became the first European to visit Lake Kivu.

During the 1880s Europeans explored the lakes of the Eastern Rift. Lakes Magadi and Naivasha were visited by a German traveler, Gustav Fischer, in 1883, and in that same year the Scottish explorer Joseph Thomson reached the shores of Lake Baringo. Five years later Count Sámuel Teleki and Ludwig von Höhnel reached Lake Rudolf. Considerable scientific study of the lakes region has been conducted since that time.