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Lake Victoria
*** Shopping-Tip: Lake Victoria
:''This page is about the African lake. For the Australian lake, see
Lake Victoria (New South Wales).''
Image:Lake Victoria composite satelite photo.JPG thumb|right|250px|Lake Victoria, as seen from space
'''Lake Victoria''' or '''Victoria Nyanza''' (also known as '''Ukerewe''' and '''Nalubaale''') is one of the
Great Lakes (Africa) Great Lakes of
Africa.
Lake Victoria is
1 E10 m² 68,800 square kilometres in size, making it the continent's largest
lake, the largest tropical lake in the world, and the second largest
fresh water lake in the world in terms of surface area. Being relatively shallow for its size, with a maximum depth of 84 m and a mean depth of 40 m, Lake Victoria ranks as the seventh largest freshwater lake by volume, containing
1000 km³ 2,750 cubic kilometres of water. It is the source of the longest branch of the
Nile River, the
White Nile, and has a catchment area of 184,000 square kilometres. The lake lies within an elevated
plateau in the western part of Africa's
Great Rift Valley and is subject to territorial administration by
Tanzania,
Uganda and
Kenya. The lake has a shoreline of 3,440 km, and has more than 3,000
islands, many of which are inhabited. These include the
Ssese Islands in Uganda, a large group of islands in the northwest of the Lake that are becoming a popular destination for tourists.
Exploration history
The first recorded information about Lake Victoria comes from
Arab traders plying the inland routes in search of
gold,
ivory,
slaves and other precious commodities. An excellent
map known as the Al Adrisi map dated from the 1160s, clearly depicts an accurate representation of Lake Victoria, and attributes it as being the source of the Nile.
The lake was first sighted by Europeans in
1858 when the
United Kingdom British List of explorers explorer John Hanning Speke reached its southern shore whilst on his journey with
Richard 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 the then
Victoria of the United Kingdom Queen of the United Kingdom. Burton, who had been recovering from illness at the time and resting further south on the shores of
Lake Tanganyika, was outraged that Speke claimed to have proved his discovery to have been the true source of the
Nile when Burton regarded this 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.
Image:Lakevictoria.jpg African Great Lakes.html" title="Meaning of right right|300px|thumb|right|The lake as seen from space, looking west, with other members of the [[African Great Lakes forming an arc in the middle distance. The cloud-covered forests of the
Democratic Republic of the Congo Congo can be made out in the distance..html" title="Meaning of 300px|thumb|right|The lake as seen from space, looking west, with other members of the [[African Great Lakes">right|300px|thumb|right|The lake as seen from space, looking west, with other members of the [[African Great Lakes forming an arc in the middle distance. The cloud-covered forests of the
Democratic Republic of the Congo Congo can be made out in the distance.">300px|thumb|right|The lake as seen from space, looking west, with other members of the [[African Great Lakes">right|300px|thumb|right|The lake as seen from space, looking west, with other members of the [[African Great Lakes forming an arc in the middle distance. The cloud-covered forests of the
Democratic Republic of the Congo Congo can be made out in the distance.
The well known British explorer and missionary
David Livingstone failed in his attempt to verify Speke's discovery, instead pushing too far west and entering the
Congo River system instead. It was ultimately the American explorer
Henry Morton Stanley who confirmed the truth of Speke's discovery, circumnavigating the Lake and reporting the great outflow at
Rippon Falls on the Lake's northern shore. It was on this journey that Stanley was said to have greeted the British explorer with the famous words ''Dr. Livingstone, I presume?'', upon discovering the Scotsman ill and despondent in his camp on the shores of Lake Tanganyika.
Ecology and social impacts
Lake Victoria plays a vital role in supporting the millions of people living around its shores, in one of the most densely populated regions on earth.
The
ecosystem of Lake Victoria and its surroundings have been badly affected by human influence. During the
1950s, the nile perch (
Nile Perch Lates niloticus) was introduced into the lake's ecosystem in an attempt to improve the yields of fishing in the lake. The nile perch proved totally devastating to the local ecosystem – of the hundreds of
endemic (ecology) endemic species, many are now extinct. Further, the initial good returns on nile perch catches has diminished dramatically. Currently, the nile perch is being overfished. It is reported that some populations of endemic species have increased again.
An eco-problem with a happier outcome was the fight against the huge increase of
Water Hyacinth (Eichhornia crassipes), a native of the tropical Americas, which forms thick mats of plant causing difficulties to transportation, fishing, hydroelectic power generation and drinking water supply. By
1995, 90% of the
Ugandan 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 into the lake with very good results.
Nalubaale dam
Image:Mwanza-lk-victoria.jpg right|300px|thumb|An Island on the Lake
The only outflow for Lake Victoria is at
Jinja, Uganda where it forms the Victoria Nile. The water originally drained over a natural rock weir. In 1954 British colonial engineers blasted out the weir and replaced it with the Owens Falls dam, now renamed the
Nalubaale dam, turning the entire lake into a giant
hydroelectric reservoir. A standard for mimicking the old rate of outflow called the "agreed curve" was established, setting the maximum flow rate at 300 to 1700 cubic meters per second depending on the lake's water level.
In 2002 Uganda completed a second hydroelectric complex in the area. By 2006 the water levels in Lake Victoria had reached an 80-year low, and Daniel Kull, a hydrologist with the
United Nations UN's International Strategy for Disaster Reduction in Nairobi, Kenya, calculated that Uganda was exceeding the agreed curve by 55% [http://www.newscientist.com/article.ns?id=mg18925384.100].
At 3500 cubic meters per second, more than double the maximum agreed curve, it would take a year to drain 110.4 cubic km 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 between
Uganda,
Tanzania and
Kenya. The main ports on the lake are
Kisumu,
Mwanza,
Bukoba,
Entebbe,
Port Bell and
Jinja, Uganda Jinja.
See also
*
Great Lakes (Africa) Great Lakes
*
Rift Valley lakes
External links
-
Lake Database: Data summary for Lake Victoria
-
LakeNet
-
Trouble in the Tropics
-
Darwin's Nightmare, an award winning documentary film by Hubert Sauper on the global political economy of the Nile perch trade at Lake Victoria and its social consequences for the region.
-
New Scientist article on Uganda's violation of the agreed curve for hydroelectric water flow.
Category:Lakes of Tanzania Victoria
Category:Lakes of Uganda Victoria
Category:Lakes of Kenya Victoria
Category:Lake Victoria *
ar:بØÙŠØ±Ø© Ù?يكتوريا
ca:Llac Victòria
cs:Viktoriino jezero
da:Victoriasøen
de:Viktoriasee
et:Victoria järv
es:Lago Victoria
fr:Lac Victoria
gl:Lago Vitoria
ko:ë¹…í† ë¦¬ì•„ 호
id:Danau Victoria
is:ViktorÃuvatn
it:Lago Vittoria
he:×?×’×? ויקטוריה
sw:Ziwa Victoria
lt:Viktorijos ežeras
hu:Viktória-tó
nl:Victoriameer
ja:ヴィクトリア湖
no:Victoriasjøen
pl:Jezioro Wiktorii
pt:Lago Vitória
ru:ВикториÑ? (озеро)
sk:Viktóriino jazero
sl:Jezero Ukerewe
sr:Викторијино језеро
sh:Jezero Victoria
fi:Victoriajärvi
sv:Victoriasjön
uk:ВікторіÑ? (озеро)
zh:ç¶å¤šåˆ©äºžæ¹–
'''Lake Victoria''' is a large lake in eastern Africa, bounded by several countries.
Category:Lakes of Africa Victoria
Category:Lakes of Uganda
Category:Lakes of Tanzania
Category:Lakes of Kenya
*** Shopping-Tip: Lake Victoria