Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/1994
Title: Lake Turkana: World’s Largest Permanent Desert Lake (Kenya)
Authors: Ojwang, W.
Obiero, K.
Donde, O.
Gownaris, N.
Pikitch, E.
Omondi, R.
Agembe, S.
Malala, J.
Avery, S.
Keywords: Desert Lake
Alkaline
Omo Delta
Transboundary
Wetland Blue-green algae
Wetland Hydropower
Irrigation Schemes
Dams
Issue Date: 2018
Publisher: Springer-Verlag (Heidelberg), Tiergartenstrasse 17 Heidelberg 69121 Germany, [mailto:subscriptions@springer.de]
Citation: The Wetland Book pp 1361-1380
Abstract: Located in the “cradle of mankind” of the East African Rift Valley, Lake Turkana is distinguished as both the world’s largest permanent desert lake and alkaline water body. With a surface area of about 7,560 km2, Lake Turkana is a highly pulsed, variable system as a result of its closed-basin nature, arid surroundings, and its strong dependence on River Omo for the majority of its inflow, which originates as rainfall over the Ethiopian highlands. In this article we describe the lake’s unique ecosystem and associated vicissitudes, diverse habitats and incredible biodiversity, and ecosystem services. Although parts of the lake and lower Omo Delta have been zoned as an international biosphere reserve, Lake Turkana and the region are facing immense threat from anthropogenic activities. A combination of external factors (hydropower dams, irrigation schemes, climate anomalies) and internal drivers (demography, economic growth) will strongly impact the Lake Turkana basin over the next decade. In turn, this will have significant negative consequences on resource productivity and the wellbeing of local communities.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/1994
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