Friday 10 February 2012

Protecting Lake Munyanyange



Cows graze near Lake Munyanyange in Kasese. Photo by Felix Basiime 

By Felix Basiime

Posted  Wednesday, February 8  2012 at  00:00
In Summary
In a bid to protect the migratory birds that use it as a habitat and to ensure conservation of the crater lake, Lake Munyanyange is going to be fenced off.

As hundreds of tourists every year visit Queen Elizabeth National Park to see wild animals, others visit the salty Lake Katwe to see how people mine different types of natural salt.

But a number of others particularly come to watch and listen to the sweet sounds of birds at Lake Munyanyange, a few metres away from Lake Katwe in Katwe-Kabatooro town council.

“Bird watching is a growing venture in the tourism sector in Uganda and here at Lake Munyanyange, visitors enjoy sporadic musical calls of birds imitating other birds calls,” said Mr Richardson Ouma, a birding specialist and field guide at Katwe Tourist Information Centre (Katic).

Lake Munyanyange attracts birds that migrate from as far as Kenya and Canada among other countries including the White Browed Robbin Chats, Black Headed Gonoleks, Long Tailed Starlings, African Hoopoes, Winding, Zitting, Flamingos and Desert Cisticolas.

Lake Munyanyange is a small seasonal shallow crater lake located to the North East of Katwe town. The lake is an important habitat for migratory birds and has one of the largest concentrations of the lesser black-backed gulls, Larus fuscus and other waders.

These birds are Palearctic migrants arriving in October and departing in April. Thousands of these birds roost at the lake.

Ouma reasons that most birds find Lake Munyanyange most safe for them as at one stage of the year it turns muddy and that makes it difficult for wild animals to wade through the mud and prey on them. During this period, the birds roost in the middle of the lake.

“Most water bird species that migrate from Europe and within Africa, that is to say Palearctic and intra-African migrants, find it the ideal stop-over and roosting area,” says Ouma.

It is this reason that Katic has planned to fence off this lake from other animals like cows, an exercise that will be monitored by Nature Uganda, an NGO.

“We are just waiting for officials from Nature Uganda who will monitor this exercise so that the fencing does not affect the birds’ habitat,” said Ouma.

Martin Kikoni Muhindo, the Katwe-Kabatooro Town Council Clerk says they have committed Shs5m from the council to Katic for mitigations on the environmental threats in the two lakes.

This follows the September 2011 partnership reached by the urban authority and Katic towards management of crater lakes in the town council.

Ouma says about 32 water bird species have been recorded at the lake and during the waterfowl counts of July 2010, a total of 410 birds representing 11 species were recorded.

The fencing of this lake also aims at ensuring the protection and conservation of the crater lake from agricultural encroachment and other potential degradation actions, promoting ecotourism development for sustainable biodiversity conservation, and generating revenue for the council and Katic.

This move has also been supported by Usaid-Star as part of managing wildlife outside protected areas and using ecotourism as an incentive for protecting biodiversity.
Bird watching on Lake Munyanyange has grown as it is a unique sanctuary with varieties and migratory birds such as flamingos and seagulls.

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