
Malawian students line up outside Blantyre Cathedral in the largest city and commercial center of the country, which was named by explorer and missionary David Livingstone after his hometown in Scotland. (Jeffrey Barbee/GlobalPost)
Malawi's massive lake sustains country
Tropical inland sea provides fish for country's population and for American aquariums.
CAPE MACLEAR, Malawi — This thin sliver of a country is one of the most densely populated in Africa. Agriculture alone could not feed Malawi's 13 million people, so the fishing industry on Lake Malawi is essential.
The tropical waters of Lake Malawi (see map below) teem with more fish species than any other lake in the world, according to marine biologists. The lake is the ninth largest expanse of fresh water in the world and the third largest lake in Africa.
Lake Malawi is home to more than 1,000 species of fish, many of which aren't found anywhere else. Some of these fish, such as the brightly colored cichlids, have found their way through breeders and traders into America's fish tanks — Malawi is the largest provider of pet fish to the U.S. and European markets. Lake Malawi National Park, around the southern part of the lake, was created to help protect the freshwater cichlids.
It is an inland sea that supports millions of people from its clear, clean waters. The original name of the country may have come from the word muravi, which in the local Chewa language means sparkling water.
The people who live in the isolated communities by the lake shore make their living by traditional fishing. The lake is part of Africa’s Great Rift Valley, which explains why it is so deep, with an average depth of more than 950 feet. Its deepest parts are more than 2,300 feet deep. The lake shares its eastern shore with the countries of Mozambique and Tanzania.
The explorer David Livingston is credited as the first European to discover the lake, but seven major tribes have lived on its shores for at least 500 years. Livingston ventured up the Zambezi River and climbed the Rift Valley escarpment 150 years ago in April. His exploration team rested underneath a small tree, where his followers later established a school. The tree is one of the few monuments that still stands in homage to the explorer. He chose the site of the first church in the country in the city of Blantyre, which bears the name of his hometown in Scotland.
Away from the lake, Malawi is a land of towering mountains and heavy storms. The rainy season lasts from December to April and for six months of the year the land is green and fertile. The people raise cattle and farm corn, the country's staple.
More GlobalPost dispatches by Jeffrey Barbee:
Recent on Africa:
Mugabe at UN food summit, as Zimbabwe goes hungry
Zimbabwe Correspondent - Zimbabwe - November 20, 2009 17:16 ET
Zimbabwe agriculture continues to suffer as Mugabe seizes farms of white and black alike.
Outraged Ireland demands a replay
Conor O'Clery - Ireland - November 19, 2009 11:53 ET
A French hand ball puts Ireland out of the World Cup.
Video: The fading glory of Kenya’s "Lunatic Express"
Eamon Kircher-Allen - Kenya - November 19, 2009 11:47 ET
The Mombasa to Nairobi railway line helped to create modern Kenya but is now outdated.
Moroccan desert blooms with organic farms
Solana Pyne - Morocco - November 17, 2009 11:53 ET
Mugabe maintains media grip
Zimbabwe Correspondent - Zimbabwe - November 17, 2009 11:23 ET
Zimbabwe's state broadcaster maintains steady stream of TV and radio propaganda.
Dakar's kaleidoscope of color
Finbarr O'Reilly - Senegal - November 17, 2009 11:13 ET
Encounter with drama group offers respite to photographer
Nigeria to press First World on climate change
Shyamantha Asokan - Nigeria - November 16, 2009 12:22 ET
Growing chorus of African countries calls for pledges to a climate change fund at Copenhagen.
Swaziland's wildlife makes spectacular comeback
Nicolas Brulliard - South Africa - November 15, 2009 09:27 ET
Animal populations thrive thanks to tough anti-poaching legislation.
Moroccan carpet confidential
Erik German - Morocco - November 13, 2009 17:16 ET
Rural women weavers struggle to earn a fair price for their intricate rugs.
Opinion: Nigeria proposes reform of oil industry
John Campbell - Worldview - November 12, 2009 15:39 ET
President Yar'Adua puts forward new legislation but it looks unlikely to effectively reform the industry.
What Morocco makes of Hillary Clinton
Solana Pyne - Morocco - November 12, 2009 11:31 ET
South Africa builds fitting memorial to Samora Machel
Nicolas Brulliard - South Africa - November 12, 2009 06:31 ET
Harrowing homage paid to Mozambique's first president who was killed in mysterious crash.
Opinion: "Old fox" Mugabe outwits others
Douglas Rogers - Worldview - November 8, 2009 09:56 ET
Power-sharing government achieves some improvements but Mugabe still rules with iron fist.
Kenya battles recurring drought
Tristan McConnell - Kenya - November 7, 2009 10:51 ET
Countries of East Africa and Horn of Africa plagued by successive years of low rainfall.
Full Frame: Freedom fighters, 30 years later
David Rochkind - Full Frame - November 4, 2009 16:31 ET
A photographer tracks down anti-apartheid fighters who have since struggled to find productive places in society.
Senegal seeks long-term solution to flooding
Anne Look - Senegal - November 4, 2009 07:06 ET
Families are being moved from flood-prone suburbs to a new settlement 15 miles east of Dakar.
Hillary defends remarks praising Israel
By Solana Pyne - Morocco - November 2, 2009 12:38 ET
After Pakistan and Israel, Clinton meets Arab foreign ministers in Marrakesh.
Coming soon: Nigerians in space?
Katrina Manson - Nigeria - October 30, 2009 06:25 ET
Nigeria's space agency is no joke. It has launched satellites and aims to put Africans into space.
Obama extends sanctions against Sudan
Tristan McConnell - Kenya - October 29, 2009 06:03 ET
New policy encourages dialogue but presses for change.
Watch GlobalPost videos:
Reporter's Notebook
Flying from Malawi into Johannesburg is a shock. It’s a short flight from the green rolling hills and villages of that little African country...Read more >
Featured: Special Projects
After the Fall:
20 years since the Berlin Wall came down
Life, Death and the Taliban:
Videos and stories
Study Abroad:
Students report from the road
Living in the Shadows:
An intimate look at China's migrant workers
A World of Trouble:
The global economy in 20 hotspots
Global Blogs:










Comments:
No Comments.
Login or Register to post comments