Lake Chad (, Kanuri: Sádǝ, ) is an endorheic freshwater lake located at the junction of four countries: Nigeria, Niger, Chad, and Cameroon, in western and central Africa respectively, with a catchment area in excess of . It is an important wetland ecosystem in West-Central Africa. The lakeside is rich in reeds and swamps, and the plain along the lake is fertile, making it an important irrigated agricultural area. The lake is rich in aquatic resources and is one of the important freshwater fish producing areas in Africa.

Lake Chad is divided into deeper southern parts and shallower northern parts. The water source of the lake mainly comes from rivers such as the Chari River that enter the lake. The water level varies greatly seasonally, and the area of the lake also changes dramatically. During the African humid period, the lake's area reached . Due to the increasingly arid climate, the lake surface gradually shrank. In the 19th century, it still had an area of . However, due to climate change and human water diversion, it has shrunk significantly since the mid-1970s, and its area has fluctuated between .

Prehistory and history<span class="anchor" id="History"></span>

thumb|275px|Lake Chad in [[African humid period (blue) and in 20th century (darker green surrounded by blue)|left]]

The Chad Basin was formed by the depression of the African Shield. For most of the Quaternary, the basin had abundant water sources. Towards the end of this period the climate became drier. Around 20,000–40,000 years ago, eolianite sand dunes began to form in the north of the basin. The area of Lake Chad experienced four heydays between 39,000 BC and 300 BC, leaving thick diatomaceous earth and lacustrine deposits in the strata. This has been called Mega-Chad. The maximum depth of Mega-Chad exceeded and it covered an area of approximately ,

The vast waters formed during the African humid period provided conditions for the emergence of lakeside fishermen's settlements, and the Nilo-Saharan ethnic group also migrated to Lake Chad during this period. Agriculture also emerged in the Sahel region at this time. By 1800 BC, a pottery culture known as Gajiganna had emerged, initially as pastoralists, but, starting around 1500 BC, living in settled hamlets at the side of the lake. The archaeological discovery revealed wild grasses, mostly of the tribe Paniceae, and wild rice together with the earliest domesticated Pearl millet in the Lake Chad region, dating to 1200–1000 cal BC. One of the oldest domesticated Pearl millet in West Africa was found in the Chad Basin, charred together with wild grasses, and their era can be traced back to 800–1000 cal BC.

Permanent villages were established to the south of the lake by 500 BC, and major archaeological discoveries include the Sao civilization. By the 5th century AD camels were being used for trans-Saharan trade via the Fezzan, or to the east via Darfur. After the Arabs conquered North Africa during the 7th and 8th centuries, the Chad Basin became increasingly linked to the Muslim countries. and even reached into Lake Chad. This was the deepest Ottoman incursion into the interior of Africa before the nineteenth century. The Ottoman Empire extended its influence on central region of the Central Sahel during the reign of Murad III, And Lake Chad becoming a part of Ottoman sphere of influence, and in the second half of the 16th century, the Bornu Empire began importing firearms from the ottoman Empire, consolidating its military hegemony. The Bornu Empire declined in the 18th century, and later lost its western region to the Sokoto Caliphate during the early 19th century. It was later colonised by European powers in the 20th century.

Following the growing interest in Africa among European academic and business communities, the Lake Chad area was extensively described by Europeans in the 19th century. Three scientific expeditions were conducted between 1898 and 1909. At the beginning of independence, the countries surrounding Lake Chad not only had a poor economic foundation, but also had more complex ethnic, religious, and political conflicts. Nigeria and Niger, which had just gained independence, experienced continuous coups, while Chad also experienced ongoing civil war. The inability of countries along the lake to consider the protection of Lake Chad has led to a series of environmental problems. It is an extensional fault depression type rift basin, which can be divided into four secondary structural units: southern depression, northern depression, central uplift, and eastern slope. The southern depression of the basin is characterized by an asymmetric fault depression composite rift with steep slopes in the east and gentle slopes in the west on the profile, and is distributed in an NNW direction on the plane. There are two large basin‐bounding normal faults developed on both sides of the basin, with a graben style fault and depression in the middle. The east and west sides are outward dipping low angle gentle slope areas. The eastern boundary fault is steep with a dip angle of about 55°, while the western fault has a dip angle of about 45°. The overall thickness of the inner layer in the slope area is relatively thin. In the central area of the basin, the thickness of the sedimentary strata is large, and the thickness of the sedimentary center zone reaches over . The northern part of the basin appears steep in the west and gentle in the east on the profile. Five fault structural zones parallel to the basin‐bounding faults have developed from west to east.

Lake Chad is divided into north and south parts by a shallow sill called the Great Barrier, with the bottom of the northern basin at an altitude of and the bottom of the southern basin at . When the water level in the south exceeds above sea level, it will flow into the north. and the sand dunes that are not completely submerged in the eastern waters form an archipelago.

The climate of the Lake Chad region is strongly influenced by continental and maritime air masses. The maritime air mass moves northward during the summer, producing seasonal precipitation. In late summer, continental air mass dominate again. Lake Chad is a shallow inland lake, and the rainfall in the Chad basin is very sensitive to small changes in atmospheric circulation, so the surface area of Lake Chad is greatly affected by climate change. Dry climate due to vegetation loss from overgrazing and deforestation and large-scale irrigation projects that diverted water from the rivers that feed the lake are the main reasons for the shrinkage of Lake Chad.

In 1870, the area of Lake Chad was about . The lake was able to flow out of the Bahr el-Ghazal during the rainy season. At the turn of the 20th century the area of Lake Chad shrank briefly, and reached a new high in the middle of the 20th century and overflowed from the Bahr el-Ghazal again. During this period, Lake Chad shrunk considerably and fluctuated in the range of thereafter. further shrunk to in 1975, From 1995 to 1998, it fluctuated within the range of . The area once reached in 2000, and the average area of surface water from 2013 to 2016 was about , with the largest area being in July 2015.

Quaternary aquifer and groundwater resilience

Beneath the lake lies the unconfined Quaternary phreatic aquifer, a massive transboundary water resource spanning approximately 500,000 square kilometers across Chad, Niger, Nigeria, and Cameroon. While the lake loses approximately 2,200mm/year of water to potential evapotranspiration, isotopic studies utilizing stable isotopes and tritium show that the underlying groundwater system remains highly resilient to climate change.

The Quaternary aquifer actively recharges through two primary processes: direct infiltration of intense seasonal rainfall events and lateral seepage from the lake itself and its ephemeral river channels. The surrounding dense woodland has been converted to open forest with acacias, baobabs, palms and Indian jujube. It is permanently or seasonally inhabited by hundreds of species of birds such as northern shoveler, Egyptian goose and marabou stork. and more than one million ruff can be observed on the lake at one time.

Mammals

The once common large mammals include red-fronted gazelle, dama gazelle, patas monkey, striped hyena, cheetah and caracal, while African elephant, otter, hippopotamus, sitatunga and kob are distributed in the wetlands. At present, most of the large mammals have been hunted to extinction, replaced by a large number of cattle. This makes it a rich fishing ground for communities across Nigeria, Niger, Chad, and Cameroon. The seasonal influx of floods combined with seasonal increases in air temperature leads to decreased salinity, increased turbidity, and increased trophic levels, which catalyzed a surge in the number of phytoplankton and zooplankton, allowing large fish to migrate seasonally within the watershed to feed and breed in the fertile floodplain when floods arrive.]]

thumb|right|275px|Building a temporary house in Lake Chad region

There are more than 30 million residents in the Chad Lake Basin. There are more than 70 ethnic groups around the lake, most of whom are distributed on the south bank, where the population density exceeds . They rely on the water source of Chad Lake for irrigation, breeding, animal husbandry and drinking. Farmers have shifted from planting mainly dry crops, such as wheat, to rice with high water demand, resulting in more serious soil salinization and water eutrophication.

Since 1970, five countries in the southern part of the basin have constructed numerous water conservancy projects in the upper reaches of the Chari River, Logone River, and Yobe River to intercept river water, resulting in a sharp decrease in the amount of water entering the lake. The average annual inflow of the Chari River and the Logone River from 1970 to 1990 was only 55% of that from 1950 to 1970. Since the 1980s, one-third of the water in the Chari River and the Logone River has been diverted and intercepted by the Central African Republic located upstream for agricultural irrigation and hydroelectric power generation.

Cameroon, Niger, Nigeria, and Chad established the Lake Chad Basin Commission on 22 May 1964. The Central African Republic joined in 1996, and Libya joined in 2008. The headquarters of the committee is located in N'Djamena, Chad. The commission's tasks include managing Lake Chad and its water resources, protecting the ecosystem, and promoting regional integration, peace, security, and development in the Lake Chad region. The surrounding countries' water replenishment plan for Lake Chad includes the construction of a canal to transport of water from the Congo River Basin to the Chari River Basin every year, and use a series of dams along the route to generate electricity.

See also

  • Inner Niger Delta, an inland delta in Mali
  • Lake Ptolemy, former lake in Sudan
  • List of drying lakes
  • Sudd, vast swamp in South Sudan
  • Wildlife of Chad

References

Further reading

  • Lake Chad Basin Commission
  • BIOsphere and Heritage of Lake Chad (BIOPALT) project
  • The Ups and Downs of Lake Chad
  • Lake Chad in World Lake Database
  • Lake Chad UN News