Our Lake, Our Life: Local Communities Say “No” to Soda Ash Mining at  Tanzania’s Lake Natron 

By Emmanuel Mgimwa, Eastern and Southern Africa Coordinator for the IUCN-SSC Flamingo Specialist Group (FSG)  Lake Natron, a globally recognised Ramsar Site, has been home to local communities, including the Maasai people, for generations. They raise their cattle here, and…

Alkaline Miracles: Studying Life on the Edge at Lake Natron

By Akshita Rabdiya, Nature Tanzania Under the blinding sun, with temperatures soaring past 42°C, and in the face of torrential rains and high-altitude winds that sweep across the East African Rift Valley, our team continues its daily vigil at the…

Wattled Cranes – majestic bird species of Malagarasi wetlands

Wattled Crane is a large, beautiful but threatened bird species of crane found in the wetlands and grasslands of Eastern and Southern Africa. In Tanzania, the Malagarasi-Muyovozi Ramsar Site is the only reliable habitat for the species. Nature Tanzania continues…

Malagarasi-Muyovozi Ramsar Site: Biodiversity Jewel Under Threat

By Daudi Onesphory, Nature Tanzania In Western Tanzania lies the Malagarasi-Muyovozi, the first Ramsar Site in Tanzania and the third largest Ramsar Site worldwide. It constitutes about one-third of Lake Tanganyika’s catchment area, and several rivers drain into it, including…

Protect Tanzania’s Wetlands for Posterity

By Emmanuel Mgimwa On 2nd February every year, the world celebrates World Wetlands Day to raise awareness about conservation of wetlands and spotlight their value. This year’s campaign theme is Protecting wetlands for our common future highlighting the critical role…

Lake Natron: Biodiversity Jewel Under Threat

By Emmanuel Mgimwa About 100 km northwest of Tanzania’s tourism capital, Arusha, lies Lake Natron. The Lake, part of the Great Rift Valley covers an area of 1,040 square kilometers, and is renowned for its reddishpink coloration arising from high…