Lake Malawi, originally known as Lake Nyasa, Lake Nyassa and Lake Niassa after the Yao word for "lake", is the most southerly lake in the Great African Rift Valley system. First "discovered" by the famed Scottish explorer and missionary Dr. David Livingstone, Lake Malawi has commonly been referred to as "Livingstone's Lake."
The lake is about 560 km long and 75 km wide at its widest point, with a total area of approximately 29,600 sq km. The lake is bordered by Mozambique, Malawi, and Tanzania. Its outlet is the Shire River; its largest tributary is the Ruhuhu. About three quarters of the lake is in Malawi; the rest is in Mozambique.
There are two inhabited islands in the lake, Likoma and Chizumulu. Although they are surrounded by Mozambican waters, they belong to Malawi since they had been colonized by Scottish missionaries from the Malawi mainland. Likoma is dominated by a huge stone Anglican cathedral. A notable feature of both islands is the large number of Baobab trees.
Lake Malawi also holds a fish species known as the Malawi cichlid. These fish, locally known as mbuna, are an important export for Malawi, but wild populations are increasingly threatened by commercial collecting and localized pollution.
Lake Malawi has traditionally provided a major food source to the residents of Malawi as it is rich in fish, the most famous of which is the Chambo, a fresh-water perch.
LakeNyasa, the third largest lake in Africa, is bordered by Tanzania in the north and northeast, by Mozambique in the east, and by Malawi in the south and west.
The lake is bounded by steep mountains, except in the south.
Its main tributary is the Ruhuhu River in the northeast; the Shire (in the south), a tributary of the Zambezi, is the lake's sole outlet.
Lake Malawi, originally known as LakeNyasa, Lake Nyassa and Lake Niassa after the Yao word for "lake", is the most southerly lake in the Great African Rift Valley system.
The lake is bordered by Mozambique, Malawi, and Tanzania.
Lake Malawi has traditionally provided a major food source to the residents of Malawi as it is rich in fish, the most famous of which is the Chambo, a fresh-water perch.