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    Home»Environment»Lake Chad has become Africa’s biggest refuge for waterbirds, despite years of conflict
    Environment

    Lake Chad has become Africa’s biggest refuge for waterbirds, despite years of conflict

    Markel ZillaBy Markel ZillaJuly 3, 2026No Comments5 Mins Read
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    Lake Chad has become Africa’s biggest refuge for waterbirds, despite years of conflict
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    Lake Chad has become Africa’s biggest refuge for waterbirds – Earth.com
    Lake Chad has become Africa's biggest refuge for waterbirds, despite years of conflict
    07-02-2026

    Lake Chad has become Africa’s biggest refuge for waterbirds, despite years of conflict

    BySanjana Gajbhiye
    Earth.com staff writer

    Lake Chad usually makes the news for conflict and its shrinking shoreline. A new study shows another side to the place

    The lake supports a huge number of waterbirds. Chad is named after it, and it is one of the largest wetlands in Africa

    A wetland surrounded by conflict

    EarthSnap

    The Lake Chad basin has faced more than a decade of insecurity. Armed conflict has forced families from their homes and kept most outsiders away

    That made the area very hard to study. Scientists had mostly stopped trying to survey it

    Regular fieldwork became too risky, so reliable bird counts stopped. A new international study has now filled that gap

    Nearly 2.48 million waterbirds

    The main finding is a large number. Researchers estimate that about 2.48 million waterbirds use the lake

    That is likely the biggest concentration of wetland birds in Africa. No other site on the continent is known to hold more

    The estimate came from a team led by Tour du Valat, a French wetland research institute. The French Biodiversity Agency (Office Français de la Biodiversité, OFB) took part as well

    Much of the flying was conducted by the Dutch NGO Wings for Conservation. The team worked with Chad’s Department of Wildlife and Protected Areas

    Together, they produced the first full survey of the lake’s birds since 2008. That gives conservationists a current baseline to work from

    Counting birds from the air

    Getting these numbers was not simple. Much of the lake is dangerous and hard to reach by road

    So the team surveyed from the air. Small planes flew set routes while observers counted the birds below

    Those counts fed into spatial models. The models estimated bird numbers across areas no one could safely reach on foot

    “By combining adapted aerial sampling methods with spatial modeling, we were able to estimate wildlife abundance across vast and difficult-to-access territories while limiting risks to observers,” said Pierre Defos du Rau, one of the study’s authors

    When conflict becomes a refuge

    The next finding was unexpected. Several species have held steady in recent years, and a few have grown

    Some of the most conflict-affected areas held more animals than calmer, easier-to-reach ones. The researchers call this a refuge effect

    Fewer people now fish, graze livestock, or hunt along the shore. That has left parts of the lake undisturbed, and wildlife has spread into them

    This runs against the usual assumption. Conflict zones are not often good for wildlife

    Not every species is thriving

    The good news has limits. Not every bird is doing well

    Some populations are rising, but others are in a clear state of decline. The mix shows how fragile the system still is

    The researchers do not oversell the positive numbers. They stress that only regular monitoring can show what is really happening

    Why the counting stopped

    Lake Chad was not always so hard to study. Decades ago it was a leading site for migratory waterbirds in Africa

    People compared it to the Inner Niger Delta in Mali. Then conflict made regular fieldwork almost impossible, and the surveys stopped

    The International Waterbird Census tracks how bird populations rise and fall. It has not run reliably at Lake Chad since the 2000s

    Without that data, it is hard to judge how many birds there are or where the numbers are heading. The census needs people on the ground, and that work had become too dangerous

    Birds linking three continents

    These birds do not stay in one place. Many migrate each year between Africa, Europe, and Asia

    The lake is an important stopover on those routes. Losing it would affect bird populations far beyond the region

    Protecting Lake Chad is not just Chad’s concern. Many countries have a stake in it

    The lake also matters to the people living around it. Its wetlands help feed nearby communities

    Fishing and other wetland reke is healthy, so are those food supplies

    Protecting it is about local livelihoods as much as wildlife. A healthy lake means more reliable catches

    A call for stronger protection

    The researchers want more than a one-off survey. They are calling for a large protected area on the lake

    They also want it added to the UNESCO World Heritage List. That status would bring stronger recognition and clearer rules

    They noted that long-term monitoring matters just as much. It is the only reliable way to track changes over time

    Why this matters now

    As wetlands disappear around the world, places like Lake Chad become increasingly important

    The lake is vital for birds that migrate between Africa, Europe, and Asia. It’s equally important for the people who depend on it for their livelihoods

    Despite years of conflict, the lake still supports remarkable biodiversity. Researchers say protecting it is now more important than ever

    The study is published in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

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    Africas become biggest Chad Lake
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