Africa’s forgotten fishes: A silent crisis beneath the waters
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At first glance, Africa’s wetlands - its shimmering
lakes and winding rivers - appear to teem with life. But
beneath the surface, a quieter story unfolds. One of urgency, fragility, and
silent loss.
A new report released Thursday by the World Wildlife
Fund (WWF), aptly titled ‘Africa’s Forgotten Fishes’ reveals that the
continent’s freshwater fish—over 3,281 species strong—are in dire straits.
These species, though often overlooked, form the beating heart of Africa’s
aquatic ecosystems, yet more than a quarter of them now face the threat of
extinction.
Out of 3,320 freshwater fish species assessed, a
staggering 714—or 26%—are officially threatened with extinction. And that
figure may very well be an underestimation, as data gaps leave room for a
potentially bleaker reality.
Freshwater fish are not just slippery creatures in
murky waters—they are lifelines. They feed tens of millions, sustain
livelihoods, power local economies, and nourish cultures passed down through
generations.
Twelve African countries produce over 100,000 tonnes
of wild freshwater fish every year. Kenya sits tenth on that list, having
harvested over 123,000 tonnes in 2022 alone. But behind those numbers swims a
deeper crisis—climate change and destructive human activity are gnawing away at
the habitats that sustain this critical resource.
“Africa is a global hotspot of freshwater fish
diversity, home to over 3,200 species—but it’s also a hotspot of risk,” says
Eric Oyare, WWF Africa’s Freshwater Lead. “When these fish disappear, we lose
much more than species: we lose food and nutrition security, livelihoods,
ecosystem balance, and adaptive capacities to climate change. These declines
are a red flag for the broader health of Africa’s freshwater ecosystems, which
are the very life support systems for people and nature.”
The report shines a particularly sobering light on
Lake Victoria—once a jewel of biodiversity, boasting an estimated 600 unique
cichlid species, many found nowhere else on Earth.
Following the introduction of Nile perch and other
human-driven pressures, as many as 200 of these species may now be extinct.
This, according to scientists, could be the single largest vertebrate
extinction event of the modern era.
In Kenya, one species—the Pangani haplo (Ctenochromis
pectoralis)—is already officially classified as extinct.
The threats are varied and intertwined: invasive
species, overfishing, habitat degradation from agriculture and deforestation,
industrial pollution, and the unchecked spread of lakeside settlements.
“The disappearance of freshwater fish is not just a
biodiversity crisis,” says Machaya Chomba, Africa Freshwater Protection Manager
at The Nature Conservancy. “It’s a direct threat to food, livelihoods, and
cultural identity for millions across Africa. These species are the backbone of
local economies and daily life. To protect them, we must restore and reconnect
the rivers and wetlands that sustain both nature and people.”
And yet, there is hope—if we act swiftly and
decisively.
Many African nations, including Kenya, have already
committed to restoring and protecting 30% of their inland waters by 2030 under
the Kunming-Montreal Global Biodiversity Framework. Kenya is also among 20
African nations that have joined the Freshwater Challenge—the world’s largest
initiative aimed at restoring degraded wetlands and rivers.
The report outlines a six-point Emergency Recovery
Plan for freshwater fish. Among the recommendations: restoring natural river
flows, improving water quality, protecting critical habitats and species,
ending unsustainable resource use, tackling invasive species, and removing
obsolete barriers to ensure rivers can flow freely.
Back home, the implications are hitting hardest at the
grassroots. Along the shores of Lake Victoria, dwindling fish stocks are
driving up prices and placing affordable protein further out of reach for
Kenya’s poorest communities.
From July 23rd to 31st, Zimbabwe will host the 15th
Conference of the Contracting Parties to the Convention on Wetlands (Ramsar
COP15). The gathering will bring together governments, scientists, and
conservationists to confront the threats facing freshwater ecosystems head-on
and chart a more sustainable future.
It will be a pivotal moment for Africa—a chance to
ensure its rivers, lakes, and wetlands are no longer forgotten, and that the
people who depend on them are heard, seen, and protected.


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