north zambia
operators - BANGWEuLU SWAMPS
Bangweulu Swamps is an enormous wetland wilderness
of low islands, reed beds, floodplains and shallow
lagoons, situated in the northern part of Zambia.
The swamps are found in a shallow depression at
the centre of an ancient cratonic platform. The
basin is fed by 17 principle rivers from a catchment
area of 190,000 square kilometres, but is drained
by only one river, the Luapula.

Unique to the floodplains of
the Bangweulu swamps is the water loving black
lechwe, which can gather in herds of up to 10,000,
following the floodwaters as they recede during
the year. Also found here is the rare antelope,
the sitatunga, which lives only in wetland areas.
Other antelope in the Bangweulu include oribi,
tsessebe, common duiker and reedbuck. Less commonly
seen are roan, wild dog and vervet monkeys, as
well as smaller more nocturnal mammals such as
mongoose and bush pigs. Although rarely seen,
leopards do exist while hyenas and jackals are
often heard at night and occasionally encountered
on night drives. Numerous crocodiles and hippos
are found in the permanent water channels or lurking
in the papyrus reeds. Buffalo and elephant move
into the area when the flood waters have receded
to feed on the plentiful grasses.

The bird life here is inspiring. One of the rarest
and most elusive birds in Africa, the shoebill
stork, which is in fact closer to the pelican
family than a stork, favours the Bangweulu Swamps
as one of their last remaining habitats. During
the early months following the rains, this strange
looking bird can regularly be seen on the fringe
between the permanent swamps and the floodplains.
The shallow waters of the floodplains also provide
ideal feeding grounds for huge numbers of indigenous
birds as well as numerous summer migrants. White
and pink backed pelicans, wattled and crowned
cranes, white and saddle-billed storks, spoonbills,
ibises in flocks numbering in the hundreds and
ruff by the thousand are a common but dramatic
sight when the waters are rich in small fish,
shrimps and snails. The shallow waterlines also
abound with ducks, geese, jacanas, pratincoles,
Montagu’s and Pallid harriers and occasionally
flamingos.
Other notables are the slaty and black egrets,
goliath heron, swamp fly-catcher, marsh tchagra,
Fullerborn’s & rosy-breasted longclaws
and white-cheeked bee-eater. The ground hornbill
and Denham's bustard are also a common sight as
they patrol the grassland for large insects. The
spectacular malachite kingfisher, speckled mousebirds,
marsh whydah, Katanga masked weaver, Luapula &
trilling cisticolas, black-collared eremomela
& Bohm’s flycatcher may also be seen. |