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THE OKAVANGO DELTA - BOTSWANA |
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| The Okavango Delta is one of the world’s largest inland water systems. It's headwaters start in Angola’s western highlands, with numerous tributaries joining to form the Cubango river, which then flows through Namibia (called the Kavango) and finally enters Botswana, where it is then called the Okavango. Millions of years ago the Okavango river use to flow into a large inland lake called Lake Makgadikgadi (now Makgadikgadi Pans). Tectonic activity and faulting interrupted the flow of the river causing it to backup and form what is now the Okavango Delta. This has created a unique system of water ways that now supports a vast array of animal and plant life that would have otherwise been a dry Kalahari savannah.
During the peak of the flooding the delta’s area can expand to over 16,000 square kilometres, shrinking to less than 9,000 square kilometres in the low period. As the water travels through the delta, the wildlife starts to move back into the region. The areas surrounding the delta are beginning to dry out (the rains in Botswana occur approximately the same time as in Angola) and the wildlife starts to congregate on the edge of the newly flooded areas, May through October. The delta environment has large numbers of animal populations that are
otherwise rare, such as crocodile, red lechwe, sitatunga, elephant, wild
dogs, buffalo, wattled crane as well as the other more common mammals
and bird life. The best time for game viewing in the delta is during the
May-October period, as the animal life is concentrated along the flooded
areas and the vegetation has dried out. The best time for birding and
vegetation is during the rainy season (Nov.- April) as the migrant bird
populations are returning and the plants are flowering and green. |
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