Current view: Text account
Site description (2001 baseline):
Site location and context
Green Lake is one of a number of crater lakes near Debre Zeit in East Shewa Zone, 50 km west of the zonal capital, Nazaret. Like all of the volcanic crater lakes in this area, Green Lake is a closed system, being fed directly by rain and by water flowing down from the crater rims. The maximum depth is 32 m, and the water is highly alkaline. The lake is encircled by an almost continuous crater wall with steep and, in places, precipitous slopes rising almost 200 m above the water. Cliffs and scattered trees that grow on these cliffs make up the major habitats surrounding the lake. Drier slopes around the lake support various
Acacia spp. where disturbance and grazing are minimal. Severely eroded areas are either bare or carry highly drought-tolerant shrubs, scramblers and succulents, the most conspicuous of which are
Carissa edulis,
Euphorbia tirucalli,
Pterolobium stellatum,
Caesalpina spinosa and
Opuntia ficus-indica. The water exclusively supports an abundant population of the blue-green alga
Spirulina platensis, as a result of which the water appears green (hence the name of the lake). The dense algal growth in the lake produces a huge amount of oxygen during the day, but at night photosynthesis ceases, the algae use up the oxygen, and the lake becomes almost completely anaerobic by daybreak. This phenomenon partly explains the absence of fish from the lake. Debre Zeit is an important town (see site ET032).
See Box for key species. This lake is important for the large concentrations of waterfowl that it supports on a seasonal basis. Recent surveys have recorded c.80 species, including a range of Palearctic and Afrotropical waders, ducks and geese. Green Lake supports, along with the other Debre Zeit lakes, a wintering population of 10–15
Aythya nyroca. Of particular importance are the substantial numbers of
Phoenicopterus minor known to use the lake: over 25,000 (including 2,000 dead birds) were recorded during a survey in November 1995, though a second survey in October 1996 found only 25. Other significant waterbird counts include
Tachybaptus ruficollis (500 in 1995, 250 in 1996),
Anas clypeata (700) and
Himantopus himantopus (300).
Non-bird biodiversity: None known to BirdLife International.
Pressure/threats to key biodiversity
Increasing numbers of people and cattle from the surrounding area are using Green Lake, accelerating erosion and degradation of the crater’s steep slopes, and there is now excessive disturbance of the birds. There is also an increasing level of deliberate persecution of birds by local herdsmen, but whether this is responsible for the 2,000 dead
Phoenicopterus minor noted in 1995 has not been confirmed. The dramatic decline in numbers of
P. minor noted between 1995 and 1996, combined with the die-off noted above, is a serious cause for concern, and one that should be investigated to determine the cause. The local farmers would prefer to avoid the steep and treacherous descent to the lake for their cattle if alternative sources of water were available. During the rainy season they take their cattle to other watering points, away from the lake, suggesting that if there were an alternative watering-site for cattle, the farmers would not interfere with the wildlife of the Green Lake area.
Recommended citation
BirdLife International (2024) Important Bird Area factsheet: Green Lake (Ethiopia). Downloaded from
https://datazone.birdlife.org/site/factsheet/green-lake-iba-ethiopia on 23/11/2024.