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Tabkin Malawi

Daga Wikipedia, Insakulofidiya ta kyauta.
Tabkin Malawi
General information
Height above mean sea level (en) Fassara 474 m
Tsawo 570 km
Fadi 75 km
Yawan fili 29,600 km²
Vertical depth (en) Fassara 704 m
Volume (en) Fassara 8,400,000 hm³
8,400 km³
Labarin ƙasa
Tsarin Daidaiton Labarin Kasa 12°11′00″S 34°22′00″E / 12.183333333333°S 34.366666666667°E / -12.183333333333; 34.366666666667
Bangare na Lake Malawi National Park (en) Fassara
African Great Lakes (en) Fassara
Rift Valley lakes (en) Fassara
Kasa Malawi, Mozambik da Tanzaniya
Hydrography (en) Fassara
Inflow (en) Fassara
Outflows (en) Fassara Shire River (en) Fassara
Watershed area (en) Fassara 6,593 km²
Ruwan ruwa Zambezi Basin (en) Fassara
Tafkin malawi
tafkin malawi

Tabkin Malawi, Anfi saninsa da Tafkin Nyasa a kasar Tanzania da kuma Lago Niassa a kasar Mozambique, na daga cikin Manyan Tabkunan Afirka kuma ita ce tafki a mafi kudancin East African Rift system, tana nan ne a tsakanin kasar Malawi, Mozambique da Tanzania.

Ita ce tabki Mafi girma na hudu (4) mai ruwa mai kyau a duniya a fadi da cika, na tara mafi girman tabki a duniya wuri fadi da tsawo, kuma na uku da na biyu a girma da zurfi a nahiyar Afirka. Tafkin Malawi na dauke da nau'ukan kifaye daban-daban fiye da kowane tafki a duniya,[1] wadanda a kalla yana dauke da nau'uka 700 na cichlids.[2] Bangaren tabkin na Mozambique gwamnatin kasar ta kebeshi a matsayin wurin Adana a ranar 10 ga watan Yunin, 2011,[3] A kasar Malawi bangaren tasu na cikin Lake Malawi National Park.[1]

Wannan Muƙalar guntuwa ce: tana buƙatar a inganta ta, kuna iya gyara ta.


  1. 1.0 1.1 "Protected Areas Programme". United Nations Environment Programme, World Conservation Monitoring Centre, UNESCO. October 1995. Archived from the original on 2008-05-11. Retrieved 2008-06-26. Unknown parameter |deadurl= ignored (|url-status= suggested) (help)
  2. Turner, Seehausen, Knight, Allender, and Robinson (2001). "How many species of cichlid fishes are there in African lakes?" Molecular Ecology 10: 793–806.
  3. WWF (10 June 2011). "Mozambique’s Lake Niassa declared reserve and Ramsar site" Retrieved 17 July 2014.