There are actually several lakes in western Tanzania. They are Lake Natron, Lake Tanganiyka, Lake Nyasa, and Lake Rukwa. However I suspect the lake you are wondering about is Lake Victoria
Lake Rukwa tilapia was created in 1903.
Arabs spoke (and still speak) Arabic. Bantus spoke (and still speak) Bantu languages, such as: Manenguba Sawabantu Basaa Bafia Beti Makaa-Njem Kele-Tsogo Teke-Mbede Mboshi-Buja Bangi-Tetela Mbole-Enya Lega-Binja Boan Lebonya Nyanga-Buyi Northeast Bantu Tongwe-Bende Mbugwe-Rangi Kilombero Kongo-Yaka-Sira Kimbundu Chokwe-Luchazi Luyana Mbukushu Pende Luban Lunda Rukwa Sabi-Botatwe Nyasa Rufiji-Ruvuma Umbundu Kavango-Southwest Bantu Yeyi Shona
There are quite a few other lakes near Lake Tanganyika. Lake Victoria to the north is the largest, over twice the size. It's part of Tanzania, Uganda and Kenya. South of Lake Tanganyika are 3 other large lakes, Lake Malawi, (also known as Lake Nyasa) , Lake Mweru, and Lake Rukwa . All of these lakes are part of Africa's Great Rift Valley.
There are many lakes in the Rift Valley of Africa but the largest are: Lake Victoria, Lake Tanganyika, Lake Malawi, Lake Turkana, Lake Albert, Lake Rukwa, Lake Mweru, Lake Kivu, and Lake Edward.
J. Ngana has written: 'Preliminary analysis of Kyela floods' 'Small scale irrigation in Coast Region' 'Estimation of annual floods with limited hydrologic data' 'Hydraulic studies downstream of the proposed Stiegler's Gorge Dam' 'Preliminary investigation of the hydrology of Rukwa region' 'The climatology and hydrology of Pugu and Kazimzumbwi coastal forests'
Education can be defined as any process of one generation in the society transmits its knowledge, skills, values and customs as a matter of experience to another generation . Tanzania before getting its Independence in 1961 was under burritish colonial rule. The education system by that time was segregated as few people had accesses to school only few the sons of chiefs mostly attended the secondary school at Tabora boys. most of the schools were under the missionaries and moslem missions . After independent in 1961 education system in Tanzania was changed so that it could cater for the need of the Tanzanian people and this was reflected in the educational policy Act. No. 37. in this act the education system was to be free for all public secondary schools, this was intended so that a number of students could increase. Education was to be provided in such way that no racial and religion discrimination, so all people had opportunity to attend in all schools. Not only that but also there was introduction Regional integration, that the schools got st5udents from different regions so that the students could know each other and establish friendship that brought National unit. Schools were to be built in areas that had no enough schools compared to other areas , For example in coastal ares missionaries didn't built a lot of schools as most of the people in this area were Muslims who didn't allow their children to study in Christian schools fearing that they may be converted. The other example is, some areas had good climatic condition and good soil for the European to live and also to establish economic activities, compare reserved ares like Mtwara, Kigoma and Rukwa with Kilimanjaro, Kagera ang Tanga.
There are thousands of animals that are endangered. A few of them are:Warbler birdsWolf spidersEagle rayslots of frogs, river frogs, banana frogs, tree frogs, Hogsback Frog, Rattray's frogGiant panda, lesser panda, red pandaChinese alligatorHowling monkeysRed-bellied Racershummingbirds, Mangrove hummingbirdlots of parrots, Red-browed Amazon, Puerto Rican, Hyacinth MacawGranular Salamander, Chinese Giant Salamander and othersAntelope SquirrelTeals (Madagascar, Brown) Ducks (Meller's, Hawaiian)Tasmanian freshwater limpetEcuador Fish-eating ratSwan GooseSacramento BeetleSulu HornbillBulmer's Fruit BatBrown KiwiMadagascar HeronWhales (Coalfish, Pollack, Sei, Blue, Finback, Razorback, N. Atlantic Right whale, Humpback)Deer (Calamanian, Philippine, Bawean)Namdapha Flying SquirrelManed Three-toed Sloth, Pygmy Three-toed SlothLonghorn fairy shrimpWild Asian Water BuffaloCuban Pine ToadHouston ToadBactrian CamelIvory Billed WoodpeckerRed WolfEthiopian WolfPondicherry sharkAssam RabbitBornean Bay CatHector's Dolphin, New Zealand Dolphin, White headed Dolphin, Chinese Lake Dolphin, Whitefin Dolphin, Yangze River DolphinGreen Sea Turtle and many othersMekong Freshwater StingraySplendid Poison FrogHuon Tree KangarooMt. Kahuzi Climbing MouseGiant Kangaroo RatChinese DormouseAsian ElephantNorthern SealionSmall-toothed MoleEastern, Mountain and Western GorillasCape and Knysna seahorsesVarious SturgeonsNorthern and Queensland Hairy-nosed WombatsPink velvet wormSierra Nevada Bighorn SheepBiak Tiger, Bonthain Tiger, Timor Yellow TigerDickey's Deer MouseSooty AlbatrossSumatran OrangutanLarge Desert Marsupial MouseGalapagos PenguinSouthern Bluefin TunaAlpine WallabyMadagascar Red OwlCalifornia Channel Island Foxand many many more. See the link below to Wikipedia.Critically Endangered AnimalsSumatran Orangutan (Indonesia)Sumatran Tiger (Indonesia)Lear's Macaw (Brazil)Brown Spider Monkey (Colombia, Venezuela)Rancho Grande Harlequin Frog (Venezuela)Panamanian Golden Frog (Panama)Pygmy Three-toed Sloth (Panama)Yellow-crested Cockatoo (Indonesia)Golden-bellied Capuchin (Brazil)Elegant Frog (Australia)Orinoco Crocodile (Colombia, Venezuela)Mountain Gorilla (Rwanda, Uganda, Democratic Republic of Congo)Golden Mantella (Madagascar)Eastern Red Colobus (Kenya)Javan Rhinoceros (Indonesia, Vietnam)Endangered AnimalsBonobo (Democratic Republic of Congo)Bornean Orangutan (Indonesia, Malaysia)Common Chimpanzee (Eastern and Central Africa)Golden Poison Frog (Colombia)Hyacinth Macaw (South America)Great Green Macaw (Central America)Maned Three-toed Sloth (Brazil)Diana Monkey (West Africa)Indian Wild Dog (Dhole) (South Asia)Aye-Aye (Madagascar)Indian Elephant (India and South East Asia)Golden Lion Tamarin (Brazil)Red Slender Loris (Sri Lanka)Proboscis Monkey (Indonesia)Javan Langur (Indonesia)Diademed Sifaka (Madagascar)Mahogany Glider (Australia)Giant Otter (South America)Bengal Tiger (South East Asia)Mountain Tapir and Baird's Tapir (South America)Vulnerable AnimalsBlue Poison Frog (Suriname)Giant Armadillo (South America) Jaguar (Central and South America)
No species has ever been threatened to extinction due to regulated hunting. In fact, it was hunters who demanded the establishment of our wildlife resource agencies and demanded they set seasons and bag limits. When you see a thriving population of deer, bear, and many other species- thank a hunter. They brought them back from the era of over exploitation, and keep their populations in balance with the animals available habitat.