Stations

Turkana

Research on Africa's Jade Sea

Overview

About Turkana

The Lake Turkana Research Station operates in one of Africa's most extreme and scientifically significant environments — the world's largest permanent desert lake and a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Established in 1984, the station monitors the lake's unique alkaline ecology, tracks fish population dynamics, and studies the impact of climate variability and upstream water abstractions on this critical but fragile ecosystem. Lake Turkana supports one of Kenya's most isolated fishing communities, and KMFRI's research underpins management decisions for the Nile perch and tilapia fisheries that are central to Turkana County's food security.

At a Glance

Established 1984
Ecosystem Freshwater (Lake Turkana)
Address P.O. Box 10–30500
Kalokol, Turkana County, Kenya
Coordinates 3°33′N, 35°55′E
Research

Research Focus Areas

Desert Lake Ecology

Monitoring alkalinity, salinity, stratification, and primary productivity in Lake Turkana's unique physicochemical environment.

Nile Perch & Tilapia Assessment

Population surveys, growth studies, and yield modelling for the commercially important Nile perch and Nile tilapia fisheries of Lake Turkana.

Climate Change Impacts

Long-term monitoring of lake level fluctuations, temperature trends, and effects of upstream Omo River dams and irrigation abstractions.

Socio-economic Fisheries

Household surveys and value-chain analysis for Turkana fishing communities, including post-harvest losses and market access studies.

Infrastructure

Infrastructure & Facilities

  • Field research laboratory
  • Research vessels
  • Limnological sampling equipment
  • Sample preservation and cold-storage units
  • Meteorological monitoring station