The fish of Dubai’s desert lakes

mattybecks

Aimara
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Al Qudra lakes. Situated in the Seih Al Salam desert in Dubai. It was created as part of a project to green and enrich part of the desert of Dubai. It is one of at least six other huge freshwater bodies located in Dubai.

Some general info about the area.

- About 40 hectares of desert shrubs surround the 10km of lakes.
- What has been identified thus far in the area: 26 species of reptile, 9 of mammals, 39 of plants, 204 native bird species, 158 species of migratory birds.

Testing the water – (17th May 2019, 5 30pm). Three water tests done to make sure results we as accurate as can be.

- 31.5 degrees Celsius
- NO2: 0ppm. NO3: 0ppm
- PH 6.8
- GH >21 (375ppm) (the tests couldn’t read higher than this, seemed maxed out)
- KH 3

I have been visiting this area for the last couple of years, and as I have mentioned in a previous thread there was a wide variety of fish living in these lakes. In the winter times there used to be a greater abundance of species (I suspect it could be people releasing their no longer wanted aquarium pets) including Koi, gold fish and Central/South American cichlids and of course a lot of hybrids.

However, it seems that over the last year or so the fish population has “stabilized” with the authority’s tighter control over what people do in the area. The pics and videos you will see below are the current fish stocks taken from different points all around the lakes. It seems there are only a few species now that are living and thriving there. I am no expert when it comes to identifying fish, I was hoping someone could help identify them.

All appear to be cichlids; I suspect a type of African cichlid? There are a lot of fry in all areas of the lake, but they are lighter in colour and not always easy to see and photograph. The darker cichlids are all about 16 – 17cm in Length, none much bigger than this size. You will notice in the videos that these guys like to dig holes and guard them quite fiercely from other fish that get to close.

Any type of fishing in prohibited in these lakes, so I couldn’t net any to give you guys a proper view. I’m hoping to get hold of equipment that would allow me to film underwater. My phone in a zip-lock bag didn’t seem to do the trick sadly.






https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vUjVpsTEfgw&feature=youtu.be

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TdM0V8xliGU&feature=youtu.be
20160730-180732-largejpg.jpg47272114_2206290866360918_4666061173213834421_n.jpg49148392_347906736007837_3760739395204808704_n.jpg56393280_1261658987335742_2775445478479629372_n.jpgIMG_20190517_180820.jpgIMG_20190517_182151.jpg
 

Fat Homer

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Interesting... i always wondered what they would do with those man made lakes in areas like that...
 

mattybecks

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Interesting... i always wondered what they would do with those man made lakes in areas like that...
I knew someone a few years back whos husbands job here was specifically caring for and stocking "ponds/lakes" with fish to keep them healthy (insect and algae control). I am not referring to large ones as mentioned above, but the smaller ones like in parks, and there are a lot in various
Very interesting indeed. The fish do appear to be some type of African Cichlids. Thank you for sharing.
Thanks. I am hoping to get better footage over the next couple weeks so we can have a look at identifying them properly. If they aren't too genetically mixed already.
 

mattybecks

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Really cool, and you have to give local authorities credit for trying to liquify/greenify the area, would be awesome to see the whole ecosystem they're creating thrive more and more over the years -- give it a (clean) chance and nature will usually find a way to flourish.
It really is. Sheikh Mohammed Bin Rashid Al Maktoum seems to be quite committed to creating a green and sustainable environment here. Rainfall patterns have changed here too. We are getting a lot more rain, more often. Just last night there was thunder rumbling, lightening flashing and warm rains. Which is not usual for the summer, but welcomed!
 

mattybecks

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Really cool, and you have to give local authorities credit for trying to liquify/greenify the area, would be awesome to see the whole ecosystem they're creating thrive more and more over the years -- give it a (clean) chance and nature will usually find a way to flourish.
Forgot to mention, there are also new salmon farms in the desert opening here. Not usual for cold water, ocean fish to be grow in a desert haha. Reminds me of the movie "salmon fishing in the Yemen". Im trying to see if I could visit one of them.
https://www.thenational.ae/business...omes-reality-for-dubai-based-company-1.842287
 

mattybecks

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Forgot to mention the cichlids in these lakes actively sift through the sand. Not sure if that would help in possibly identifying them.
 
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