Lake Enriquillo covers an area of 145 mi2, and is the lowest point for an island country, falling below sea level. Its drainage basin includes 10 minor river systems. The rivers that rise in the Neiba Mountains to the north are perennial. Those rivers that rise in the Baoruco Mountains to the south are intermittent. Lake Enriquillo has no outlet. The lake's water level varies because of a combination of storm-driven precipitation events and the region's high evaporation rate. Salinity in the lake can vary between 33 parts per thousand and over 100 parts per thousand. The region has a hot, semiarid climate. Annual rainfall is not evenly distributed, with peak precipitation occurring in May and October. The dry season is December through April when rainfall may be less than. Due to the length of the lake, annual rainfall averages also vary at the eastern and western ends: on the northwest shore, and in the southeast.
Flooding trend
Between 2004 and 2009, the lake doubled its surface area. Records for 2004 show the lake to be ; measurements from 2011 put the area at. Reasons for the flooding are being debated, but may be a combination of several, including increases in rainfall in the region in recent years, increase of sediments going into the lake from run-off due to deforestation that are contributing to raising the lakebed, and milder temperatures, which are reducing the surface evaporation rate.
Geography
The lake lies in a valley that stretches from near Port-au-Prince in Haiti to Bahia de Neiba in the Dominican Republic. The valley is known as the Hoya de Enriquillo in the Dominican Republic and as the Plain du Cul-de-Sac in Haiti. Parts of the depression are below sea level and are covered by large salt lakes, including Lake Enriquillo and the Etang Saumâtre. There are three islands in the lake: Barbarita, Islita, and Isla Cabritos. Once, when water levels dropped during dry spells, the islands were linked to one another by sandbars. As of December 2011, only Isla Cabritos remains; the other two islands are submerged by the rising level of the lake.
Geology
Lake Enriquillo is located within a linear depression that formed as a ramp basin between the Haiti fold and thrust belt to the north and the uplifted oceanic crust of the Massif de la Selle-Sierra de Bahoruco to the south. The Enriquillo-Plantain Garden fault is a later strike-slip fault, cutting across the depression, which extends from Jamaica in the west, to near Neiba in the Dominican Republic in the east. The valley, a former marine strait, was created around one million years ago when the water level fell and the strait was filled in by sediments of the Yaque del Sur River. Tremors in the region are common.
Ecology
Lake Enriquillo is home to the largest population of American crocodiles in the Caribbean. Three species of fish inhabit the lake: the blackbanded limia, the Hispaniolan gambusia, and the Hispaniola pupfish. Two rare iguanas endemic to Hispaniola live sympatrically on Isla Cabritos, the critically endangeredRicord's iguana and the threatened rhinoceros iguana. Among the numerous bird species found at the lake, American flamingos are prominent; flocks of flamingos are especially concentrated on Isla Cabritos and near the eastern end of the lake. Plants that thrive in arid places, such as cacti, can be found here. A national park was established in 1974 to preserve the area; in 2002 it was combined with two other parks to form the Jaragua-Bahoruco-Enriquillo Biosphere Reserve.
History
The lake is named after Enriquillo, a cacique of the indigenous Taíno, who rebelled against the Spaniards in the early 16th century, and hid in the mountains south of the lake. It was previously called Lake Xaragua, after the Taino chiefdom in which it was located.
Economy
Land near Lake Enriquillo has long been used for agriculture, such as banana, sweet potato and yuca farms, and pasture for cattle. The rising water levels have affected hundreds of nearby residents in townships bordering the lake, with abundant loss of agricultural land. Important towns near the shores of Enriquillo include Neiba, the capital of Baoruco Province, on the northeast, and Jimaní, the capital of Independencia Province, at the western end of the lake near the border with Haiti. La Descubierta is the town nearest to the entrance of Lago Enriquillo e Isla Cabritos National Park. The community of Boca de Cachon, near the lake and severely affected by the rising waters, has been the subject of government relocation efforts including the construction of a new town further from the shores of Enriquillo.