Lake Manyara National Park is a Tanzanian national park
located both in Arusha Region and Manyara
Region, Tanzania. The two administrative
regions have no jurisdiction over the parks. The park is governed by the
Tanzania National Parks Authority. The majority of the land area of the park is
a narrow strip running between the Gregory Rift wall to the west and Lake
Manyara, an alkaline or soda-lake, to the east.
The park consists of 330 km2 of arid land, forest, and a soda-lake which covers as much as 200 km2 of land during the wet season but is nearly nonexistent during the dry season Lake Manyara National Park is known for the flamingos that inhabit the lake. During the wet season they inhabit the edges of the lake in flocks of thousands but they are not so present during the dry season.
Leopards, lions, cheetahs, elephants,
blue monkeys, dik-dik, gazelle, hippo,
giraffe, impala, and more inhabit the park
and many can be seen throughout the year. There is a hippo pond at one end of
the park where visitors can get out of their cars and observe from a safe
distance. The leopards and lions are both known to lounge in the trees while
not hunting for prey

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