Classroom lesson · Wildlife · 🇬🇼 Guinea-Bissau

Cufada Lagoons

A waterbird paradise in Guinea-Bissau

Photo · Wikimedia Commons

What is it?

The Cufada Lagoons Natural Park sits in central Guinea-Bissau and contains a system of large, shallow lakes surrounded by forest and grassland. These lagoons are a resting and feeding place for enormous numbers of waterbirds, some of which travel thousands of kilometres to be here.

Tell me more

Lagoons are shallow stretches of water separated from the open sea by strips of land. The Cufada lagoons were formed where rivers flooded wide, flat areas over many thousands of years. Because the water is calm and full of fish and water plants, they attract huge flocks of birds — herons, egrets, pelicans, and many more.

Every year, birds from Europe and Asia fly south for the winter. The Cufada lagoons are a vital stopping point on this long journey, offering food and rest to exhausted travellers. Some birds stay all winter; others just refuel and continue south. The sight of thousands of birds arriving at dusk is spectacular.

Around the lagoons, local fishermen launch their canoes early each morning to catch the plentiful fish. Fish are an important part of the diet in Guinea-Bissau, and the lagoons have provided food for communities here for as long as anyone can remember. The challenge is to keep the fishing sustainable so the fish and the birds both thrive.

The park is also home to waterbuck, warthogs, and green monkeys on the dry land around the water. At night, you can sometimes hear hippos calling from the deeper parts of the lagoons.

In the classroom

Walk your class through this in 15 minutes.

Talk together

Discussion prompts

  1. 01Birds migrate thousands of kilometres — why do you think they do this instead of staying in one place all year?
  2. 02The lagoons are important for both fishermen and wildlife. How might a community decide how many fish to catch to keep things balanced?
  3. 03If you were a bird arriving at Cufada after a very long flight, what would be the first thing you would do?
  4. 04What sounds do you think you might hear if you sat quietly beside a lagoon at sunrise?
Try this

Classroom activity

Give children a migration map outline showing Europe, Africa, and Asia. Ask them to draw arrows for three imaginary birds, choosing a starting point in Europe or Asia and tracing a route south to Guinea-Bissau. Ask: How far is that journey? How long might it take a bird flying 300 km per day?