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Home » Blog » DR Congo’s fish that climb waterfalls
Regional News

DR Congo’s fish that climb waterfalls

Our Reporter
Last updated: April 26, 2026 6:11 am
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Sangala Village — Stories of fish that allegedly climb steep riverbanks in Sangala Village, located near the Luvilombo Falls in the Democratic Republic of the Congo, have resurfaced online, blending local folklore with growing scientific interest in unusual fish behaviour across Africa.

The accounts, passed down through generations in the community, describe small freshwater fish that appear to move against strong currents and scale wet rock surfaces during seasonal floods. To many residents, the phenomenon is part of long-held oral tradition tied to nearby waterways.

In one recent scientific discussion from Central Africa, researchers documented a similar behaviour among tiny freshwater fish capable of ascending waterfall rock faces using specialised fin structures and gripping mechanisms. Studies published in April 2026 confirmed that certain species in the Congo Basin can climb vertical rock surfaces during migration periods, a discovery that challenged long-held assumptions about fish movement.

While Sangala’s version remains unverified by formal scientific observation, researchers note that such stories are not unusual in regions with complex river systems. Across Africa, fish species such as the climbing perch and other amphibious varieties have demonstrated the ability to survive out of water for short periods or move across wet surfaces under specific conditions.

Local elders in Sangala say the tale has been told for decades, often used to explain seasonal changes in river behaviour or the movement of fish during floods. Younger residents, however, have taken to social media to compare the story with newly documented “waterfall-climbing fish” discovered in scientific field studies elsewhere on the continent.

A recent report on freshwater ecosystems in Central Africa described how fish migration and adaptation can produce surprising behaviours, especially in environments with strong seasonal flooding and rocky river formations.

Scientists caution that while such adaptations are real in some species, each claim must be independently verified before being accepted as fact. They say many African river systems remain under-researched, leaving room for both genuine discoveries and the persistence of folklore.

For now, the “climbing fish of Sangala” remains a mix of oral tradition and scientific curiosity—highlighting how local knowledge and modern research continue to intersect in understanding Africa’s rich aquatic biodiversity.

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