Lake Chad is a large shallow lake, lying at the center of a large
closed drainage basin, with no outlet to the sea. The
Lake Chad basin has an area of . The northern portion of the basin is arid or semi-arid, and the southern portion has a seasonally-dry savanna climate. The flooded savannas surround the lake. The
Chari and
Logone rivers, which drain northwards from the highlands along the basin's southern edge, supply 95% of Lake Chad's freshwater. The
Yobe River, which flows eastwards into the lake's northern end, contributes 2.5% of the lake's inflow. Despite having no outlet, Lake Chad has relatively low salinity. The saltier waters sink to the bottom of the lake, and drain northwards via underground conduits. The southern portion of the lake, which receives far more river inflow, is generally less salty than the northern portion. The ecoregion also includes the
Hadejia-Nguru wetlands in northern Nigeria. These seasonal wetlands form at the confluence of the
Hadejia and the
Jama'are rivers, part of the Yobe River system lying west of the lake. These wetlands expand to 6,000 km2 during the rivers' late-August peak, with a water surface area of 2,000 km2. The Lake Chad portion of the ecoregion is surrounded by the
Sahelian Acacia savanna ecoregion, a belt of dry savanna which runs east and west across Africa south of the
Sahara Desert. The Hadejia-Nguru wetlands are bounded by the
West Sudanian savanna ecoregion. ==Climate==