Due to drainage of the waters for agriculture and dairy farming, the lake levels have dropped drastically in recent years and many flora and fauna species have disappeared.
Etymology
In the Chibcha language of the Muisca, Fúquene means "Place of swamps covered with fog", "Bed of the fox" or "Holy People", referring to the religious rituals of the Muisca. Muisca means "people" in Chibcha.[2][5][6][7]
History
Lake Fúquene, the lake in the Ubaté-Chiquinquirá Valley, one of the four major valleys of the Altiplano Cundiboyacense, was an important ritual lake in the culture of the Muisca. It formed the connection between the territories of the zipa in the south and zaque in the north and merchants between the two parts of the Muisca Confederation would pass the lake.
Since 1934 about 70% of the lake surface has shrunk, from 100 square kilometres (1.1×109 sq ft) to 30 square kilometres (320,000,000 sq ft).[9] In this time, the lake level has dropped by 1 metre (3.3 ft).[9]
In 2014, around 207,000 inhabitants of the area lived around the lake.[11] Fifty dairy farming industries exist around it, with the most important in Ubaté, Chiquinquirá and Simijaca.[11][15]
Cabrera Ortiz, Wenceslao (1957), "La laguna de Fúquene - Lake Fúquene"(PDF), Boletín de la Sociedad Geográfica de Colombia (in Spanish), XV (53): 1–20, retrieved 2016-07-08
Ocampo López, Javier (2013), Mitos y leyendas indígenas de Colombia - Indigenous myths and legends of Colombia (in Spanish), Bogotá, Colombia: Plaza & Janes Editores Colombia S.A., pp. 1–219, ISBN978-958-14-1416-1
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Lake Fúquene.