The ancient Lenca settlers who established themselves on its shores named it with a word that says it all: Olomega, from 'olom' (eel) and 'mega' (water reservoir), 'the lagoon of the eels'. That name, which survived the conquest, the colony and the Republic, holds the age-old relationship between a people and their water. Laguna de Olomega is the largest freshwater body in eastern El Salvador: about 24 km² of water surface and wetlands spread across the departments of San Miguel and La Unión, on the warm eastern plain of the country.
It's a wetland of natural origin, fed and drained by the Grande de San Miguel River, which in the rainy season provides the water that keeps it alive. Its shallow waters, its islands and its abundant aquatic vegetation make it an ecosystem of enormous value. Since pre-Hispanic times, the communities harnessed the resources of the wetland —fishing, birds, aquatic plants— which offered abundant sustenance in an area of warm climate.
As a wetland, the lagoon performs crucial ecological functions: it controls floods, purifies the water and recharges the aquifers from which, through wells, about 9,000 inhabitants of the area drink. Its character as the great lagoon of the east sets it apart within a Salvadoran geography better known for its volcanoes, its coasts and its crater lagoons than for its lowland wetlands.
Life around Laguna de Olomega has always revolved around the water. On the shores of the lagoon, the town of Olomega developed, a lakeside community dedicated mainly to artisanal fishing, which has been for generations the livelihood of its families. The fishermen work with nets and cast nets and bring to shore the freshwater fish that is sold and consumed locally.
After the Spanish colonization, the eastern region was integrated into the colonial territory and, later, into the Republic of El Salvador. During the 20th century, the Olomega area gained relevance as a stop on the railroad that ran through the country's east, which connected the town with other localities and, for a time, energized its economy. The mark of that railroad past is still part of the local memory.
The relationship of the communities with the lagoon has also been one of adaptation to its cycles: the waters rise and fall according to the rains and the season, and lakeside life adjusts to those rhythms. This close connection between the people and the wetland defines Olomega's identity as a fishing town of the Salvadoran east.
Laguna de Olomega is valued today above all for its biodiversity, especially for its birdlife. The wetland hosts a rich variety of resident aquatic birds —herons, egrets, coots, ducks, jacanas and kingfishers, among others— and receives in the dry months migratory birds that come to spend the boreal winter, which makes the lagoon a point of interest for birdwatching and conservation.
Like many wetlands, Olomega faces environmental challenges: sedimentation, pressure on its fishing resources, pollution and variations in the level of its waters. These challenges have motivated conservation and wetland management initiatives, aimed at protecting its biodiversity and sustaining the life of the communities that depend on the lagoon.
In recent decades, alongside traditional fishing, an incipient nature tourism has begun to develop: boat rides, birdwatching and contact with lakeside life. Olomega is thus projected as a quiet and authentic destination within the Salvadoran east, which offers the visitor a different face of the country —that of fresh water, wetlands and lake life— and invites you to tour it with respect for its fragile environment and for the communities that inhabit it.
International recognition came on February 2, 2010, when Laguna de Olomega was declared a Wetland of International Importance under the Ramsar Convention and listed with number 1899, becoming El Salvador's third Ramsar site. The designation covers not only the water surface, but also the wetlands, gallery forests and lowlands of its surroundings, and recognizes its role as a habitat for resident and migratory aquatic birds. According to the inventories associated with the convention, about 127 species of fauna and a hundred species of flora have been recorded at the site.
Like much of the Central American wetlands, Olomega faces serious pressures: sedimentation that reduces its depth, the expansion of the water hyacinth (the invasive aquatic plant that can cover large areas), the deforestation of its watershed, pollution from wastewater and agrochemicals, livestock farming and overfishing. These processes threaten both the biodiversity and the livelihood of the fishing families.
Faced with these challenges, the Ministry of the Environment and Natural Resources (MARN), non-governmental organizations and the communities themselves have driven sustainable management and restoration initiatives: cleaning the lagoon, controlling the invasive vegetation, regulating the fishing and environmental education. The conservation of Olomega is today a shared task between nature, the state and the people who live off its waters.
Much of the relevance Olomega had in the 20th century is explained by the railroad. From 1895, the eastern line began to be built from the port of La Unión toward San Miguel, and with the arrival of the International Railways of Central America (IRCA) around 1912, the sections that connected the port of Cutuco, San Miguel and, by 1920, the capital, San Salvador, were put into operation. The San Miguel station opened in 1922, with branches toward La Unión and toward the capital.
That eastern railroad crossed the departments of La Unión, San Miguel, Usulután, La Paz and San Vicente over about 200 kilometers, in a daily journey that could last twelve hours. The Olomega region, on the corridor that linked San Miguel with the eastern coast, was tied to that route, and the passage of the train energized, for a time, the economy and the movement of people and cargo in the east. For the lakeside communities, used to moving by boat on the lagoon, the train was a window to other regions of the country.
Over the decades, the Salvadoran railroad entered a long decline: the competition from road transport, the lack of investment and the conflicts of the 20th century gradually shut down the locomotives until the passenger service was practically abandoned. From those 'iron years' survives, in the east, the memory of a time when the train's whistle set the rhythm of the towns, Olomega among them, before the lagoon returned, as always, to the hands of its fishermen.