Mayo Kébbi (river)
Mayo Kebbi Mao Kebi |
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Catchment area of the Benue |
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Data | ||
location |
Chad Cameroon |
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River system | Niger | |
Drain over | Benue → Niger → Atlantic Ocean | |
muzzle | In the Benue coordinates: 9 ° 19 ′ 3 ″ N , 13 ° 32 ′ 3 ″ E 9 ° 19 ′ 3 ″ N , 13 ° 32 ′ 3 ″ E
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length | 495 km | |
Catchment area | over 30,000 km² | |
Discharge at the gauge Cossi A Eo : 25,000 km² Location: 80 km above the mouth |
NNQ (min. Month Ø) MNQ 1954–1980 MQ 1954–1980 Mq 1954–1980 MHQ 1954–1980 HHQ (max. Month Ø) |
0 l / s 1.5 m³ / s 97 m³ / s 3.9 l / (s km²) 353 m³ / s 589 m³ / s |
Left tributaries | Mayo Louti , Mayo Oulu | |
Flowing lakes | Léré lake ; Trene Lake , Tikem Lake , N'gara Lake | |
Medium-sized cities | Léré , Fianga | |
The Logone in the east, the former outflow of the Mega Lake Chad with Lake Fianga in the middle and the Mayo Kebi flowing from east to west (below) (a narrow river bed in the east until it joins the former outflow directly after the Fianga) ) |
The Mayo Kébbi (also Mao Kebi or Kabia) is a river in Chad and Cameroon .
course
Its sources are on the border of Chad with Cameroon, on the northeastern flanks of the Adamaua highlands . On the upper reaches, the Mayo Kébbi flows through the Tikem and N'gara lakes and is connected to the Logone via the Fianga lake . The Mayo Kébbi receives a substantial proportion of its water masses from the Logone over a large flood plain. The river has a sharp separation of the upper and lower reaches, this is created by a series of rapids and two larger waterfalls, which overcome a total difference in height of 110 meters and are collectively called the Gauthiot waterfalls . The Kebi flows into the Benue about 14 km east of the town of Garoua in a wide delta .
The provinces of Mayo-Kebbi Ouest and Mayo-Kebbi Est in Chad, which it flows through, are named after him.
Hydrometry
The flow rate of the river was measured at the Cossi station in m³ / s
Mega Chad
The connection between Logone and Mayo Kébbi via the flood plain corresponds to the discharge from the historic mega-Lake Chad in its maximum extent more than 5000 years ago. Thus, the Mayo Kébbi establishes a connection to the now endorheic Chad Basin , which increased the Niger catchment system by 2.434 million km². This connection is probably the cause of the occurrence of African manatees in the tributaries of Lake Chad, which is cut off from the sea.
Protected areas
The flood plain of the Longone was placed by Chad under the title Plaines d'inondation du Logone et les dépressions Toupouri under the protection of the Ramsar Convention .
The lower reaches of the Mayo Kébbi watered the Trene Lake and léré lake that is part of the game reserve Binder Léré are and where a population of the rare African manatee lives.
Web links
- Country information Chad on Ramsar Wetland ( Memento from September 24, 2012 in the Internet Archive ) (English) 172 kb PDF
- Uni-Frankfurt: German Colonial Lexicon (1920) on Mayo Kébbi
- Lake Chad Diagnostic Basin (PDF)
Individual evidence
- ↑ a b c PDF on the hydrology of Cameroon (French) Accessed August 24, 2018
- ↑ Leblanc et al. 2006 Reconstruction of megalake Chad using shuttle radar topographic mission data. Palaeogeography, palaeoclimatology, palaeoecology 239, pp. 16-27 ISSN 0031-0182 ISSN 1872-616X
- ^ The Annotated Ramsar List: Chad. In: archive.ramsar.org. January 14, 2002, accessed August 26, 2018 .