Sukhyi Estuary

46°20′N 30°38′E / 46.333°N 30.633°E / 46.333; 30.633River sourcesDalnyk River, Akkarzhanka RiverOcean/sea sourcesAtlantic OceanBasin countriesUkraineMax. length7.2 km (4.5 mi)Max. width1.5 km (0.93 mi)Surface area5.7 km2 (2.2 sq mi)Average depth7.3 m (24 ft)Max. depth14 m (46 ft)Salinity10-18 ‰SettlementsOdesa, Chornomorsk

Sukhyi Estuary, or Sukhyi Lyman (Ukrainian: Сухий лиман - dried estuary), is on open estuary in the north-western Black Sea, near the cities of Odesa and Chornomorsk, Ukraine. In 1957 the estuary was connected to the sea via 14-m depth navigation canal, therefore the water body de facto transformed to the marine bay. Upper site of the estuary is more shallow, up to 1.5 m depth. Northern and western parts are separated by artificial dam and transformed to fresh water ponds. The Dalnyk River inflows to the estuary.

The modern name, "Dry Estuary", the water body have got in the time when it was isolated from the Black Sea. That time the estuary dried regularly, sometime up to 1 km² area. The earlier name is Kleinliebenthal Estuary, origine from the German: Kleinliebenthal, "Small valley of love". The name of the water body is given by German colonists. The upper part of the estuary is located in two valleys:

  • Kleinliebenthal, "Small valley of love". The main part of the estuary is located in this valley. The Dalnyk River inflows in this part. On the coast is a village Malodolynske (old name is Kleinliebenthal).
  • Großliebenthal, "Grand valley of love". In this valley is a bay, the Akkarzhanka River inflows in which. On the coast is a village Velykodolynske (old name is Großliebenthal).

The estuary is a place of spawning and feeding of fish, such as flounder, gobies (the grass goby is most numerous), sand-smelts, mullets.

References

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Sukhyi Estuary.
  • Starushenko L.I., Bushuyev S.G. (2001) Prichernomorskiye limany Odeschiny i ih rybohoziaystvennoye znacheniye. Astroprint, Odesa, 151 pp. (in Russian)
  • North-western Black Sea: biology and ecology, Eds.: Y.P. Zaitsev, B.G. Aleksandrov, G.G. Minicheva, Naukova Dumka, Kyiv, 2006, 701 pp.
  • Crassing though the estuary
    Crassing though the estuary
  • On the coast
    On the coast
  • Sunset on the Sukhyi Estuary
    Sunset on the Sukhyi Estuary

See also