Oba River

Oba River

Course of the Oba River
Country Nigeria
Basin
Main source 8°18′51″N 4°13′14″E / 8.314248°N 4.220588°E / 8.314248; 4.220588 (Primary source of Oba River)
River mouth 7°28′26″N 4°08′44″E / 7.473872°N 4.145651°E / 7.473872; 4.145651 (Mouth of Oba River)Coordinates: 7°28′26″N 4°08′44″E / 7.473872°N 4.145651°E / 7.473872; 4.145651 (Mouth of Oba River)
River system Osun River

The Oba River (Yoruba: Odo Ọba) is a river in Oyo and Osun States in Nigeria. It is the main tributary of the Osun River. The landscape varies from wooded savanna in the north to rain forest in the south. The river is heavily polluted. Most of the people who live along its length practice farming and fishing.

Name

The Ọba River is named for the goddess Ọba, one of the wives of Shango, the Yoruba god of thunder. His other wives were Ọshun and Ọya.[1] According to legend Ọshun tricked Ọba into cutting off her ear and adding it to Shango's food, saying it would please him. When Shango found what Ọba had done he, furious, scramed and Osun and Oba fled frightened, turning in the two rivers. That is why because the meeting point of the rivers Osun and Oba is so rushing.[1]

Course

The Oba River is the main tributary of the Osun River. It rises about 15 kilometres (9 mi) north of Ogbomosho in Oyo State.[2] The river flows past Ogbomosho, where it is dammed.[3] The Ogbomoso Reservoir on the Oba River was completed in 1964, covers an area of 137.6 hectares (340 acres) and has a storage capacity of 3,520 megalitres (124×10^6 cu ft).[4] The dam is fed by the Idekun, Eeguno, Akanbi Kemolowo, Omoogun and Yakun streams, and has a catchment area of 321 square kilometres (124 sq mi).[5]

The Oba continues south from the dam until it joins the Oshun River just above the settlement of Odo Oba. Settlements along its course from north to south include Apo, Iluju, Obada, Mosunmade, Otuokun, Bale, Olori and Olumoye. The river receives a left tributary just downstream from Obada and another left tributary to the south of Olori. The second tributary flows past Ife Odan.[6] The Ọba River joins the Ọshun River in a series of rapids.[1] The two rivers meet at the northern end of the Asejire Reservoir.[6]

Environment

The climate in the upper part of the river around Ogbomoso has consistently high temperatures, with moderate to heavy rainful in March–July. Annual rainful averages 1,247 millimetres (49.1 in). The vegetation is derived savanna, between the northern savanna zone and the Ibadan region rain forests.[7] A study published in 2014 found that the fish in the Ogbomoso Reservoir were infected with parasites that could cause a risk to human consumers.[8] The Oba River is heavily polluted, at class V on the Prati scale. There is little or no dissolved oxygen in the water.[9] Sources of pollution include sewage and domestic and market waste, and includes much inert matter that is not readily biodegradable.[10]

Economy

The people along the whole length of the Oba River are mostly engaged in farming and fishing.[11] In 1977 the land use around the Ogbomoso Reservoir was 71.9% forest, 4.9% arable and 23.2% fallow. By 1992 land use was 23.5% forest, 60.5% arable and 16.0% fallow. The main crops were maize and vegetables, particularly okra. Farmers were making heavy use of nitrogenous fertiliser.[12] In 2014 farm workers from northern Nigeria had started to practice irrigation farming in the Oba River basin at Ikose, Ogbomoso North Local Government and Iluju, Ikoyi-Ile, Orire Local Government in Oyo State. They were using pumps to take water from the Oba River, often piping it a kilometre or more to their farmland.[3] Crops include vegetables, okra, maize, garden eggs and water melon. The farmers were finding a ready market with buyers from Osun, Ondo and Oyo states. Irrigation farming is unusual in the region since rainfall is fairly plentiful, but is common in the northern states where the farmers originate.[3]

References

Citations

Sources

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 10/19/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.