Tocantins River

Last updated
Tocantins River
Pyti (Parkatêjê) [1] :59
Flavio Andre PonteFernandoHenriqueCardoso Palmas TO.jpg
Tocantins River and Fernando Henrique Cardoso bridge
Tocantins watershed.png
Map of the Araguaia/Tocantins Watershed
Native nameRio Tocantins (Portuguese)
Location
Country Brazil
Physical characteristics
Source Serra da Mesa Reservoir
  location Minaçu, Goiás
  coordinates 13°50′03″S48°18′16″W / 13.83417°S 48.30444°W / -13.83417; -48.30444
  elevation443 m (1,453 ft)
Mouth Marajó Bay
  location
Igarapé-Miri, Pará
  coordinates
1°45′S49°10′W / 1.750°S 49.167°W / -1.750; -49.167
  elevation
0 m (0 ft)
Length2,640 km (1,640 mi)
Basin size764,183 km2 (295,053 sq mi)
Discharge 
  locationmouth
  average11,796 m3/s (416,600 cu ft/s)
Basin features
River system Tocantins basin
Tributaries 
  left Paranã, Sono River
  right Araguaia River, Itacaiúnas River

The Tocantins River (Portuguese: Rio TocantinsPortuguese pronunciation: [ˈʁi.utokɐ̃ˈtʃĩs,tu-] , Parkatêjê: Pyti [pɨˈti]) [1] :59 is a river in Brazil, the central fluvial artery of the country. In the Tupi language, its name means "toucan's beak" (Tukã for "toucan" and Ti for "beak"). It runs from south to north for about 2,450 km (1,520 mi). While sometimes included in definitions of the Amazon basin, the Tocantins is not a branch of the Amazon River, since its waters flow into the Atlantic Ocean via an eastern channel of the Amazon Delta, alongside those of the Amazon proper. It flows through four Brazilian states (Goiás, Tocantins, Maranhão, and Pará) and gives its name to one of Brazil's newest states, formed in 1988 from what was until then the northern portion of Goiás.

Contents

The Tocantins is one of the largest clearwater rivers in South America. [2]

Course

It rises in the mountainous district known as the Pireneus, west of the Federal District, but its western tributary, the Araguaia River, has its extreme southern headwaters on the slopes of the Serra dos Caiapós. The Araguaia flows 1,670 km (1,040 mi) before its confluence with the Tocantins, to which it is almost equal in volume. Besides its main tributary, the Rio das Mortes, the Araguaia has twenty smaller branches, offering many miles of canoe navigation. In finding its way to the lowlands, it breaks frequently into waterfalls and rapids, or winds violently through rocky gorges, until, at a point about 160 km (99 mi) above its junction with the Tocantins, it saws its way across a rocky dyke for 20 km (12 mi) in roaring cataracts.[ citation needed ]

Boats on the Tocantins Rio Tocantins e embarcacoes.JPG
Boats on the Tocantins

Two other tributaries, called the Maranhão and Paranatinga, collect an immense volume of water from the highlands which surround them, especially on the south and south-east. Between the latter and the confluence with the Araguaia, the Tocantins is occasionally obstructed by rocky barriers which cross it almost at a right angle.[ citation needed ]

Fauna

The Tocantins basin (which includes the Araguaia River) is the home of several large aquatic mammals such as Amazonian manatee, Araguaian river dolphin and tucuxi, and larger reptiles such as black caiman, spectacled caiman and yellow-spotted river turtle. [3]

The Tocantins River Basin has a high richness of fish species, although it is relatively low by Amazon basin standards. [3] More than 350 fish species have been registered, including more than 175 endemics. [4] The most species rich families are Characidae (tetras and allies), Loricariidae (pleco catfish and allies) and Rivulidae (South American killifish). [4] While most species essentially are of Amazonian origin, there are also some showing a connection with the Paraná and São Francisco rivers. The Tocantins and these two rivers flow in different directions, but all have their source in the Brazilian Plateau in a region where a low watershed allows some exchange between them. [5] There are several fish species that migrate along the Tocantins to spawn, but this has been restricted by the dams. [3] [4] Following the construction of the massive Tucuruí Dam, the flow of the river changed. Some species have been adversely affected and there has been a substantial reduction in species richness in parts of the river. [3] [6]

The São Domingos karst in the upper Tocantins basin is home to an unusually high number of cavefish species (more than any other region in the Americas): Ancistrus cryptophthalmus , several Ituglanis species, Pimelodella spelaea, Aspidoras mephisto , an undescribed Cetopsorhamdia species and Eigenmannia vicentespelaea . [7] [8] The last is the only known cave-adapted knifefish and one of only two known non-catfish in caves of the South American mainland (the other is the characid Stygichthys typhlops ). [7]

In its lower reaches, the Tocantins separates the Tocantins–Araguaia–Maranhão moist forests ecoregion to the east from the Xingu–Tocantins–Araguaia moist forests ecoregion to the west. It acts as a barrier that prevents dispersal of flora and fauna between these ecoregions. [9]

Dams

Downstream from the Araguaia confluence, in the state of Pará, the river used to have many cataracts and rapids, but they were flooded in the early 1980s by the artificial lake created by the Tucuruí Dam, one of the world's largest. [3] When the second phase of the Tucuruí project was completed on November 30, 2010, a system of locks called Eclusas do Tucuruí was established with the goal of making a long extension of the river navigable.[ citation needed ]

In total there are seven dams on the river (Serra da Mesa dam, Cana Brava dam, São Salvador dam, Peixe Angical dam, Luiz Eduardo Magalhães (Lajeado) dam, Estreito dam, and Tucuruí dam), of which the largest are the Tucuruí and the Serra da Mesa dam. [3]

Geology

The flat, broad valleys, composed of sand and clay, of both the Tocantins and its Araguaia branch are overlooked by steep bluffs. They are the margins of the great sandstone plateaus, from 300 to 600 metres (980 to 1,970 ft) elevation above sea-level, through which the rivers have eroded their deep beds. Around the estuary of the Tocantins the great plateau has disappeared, having been replaced by a part of the forest-covered, half submerged alluvial plain, which extends far to the north-east and west. The Pará River, generally called one of the mouths of the Amazon, is only the lower reach of the Tocantins. If any portion of the waters of the Amazon runs round the southern side of the large island of Marajó into the river Para, it is only through tortuous, natural canals, which are in no sense outflow channels of the Amazon.[ citation needed ]

Discharge

The Tocantins River records a mean discharge rate of 13,598 m3/s (480,200 cu ft/s) and a specific discharge rate of 14.4 L/s/km2 (1.32 cu ft/s/sq mi). The sub-basins have the following specific discharge rates: Tocantins (11 L/s/km2 or 1.0 cu ft/s/sq mi), Araguaia (16 L/s/km2 or 1.5 cu ft/s/sq mi), Pará (17 L/s/km2 or 1.6 cu ft/s/sq mi) and Guamá (21 L/s/km2 or 1.9 cu ft/s/sq mi).[ citation needed ]

The banks of the Tocantins are rocky in some places Tocantins River.jpg
The banks of the Tocantins are rocky in some places

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Amazon River</span> Major river in South America

The Amazon River in South America is the largest river by discharge volume of water in the world, and the longest or second-longest river system in the world, a title which is disputed with the Nile.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Geography of Brazil</span>

The country of Brazil occupies roughly half of South America, bordering the Atlantic Ocean. Brazil covers a total area of 8,514,215 km2 (3,287,357 sq mi) which includes 8,456,510 km2 (3,265,080 sq mi) of land and 55,455 km2 (21,411 sq mi) of water. The highest point in Brazil is Pico da Neblina at 2,994 m (9,823 ft). Brazil is bordered by the countries of Argentina, Bolivia, Colombia, Guyana, Paraguay, Peru, Suriname, Uruguay, Venezuela, and French Guiana.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Tapajós</span> River in Brazil

The Tapajós is a river in Brazil. It runs through the Amazon Rainforest and is a major tributary of the Amazon River. When combined with the Juruena River, the Tapajós is approximately 2,080 km (1,290 mi) long. It is one of the largest clearwater rivers, accounting for about 6% of the water in the Amazon basin.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Araguaia River</span> River in Pará, Brazil

The Araguaia River is one of the major rivers of Brazil, and a tributary of the Tocantins River.

<i>Aspidoras</i> Genus of fishes

Aspidoras is a genus of catfishes of the family Callichthyidae from Brazil.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Maranhão Babaçu forests</span>

The Maranhão Babaçu forests is a tropical moist broadleaf forest ecoregion of north-central Brazil. The forests form a transition between the equatorial forests of the Amazon biome to the west and the drier savannas and xeric shrublands to the south and east.

The Serra do Tiracambu is a mountain range in Maranhão state of north-central Brazil. The range runs north and south, and forms the divide between the basins of the Gurupí River to the west and the Pindaré River to the east.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Gurupí River</span> River in Brazil

The Gurupi River is a river in north-central Brazil that forms the boundary between Maranhão and Pará states. The Gurupi rises in the low hills that separate its basin from that of the Tocantins River to the south, and flows north into the Atlantic Ocean. The Serra do Tiracambu lies to the east, and separates the basin of the Gurupi from that of the Pindaré River.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Tucuruí Dam</span> Dam in Pará, Brazil

The Tucuruí Dam is a concrete gravity dam on the Tocantins River located on the Tucuruí County in the State of Pará, Brazil. The main purpose of the dam is hydroelectric power production and navigation. It is the first large-scale hydroelectric project in the Brazilian Amazon rainforest. The installed capacity of the 25-unit plant is 8,370 megawatts (11,220,000 hp). Phase I construction began in 1980 and ended in 1984 while Phase II began in 1998 and ended in 2010. The dam was featured in the 1985 film The Emerald Forest.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Guamá River</span> River in Brazil

The Guamá River is located in northeast Pará state in north-central Brazil. Its mouth forms the southern border of the state capital, Belém. Its watershed drains an area of 87,389.54 km2 (33,741.29 sq mi). The navigability is feasible in the last 160 km (100 mi) of the river, from the municipality of São Miguel do Guamá to Guajará Bay. Among its tributaries, the Acará, Capim and Moju rivers stand out. In the Guamá River, the pororoca phenomenon usually occurs. The main campus of the Federal University of Pará, near Belém, is located on its right bank. About 75% of the water consumed in Belém comes from this river, which receives 11 streams contaminated by the irregular disposal of urban waste, since only 4, 5% of the home network of the Pará capital is connected to the collecting network.

The Serra da Mesa Dam, once known as Sao Felix, is an embankment dam on the Tocantins River near Minaçu in Goiás, Brazil. The dam serves an associated hydroelectric power plant with a 1,275 megawatts (1,710,000 hp) installed capacity. The dam creates the largest reservoir by volume in Brazil.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Araguaian river dolphin</span> Species of mammal

The Araguaian river dolphin or Araguaian boto is a South American river dolphin population native to the Araguaia–Tocantins basin of Brazil.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Serra dos Martírios/Andorinhas State Park</span>

The Serra dos Martírios/Andorinhas State Park is a state park in the state of Pará, Brazil. It protects a mountainous region of forests in the transition between the Amazon rainforest and cerrado biomes, beside the Araguaia River. The park contains caves that hold ancient rock carvings and paintings. Some of the caves are endangered by tourists or by local people who camp in them while they perform the annual Festival of the Divine Holy Spirit.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Marajó várzea</span>

The Marajó várzea (NT0138) is an ecoregion of seasonally and tidally flooded várzea forest in the Amazon biome. It covers a region of sedimentary islands and floodplains at the mouth of the Amazon that is flooded twice daily as the ocean tides push the river waters onto the land. The flooded forests provide food for a wide variety of fruit-eating fish, aquatic mammals, birds and other fauna. It has no protected areas and is threatened by cattle and water-buffalo ranching, logging and fruit plantations.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Tapajós–Xingu moist forests</span>

The Tapajós–Xingu moist forests (NT0168) is an ecoregion in the eastern Amazon basin. It is part of the Amazon biome. The ecoregion extends southwest from the Amazon River between its large Tapajós and Xingu tributaries.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Xingu–Tocantins–Araguaia moist forests</span>

The Xingu–Tocantins–Araguaia moist forests (NT0180) is an ecoregion in the eastern Amazon basin. It is part of the Amazon biome. The ecoregion is one of the most severely degraded of the Amazon region, suffering from large-scale deforestation and selective extraction of timber, particularly along the Trans-Amazonian Highway and in the higher and more populated southern portions.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Tocantins–Araguaia–Maranhão moist forests</span>

The Tocantins–Araguaia–Maranhão moist forests (NT0170), also called the Tocantins/Pindaré moist forests, is an ecoregion in the north of Brazil to the south of the mouth of the Amazon River. It is part of the Amazon biome. The ecoregion contains the city of Belém, capital of the state of Pará. It is the most developed part of the Amazon region, and is one of the most severely degraded natural habitats of the region.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Mato Grosso tropical dry forests</span> Ecoregion in central Brazil

The Mato Grosso tropical dry forests (NT0140), also called the Mato Grosso seasonal forests, is an ecoregion in central Brazil to the south of the Amazon region. It contains vegetation in the transition between the Amazon rainforest to the north and the cerrado savanna to the south. The opening of highways through the region has caused rapid population growth, deforestation and pollution.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Pará mangroves</span> Mangrove ecoregion in Northern Brazil

The Pará mangroves (NT1427) is an ecoregion along the Atlantic coast of the state of Pará in Brazil. They constitute the western extension of the Maranhão mangroves ecoregion. The mangroves are relatively intact, although they are under some pressure from agriculture and logging.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Tocantins basin</span>

The Tocantins basin, or Araguaia-Tocantins basin, is a Brazilian river basin, almost entirely located between the 2ºS and 18ºS parallels and the 46ºW and 56ºW meridians. The main rivers in the basin are Tocantins and Araguaia.

References

  1. 1 2 Araújo, Leopoldina (2019). Romanço Parkatêjê. Belém. ISBN   978-85-910871-4-3.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  2. Perez, M.S. "Where the Xingu Bends and Will Soon Break". American Scientist. Retrieved 1 October 2017.
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Provete, D.B. (2013). Tocantins River. 1237-1239
  4. 1 2 3 Hales, J., and P. Petry: Tocantins - Araguaia . Freshwater Ecoregions of the World. Retrieved 26 May 2014
  5. Garavello, J.C.; Garavello, J.P.; and Oliveira, A.K. (2010). Ichthyofauna, fish supply and fishermen activities on the mid-Tocantins River, Maranhão State, Brazil. Braz. J. Biol., vol. 70(3): 575-585
  6. Lambert de Brito Ribeiro, M. C.; Petrere Junior, M.; and Juras, A. A. (2006). "Ecological integrity and fisheries ecology of the Araguaia—Tocantins River Basin, Brazil." Regulated Rivers: Research & Management, vol. 11(3-4): 325–350
  7. 1 2 Romero, Aldemaro, editor (2001). The Biology of Hypogean Fishes. Developments in Environmental Biology of Fishes. ISBN   978-1402000768
  8. Caserta Tencatt; L. F.; and M. Elina Bichuette (2017). Aspidoras mephisto, new species: The first troglobitic Callichthyidae (Teleostei: Siluriformes) from South America. PLoS ONE 12(3): e0171309.
  9. Sears, Robin, South America: Eastern extreme of the Amazon basin in Brazil (NT0170), WWF: World Wildlife Fund, retrieved 2017-03-25