Opava (river) explained

Opava
Source1:Černá Opava
Source1 Location:Zlaté Hory, Hrubý Jeseník
Mouth Location:Oder
Mouth Coordinates:49.8336°N 18.2214°W
Subdivision Type1:Countries
Subdivision Type2:Regions/
Voivodeships
Length Km:129.3
Discharge1 Avg:17.6m3/s near estuary
Basin Size Km2:2088.8

The Opava (pl|Opawa, de|Oppa) is a river in the Czech Republic, a left tributary of the Oder River. It partly forms the Czech-Polish state border. It flows through the Moravian-Silesian Region in the Czech Republic and along the Opole Voivodeship in Poland. It is formed by the confluence of the Černá Opava and Střední Opava streams. Together with the Černá Opava, which is its main source, the Opava is 129.3km (80.3miles) long, making it the 15th longest river in the country. Without the Černá Opava, it is 110.7km (68.8miles) long.

Etymology

The first written mentions of the river are from 1031 (as Vpa) and 1062 (as Opa). The words apa, opa were Celtic words for 'water' or 'river'. The suffix -ava is of younger origin and also denotes 'water'.[1] [2] The source streams of the Opava are called Černá Opava ('black Opava'), Střední Opava ('middle Opava') and Bílá Opava ('white Opava').

Characteristic

From a water management point of view, the Opava, Černá Opava and Střední Opava are three different watercourses with separate numbering of river kilometres. The Opava itself is formed by the confluence of the Černá Opava and Střední Opava in the territory of Vrbno pod Pradědem at an elevation of, and is 110.7km (68.8miles) long.[3] The stream of Bílá Opava flows to the Střední Opava shortly before its confluence with the Černá Opava and is also considered the source of the Opava.[4]

In a broader point of view, the Opava (as Černá Opava) originates in the territory of Zlaté Hory in the Hrubý Jeseník mountain range, on the slope of the Orlík mountain at an elevation of, and flows to Ostrava, where it enters the Oder River at an elevation of . It is 129.3km (80.3miles) long, making it the 15th longest river in the country. The river forms 21.8km (13.5miles) of the Czech-Polish border. Its drainage basin has an area of 2088.8km2, of which 1813.7km2 is in the Czech Republic.[3] [4]

The sources and longest tributaries of the Opava are:[5]

Tributary Length (km) River km Side
100.5 35.4 right
Opavice 35.7 71.6 left
Čižina 23.0 56.3 right
Heraltický potok 18.7 51.1 left
Černá Opava 18.6 110.7
Velká 17.2 38.8 right
Krasovka 14.6 80.4 left
Střední Opava 12.9 110.7 right

Course

The most notable settlement on the river are the cities of Ostrava and Opava, named after the river. The river flows through the municipal territories of Vrbno pod Pradědem, Karlovice, Široká Niva, Nové Heřminovy, Zátor, Brantice, Krnov, Úvalno, Brumovice, Holasovice, Opava, Velké Hoštice, Kravaře, Štítina, Mokré Lazce, Háj ve Slezsku, Dolní Benešov, Kozmice, Dobroslavice, Děhylov, Hlučín and Ostrava.

In the section between Krnov and Opava, where the river forms most of the Czech-Polish state border, the river flows along the territory of Gmina Branice.

Bodies of water

There are no reservoirs and fishponds built directly on the Opava. There are 754 bodies of water in the basin area. The largest of them is the Slezská Harta Reservoir with an area of .[3]

Fauna

Common fish in the river include river trout, grayling and common barbel. Among the protected species of fish and lampreys are the common minnow, European bullhead, alpine bullhead and brook lamprey, occurring on the upper course of the river. Among the protected animal species occurring in the lower course of the river are the European crayfish, painter's mussel, swollen river mussel and duck mussel. The entire course of the river is also a nesting and hunting ground for the common kingfisher.[4]

Tourism

The Opava is suitable for river tourism. The most popular part is the lower section of the river from Kravaře to Ostrava with a length of about, which is passable all year round and is suitable for less experienced paddlers.[6]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Svoboda. Jiří. O původu názvů českých řek. cs. 2011-09-08. 2019-07-12. https://web.archive.org/web/20201025122958/https://sites.google.com/site/bskotyz/home/jiri-svoboda/o-puavodu-nazvua-rek. 2020-10-25.
  2. Web site: Šlezingr. Radim. Poutavá historie města Opavy. Seznamte se s ní s historiky Slezské univerzity. Silesian University in Opava. cs. 2020-12-21. 2024-08-29.
  3. Web site: Základní charakteristiky toku Opava a jeho povodí. T. G. Masaryk Water Research Institute. cs. 2024-08-29.
  4. Web site: Opava. Atlas hlavních vodních toků povodí Odry. Povodí Odry. cs. 2023-10-04.
  5. Web site: Vodní toky. Evidence hlásných profilů. Czech Hydrometeorological Institute. cs. 2024-10-16.
  6. Web site: Víkendová plavba po příjemně meandrující řece Opavě. Pádler. cs. 2024-08-29.