Oti River | |
Map: | Map of rivers of Togo OSM.png |
Map Size: | 250 |
Subdivision Type1: | Countries |
Length: | 520km (320miles) |
Discharge1 Location: | Mouth |
Source1 Elevation: | 150m (490feet) |
Mouth: | Lake Volta of Ghana |
Mouth Location: | Gulf of Guinea |
Mouth Coordinates: | 8.78°N -2.5747°W |
Basin Size: | 72000km2 |
Custom Label: | Designation |
The Oti River or Pendjari River is an international river in West Africa. It rises in Benin, forms the border between Benin and Burkina Faso, flows through Togo, and joins the Volta River in Ghana.
The Oti River is about 5200NaN0 long. Its headwaters are in Benin and Burkina Faso, it flows through Benin and Togo and joins the Volta River in Ghana. Tributaries on the left bank in Togo originate from the Togo Mountains to the south. One of its eastern tributaries is the Kara River, the confluence being on the Ghana–Togo border, where another tributary, the Koumongou River, joins from the south. The mouth of the Oti was formerly on the Volta River, but it now flows into Lake Volta reservoir in Ghana.[1]
The river crosses the northern part of Togo in a savannah-clad valley some 40or wide. Along the margins of the river is gallery forest which floods periodically. The dry season here lasts from about November until April, with the hot dry Harmattan wind blowing from the north. At this time of the year the river's flow is minimal. Both the Oti and the Koumongou have floodplains, some 10and wide, respectively. These flood extensively during the wet season, but during the dry season they become dry, dusty plains, with the occasional pond or lake in a depression. Cattle graze on the floodplains during the dry season. There is also some small-scale growing of crops, and the hunting of game takes place there.[2]
The river forms part of the international borders between Ghana, Burkina Faso, Togo, and Benin.[3]
The Oti River flows through Pendjari National Park in Benin[4] and the Oti-Kéran National Park in Togo.[2]