Kulsi River

Summary

The Kulsi River is a tributary of the Brahmaputra River in the Indian state of Assam. The river originates from West Khasi Hills of Meghalaya. The river is known as Khir River in its origin. After travelling 12 km in Meghalaya, the river then flows through Kamrup district of Assam and is known as Kulsi. The confluence of the Kulsi with Brahmaputra River is at Nagarbera of Kamrup district, Assam.[citation needed]

Kulsi River
Kulsi river is a habitat of South Asian river dolphin (Ganges river dolphin)
Kulsi River is located in Assam
Kulsi River
Kulsi River is located in India
Kulsi River
Native nameকুলশী নদী (Assamese)
Location
StateAssam
DistrictKamrup District
Physical characteristics
SourceWest Khasi Hills
 • locationMeghalaya
 • coordinates25°33′55.7″N 91°39′34.4″E / 25.565472°N 91.659556°E / 25.565472; 91.659556
MouthBrahmaputra River
 • location
Nagarbera, Kamrup district, Assam
 • coordinates
26°07′10.4″N 91°00′04.4″E / 26.119556°N 91.001222°E / 26.119556; 91.001222
Basin features
ProgressionKulsi River - Brahmaputra River

Habitat of Dolphin edit

The Kulsi river is the habitat of endangered South Asian river dolphin (Platanista gangetica). This endangered dolphin (known as Xihu in Assamese language) breeds only in the Subansiri and Kulsi rivers across the entire Brahmaputra delta.[1] However, sand mining and other development activities make dolphins in the Kulsi vulnerable and the numbers of this endangered dolphin have sharply declined.[2]

References edit

  1. ^ "Summary of Dolphin habitat zone of river Kulsi" (PDF).
  2. ^ "Brahmaputra tributaries no longer secure dolphin habitats". Northeast Now. Retrieved 23 January 2019.