Tuloma River

For other uses, see Tuloma.
Tuloma (Russian: Тулома, Skolt Sami: Tuållâmjokk)
Finnish: Tuulomajoki, Northern Sami: Doallánjohka
River
Region Murmansk Oblast, Russia
Tributaries
 - left Lutto
 - right Pecha, Ulita
Source Nota River
 - location Saariselkä, Lapland, Finland
Mouth
 - location Kola Bay, Murmansk Oblast, Russia
Length 64 km (40 mi)
Basin 21,500 km2 (8,301 sq mi)
Discharge for Kola Bay
 - average 255 m3/s (9,005 cu ft/s)
Tuloma-Kola river basins. Tuloma in yellow

The Tuloma River (Russian: Тулома, Skolt Sami: Tuållâmjokk, Northern Sami: Doallánjohka and Finnish: Tuulomajoki) is a river in Murmansk Oblast in Russia. With a drainage basin of 21,500 square kilometres (8,300 sq mi) and an average discharge at 255 m³/s, the Tuloma is one of the biggest rivers in northern Fennoscandia.

The river has its sources in the Saariselkä mountains in the eastern parts of the Lapland region in Finland. The Tuloma River itself is formed by the confluence of the Lutto and Nota rivers at Lake Notozero. Its outflow is in the Kola Bay, at the confluence with the Kola River and 10 kilometres (6 mi) south of Murmansk in the Kola Peninsula in Russia.

Hydro Power development

There are two hydroelectric power stations on the Tuloma. The Lower Tuloma was finished in 1938, and is located at the town of Murmashi, close to the rivers outflow into the Kola Bay. The dam raised the river by 19 metres (62 ft), and the resulting reservoir was 60 kilometres (37 mi) long.

The second and largest power plant, the Upper Tuloma, was built in the 1960s at Verkhnetulomskiy, 60 kilometres further upriver. A 62-metre (203 ft) high dam was constructed below the outflow from Lake Notozero, forming a large reservoir 120 kilometres (75 mi) long and up to 20 kilometres (12 mi) wide.

Hydroelectric Plant Year built Head Capacity Avg. annual production
Lower Tuloma 1934–38 19 m 56 MW 250 GWh
Upper Tuloma 1961–66 62 m 268 MW 800 GWh

(Lenhydroproject)

Fishing

The Tuloma used to be a great salmon river, on a par with the famous Tana River in Norway in productivity, with annual catches in excess of 100 tons. At Padun Falls at the outflow from Lake Notozero the Skolt Sami had rights to catch salmon in a large weir, and every year tens of tons of salmon was caught at this site alone.

When hydro power plants were built the salmon spawning grounds and migration routes were destroyed. At the first power plant, the Lower Tuloma, a fish ladder was built. Within a few years salmon catches soon approached their former levels. When the Upper Tuloma plant and a dam at Verkhnetulomskiy were built the salmon stock collapsed. Lake Notozero became part of the large Verkhnetulomskoye reservoir, and the Padun Falls was gone. A fish lift was built at the dam, but it did not work and was closed down after a short time. There remains, however, a small salmon stock in the Toluma, spawning in the tributaries below the dam, especially in the Pecha. (tuulomajoki.fi)

There is a project under way to ascertain whether it is possible to reestablish the salmon to the river, by allowing the fish to pass the dams and thus reaching spawning grounds in the tributaries above the reservoirs, which are still in their natural state. It is hoped that this will bring substantial benefits to the region, through recreational fishing and eco-tourism. (Tuloma River Project)

External links

Coordinates: 68°53′N 033°00′E / 68.883°N 33.000°E / 68.883; 33.000

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