The Suketō River (助任川, Suketō-gawa), also called the Fukushima River, is a river in Tokushima Prefecture, Japan.

Suketō River
The Suketō River, one of the rivers running through the center of Tokushima City.
Map
Location
CountryJapan
RegionTokushima City in Tokushima Prefecture
Physical characteristics
Source 
 • locationRunoff from the Shinmachi River
Mouth 
 • location
Shinmachi River

Course

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It starts on the western side of Hyōtan-jima where the Shinmachi River hits the Mitsuai Bridge and runs around to meet the river again to the east. The river passes through the Maegawa, Suketō, Fukushima, and Hyōtan-jima districts, as well as several others. In midstream, the Suketō River branches out into the Ōokagawa and Sumiyoshi-jima Rivers, and is known by some people as the "Fukushima River" in the area where it passes by the district of the same name.[1] The Suketō River is crossed by the Mitsuai, Maegawa, Nishi no Maru, Suketō, New Suketō, Myōjin, Tokusumi, Fukushima, Sumiyoshi, New Fukushima, Nakazu and several other bridges.[2]

Ecology

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According to research in the year 2006, the river has a chemical oxygen demand of around 4–5 parts per million, making it slightly dirtied, but the water is clear to 50 cm in depth and still relatively clean. The Shinmachi Preservation Committee is working towards keeping the river and its waterways clean.

In the year 2007, a stingray was found living in the waters of the river. While the details remain unknown, it is said [by whom?]to have made its way there from the mouth of the Yoshino River .

Fukushima River

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The Fukushima River is another name for the Suketō River, mostly supported by those living further downstream of the river than the Fukushima Bridge. While the name 'Fukushima' refers to one of the prefectures in Japan, it is also a suburb in Tokushima City. The river is recorded as "Suketō River" on the Fukushima Bridge, and as "Fukushima River" on the New Fukushima Bridge.

34°04′01″N 134°33′50″E / 34.066989°N 134.56375°E / 34.066989; 134.56375

References

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  1. ^ "Hyotan-jima Cruise|ようこそ徳島県へ". ようこそ徳島県へ. Retrieved 2022-05-30.
  2. ^ Ito, Keitaro (2021-03-23). Urban Biodiversity and Ecological Design for Sustainable Cities. Springer Nature. ISBN 978-4-431-56856-8.