Yegorlyk
The Yegorlyk or Greater Yegorlyk is a north-flowing river on the Black Sea-Caspian Steppe of southern Russia, a left tributary of the Manych. It is long, and has a drainage basin of. Since the Manych flows into the Don it is the southernmost tributary of the Don, if one excludes the Kalaus.
Etymology
The name of the river comes from Turkic agri, meaning "curved". Its Russian name was influenced by the given name Egor. Its name in Kalmyk is, ).Fauna
Several introduced species are present in the Yegorlyk catchment area. This includes the spotted forked catfish, which was imported for fish farming from the United States in the 1970s and subsequently also spread outside the fish farms. Another fish is the gobioninae species Romanogobio pentatrichus, which migrated independently from the Kuban, its original distribution area, via the Nevinnomyssk Canal.Usage and infrastructure
There is no navigation on Jegorlyk river.The entire length of the river flows through intensively farmed areas, for whose irrigation the water is used. The largest part is taken from the Novotroitskoye Reservoir via the Right Yegorlyk Canal .
Several small hydropower plants have been built on the upper reaches of the river, which are now operated by the ' 'Kuban Hydro Power Plant Cascade ' ':
- Sengilejewskoje hydropower plant
- Jegorlyk hydropower plant
- Hydropower plant Jegorlyk-2
- Novotroizk hydropower plant
A number of other reservoirs directly on the Jegorlyk or in its valley are used for fish farming, for example at Ptitschje north of Isobilny.
The upper reaches of Yegorlyk are crossed by a branch of the trunk road R217, which connects the regional capital Stavropol to the main road between Newinnomyssk and Kochubeyevskoye. The railway line from Kropotkin to Stavropol and Elista crosses the river below Novotroizkaja and Isobilny, the regional road R269 following the middle course on the left Bataisk; - Stavropol near the village of Besopasnoye.