Other fish species are also abundant in its waters, as well as crab fisheries near the mouth.
The Kheidzhan Range on the left side of its valley separates it from the Taui (Kava) basin in the east.
In its last stretch the river expands and fans out in many arms through a widening floodplain parallel to the Ulbeya to the west.
[4][5] The main tributary of the Inya is the 210 kilometres (130 mi) long Nilgysy that joins it in its middle course from the right.
You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.This Khabarovsk Krai location article is a stub.