Key Biodiversity Areas

Thomsen River (11254)
Canada, North America

Site overview


KBA status: confirmed
Year of last assessment: 2008
National site name: Thomsen River
Central coordinates: Latitude: 74.0010, Longitude: -119.7520
System: marine, terrestrial
Area of KBA (km2): 660.96743
Protected area coverage (%): 99.92
KBA classification: Regional
Legacy site: Yes

Site details


Site description: The Thomsen River is located in north-central Banks Island, in the western Arctic. The site covers the river from its mouth at Castel Bay to a point about 60 km upstream. The river flows through a broad valley surrounded by low rolling hills. These hills are dissected by gullies and underlain by sandstones and shales. The river eventually empties into Castel Bay and is surrounded here by deeply cut badland topography. Polar desert and arctic tundra communities dominate the vegetation, with the main types being dwarf shrub, willow-sedge and lichen-legume tundra. Extensive wet sedge meadows are found in the valley bottom of the river. A polynya exists in MClure Strait and open water can appear as early as January or February, that then disappears by July. Muskoxen are commonly found year-round, while Peary Caribou migrate north in late spring, moving to calving grounds in the northeast and northwest parts of the island. Arctic Foxes are common and Polar Bears are occasionally spotted on the northern coast.
Rationale for qualifying as KBA: This site qualifies as a Key Biodiversity Area of international significance that was identified using previously established criteria and thresholds for the identification of Important Bird and Biodiversity Areas (IBAs) and for which available data indicate that it does not meet global KBA criteria and thresholds set out in the Global Standard.
Additional biodiversity: Together, the Thomsen River and Castel Bay have hosted up to 5,000 moulting Black Brant (subspecies nigricans) during late summer. This number exceeds 3% of the population of this subspecies, and is also over 1% of the North American Brant population. Also during the late summer, up to 25,000 Lesser Snow Geese have been reported moulting in the Thomsen River valley. However, it is unknown how consistently the geese use this area for moulting year to year. Surveys in the mid-1970s recorded a maximum of only 1,200 birds in early August, while later reports in 1988 and 1989 found that numbers varied from several hundred to none. Clearly, more surveys are needed to elucidate this situation. Two hundred and fifty Canada Geese have also been recorded moulting on the river.
Delineation rationale: 2011-06-06 (BL Secretariat): site area updated from 60000 ha to 68000 ha, following GIS analysis of site polygon by Bird Studies Canada (J. Moore & S. Marquez in litt. 2009).

Habitats


Land use: not utilised
IUCN HabitatCoverage %Habitat detail
Marine Intertidal25
Shrubland25
Grassland25
Marine Neritic25