Key Biodiversity Areas

Shagamu River and Area (11372)
Canada, North America

Site overview


KBA status: confirmed
Global KBA criteria: D1a
Year of last assessment: 2008
National site name: Shagamu River and Area
Central coordinates: Latitude: 55.8920, Longitude: -86.7960
System: marine, terrestrial
Elevation (m): 0 to 10
Area of KBA (km2): 901.58032
Protected area coverage (%): 26.40
KBA classification: Global
Legacy site: Yes

Site details


Site description: The Shagamu River enters Hudson Bay about half way between the Severn River to the west and the Winisk River to the east. The site encompasses both sides of the mouth of the Shagamu River for about 40 km east to Ministick Creek and 30 km west to Beavertrap Creek. Numerous beach ridges are located parallel to the coast, with hollows containing thousands of small ponds and lakes. Near the coast, supertidal marshes occur inland, with extensive intertidal marshes and submerged shoals extending well offshore. The raised beach ridges are vegetated with scattered graminoids, and these ridges becoming covered with heath tundra and scattered spruces as one progresses inland. These coastal beach ridges are an important calving area for Woodland Caribou (designated as nationally vulnerable).
Rationale for qualifying as KBA: This site qualifies as a Key Biodiversity Area of international significance that meets the thresholds for at least one criterion described in the Global Standard for the Identification of KBAs.
Additional biodiversity: Shorebirds and waterfowl occur at this site in large numbers during both the spring and fall migration. During a 1993 study, significant one-day counts were recorded for two shorebird species: Hudsonian Godwit (920 over 1% of the worlds estimated population) and Pectoral Sandpiper (900 over 2% of the worlds estimated population). Up to 600 American Golden-Plovers have also been recorded during one-day counts. Large numbers of Lesser Snow Geese and Canada Geese have also been recorded at this site during both the spring and fall migrations. Notable numbers include one-day counts of over 20,000 Lesser Snow Geese in both the spring and fall and almost 10,000 Canada Geese in the fall. (The Canada Geese were likely from either the Tall Grass Prairie or the Mississippi Valley populations.) In addition to staging geese and shorebirds, significant numbers of Black Scoters gather in moulting flocks of the coastline. Aerial surveys during the late summer of 1994 resulted in an estimate of 43,700 birds (as much as 21.8% of the estimated eastern North American population).
Delineation rationale: 2011-06-06 (BL Secretariat): site area updated from 93600 ha to 88000 ha, following GIS analysis of site polygon by Bird Studies Canada (J. Moore & S. Marquez in litt. 2009). Type 2 marine IBA: non-breeding (coastal) congregations.

Habitats


Land use: hunting | nature conservation and research
IUCN HabitatCoverage %Habitat detail
Shrubland17
Marine Neritic17
Marine Intertidal17
Marine Coastal/Supratidal17
Grassland17
Wetlands(Inland)17