Chaplin Lake and neighbouring Reed and Old Wives Lakes are situated in a physiographic region called the Chaplin Plain Landscape Area. These salt lakes make up the second largest saline lake in Canada, after the Quill Lakes, and the fourth largest in North America.[4] It is a very important region for migratory and nesting birds and it was designated as Western Canada's first hemispheric shorebird reserve when it joined the Western Hemisphere Shorebird Reserve Network (WHSRN).[5] At the southern end of the lake, an arroyo creek called Chaplin Creek[6] flows out of the lake and into Wood River, which leads to Old Wives Lake.
Saskatchewan Mining and Minerals
Saskatchewan Mining and Minerals operates a sodium sulphate mine on the northern shore of the lake, next to the village of Chaplin. Construction of the salt mine began in 1947 and it officially opened under the name of Saskatchewan Minerals as a Crown corporation in 1948 with its first shipment of salt cake to Bathhurst Pulp & Paper in New Brunswick. The sodium sulphate that's mined there is used in a variety of products such as detergents, pulp and paper, textiles, and mineral feed for livestock.[7]
In the early 1980s, researchers concerned about declining migratory bird numbers across North America noticed that there was a very large number of birds that stopped over at Chaplin Lake in the spring. Saskatchewan Minerals was approached by the researchers about the preservation of habitat at Chaplin Lake and an agreement was made to help preserve the environment for migrating birds. The mine helps regulate water levels so that during drought years the lake doesn't completely dry up and during wet years, flooding is controlled. In 1988, Saskatchewan Minerals ceased being a Crown corporation and was privatised. In 2013, it was renamed Saskatchewan Mining and Minerals Inc. "to better reflect our long-term vision."[8][9]
WHSRN & IBA
Chaplin Lake and its surrounding shore are part of the Chaplin Lake (SK 033) Important Bird Area (IBA) of Canada. The Chaplin Lake IBA covers an area 171.41 km2 (66.18 sq mi) encompassing the lake and its shoreline. Up to about 30 different species of shore birds, totalling about 100,000 individuals, visit the lake and the IBA site each year.[10] One of the primary foods for the migratory birds is brine shrimp.[11] In April 1997, Chaplin and its two neighbouring lakes, Reed and Old Wives, were designated part of the Western Hemisphere Shorebird Reserve Network (WHSRN). It is one of only three such sites in Canada and the only one that is located inland. The other two sites are the Fraser River estuary[12] and Bay of Fundy.[13] The Chaplin / Old Wives / Reed Lakes WHSRN is 42,680 ha (105,500 acres) and is managed by Saskatchewan Mining and Minerals, Ducks Unlimited Canada, and the Chaplin Nature Centre. Tours are available through the nature centre.[14]
In November 2021, the Nature Conservancy of Canada (NCC) purchased the Mackie Ranch on the eastern shore of Chaplin Lake, which contains 646 ha (1,600 acres) of native grassland.[16] In the 25 years prior to this land purchase, Saskatchewan had lost 809,000 ha (2,000,000 acres) with only about 25% of the original grasslands left intact in the province. Grasslands are an important part of the ecosystem because they filter water, help prevent flooding and droughts, provide habitat and breeding grounds for birds, and sequester carbon.[17]