The NWA covers an area of 23.7 ha, including 1.46 ha in the marine environment.[1] It is located five kilometers east of downtown Rimouski, and its territory lies entirely within the city of Rimouski, in the Pointe-au-Père sector.[2]
The reserve has a subpolar subhumid continental climate.[6] The average temperature in Rimouski is -11.7 °C in January and 18.2 °C in July. The city receives an average of 642 mm of rain and 271.7 cm of snow per year.[7] The territory has a frost-free period of 262 days. Although in a continental zone, temperatures are nevertheless influenced by the St. Lawrence estuary. In summer, coastal temperatures are four to five degrees Celsius lower than inland. In winter, the difference can sometimes be as much as 10 °C.[6]
The salt marshes that make up the reserve are mainly populated by salt hay (Spartina patens), sloughgrass (Spartina pectinata), red fescue (Festuca rubra) and chaffy sedge (Carex paleacea). Other plants typical of estuarine environments include sea pea (Lathyrus japonicus), Scottish licorice-root (Ligusticum scoticum), American searocket (Cakile edentula) and sea milkwort (Lysimachia maritima). In submerged areas, the flora is dominated by eelgrass (Zostera marina).[12]
Fauna
The reserve is home to 120 species of birds. In spring, it is a staging area for around 25,000 snow geese (Chen caerulescens). Also in spring, the reserve is visited by around 150 Barrow's goldeneyes (Bucephala islandica), 1,000 Least sandpipers and 250 Greater yellowlegs (Tringa melanoleuca). It is also visited by a significant population of short-billed dowitcher (Limnodromus griseus).[12]
Despite its small size, the reserve is home to a dozen mammal species, including the muskrat (Ondatra zibethicus), common shrew (Sorex cinereus), Meadow jumping mouse (Zapus hudsonius) and field vole (Microtus pennsylvanicus).[2]
History
The first efforts to protect the salt marsh date back to 1978, when a group of birdwatchers noticed the damage caused to the natural site by landfill and sand removal.[14] These interventions were compounded by the recurring problem of illegal hunting in the marsh.[14] The group entrusted one of their members, Jean-Pierre Fillion, with the task of raising public awareness of the marsh. They all realized that the ecological integrity of the marsh, which until then had been fairly well preserved, was in danger of being compromised, which would undoubtedly have a negative impact on the presence of the birds that frequent it.[15] The marsh site has long been a meeting place for birdwatchers in the region, who take advantage of the site's ecological richness and the presence of several bird species,[14] with a survey carried out in the late 1970s recording the presence of 102 different bird species.[16]
On behalf of the Regroupement pour la conservation du marais de Pointe-au-Père (which foreshadowed the creation of the Club des Ornitholoques du Bas-Saint-Laurent), Mr. Fillion organized information meetings, photo exhibitions, and the publishing of reports in the local media to raise awareness of the marsh and its ecological importance among residents of the Rimouski region.[14] He also lobbied federal, provincial, and municipal governments to protect the site. In 1980, he handed over to Michel Larivée, who continued the work of raising awareness.[14] In 1982, having become Director of the Musée de la Mer de Pointe-au-Père, Mr. Fillion took up the project again and made it one of the Museum's mandates, reserving one of his exhibition rooms for the enhancement of the salt marsh and offering guided tours during the tourist season.
In 1986, the Canadian government officially created the reserve as the "Pointe-au-Père National Wildlife Area".[2]
Administration and tourism
The reserve is administered by the Canadian Wildlife Service, a division of Environment Canada.[2] The most important infrastructure dedicated to tourism in the reserve is a 500 m trail, and the only activities permitted are hiking, nature observation, and photography. Access is permitted only in areas set aside for this purpose.[2] A rest area and interpretation panels on marine biology were installed in the northern sector of the reserve in 2012 to "raise visitor awareness of the fragility of the environment and reduce disturbance of birds by kayakers and hikers".[17]
^(fr) Ministère de l'Énergie et des Ressources, Carte géo-touristique: Géologie du sud du Québec, du Bas-Saint-Laurent et de la Gaspésie, Les Publications du Québec, 1991
^(fr) "Trois-Pistoles Group" archive, Canadian Geological Units Lexicon, on Canadian Geoscience Knowledge Network, December 8th, 2009 (accessed October 21st, 2012)
^ ab(fr) Municipal Regional County of Rimouski-Neigette, Schéma d'aménagement et de développement révisé, 411 p., p. 13
^(fr)Les régions écologiques de l'Amérique du Nord : Vers une perspective commune, Montréal, Commission de coopération environnementale, 1997, 70 p. (ISBN2-922305-19-8, read onlinearchive), p. 18-19
(fr) Marie-Andrée Massicotte et al., Une lumière sur la côte, Pointe-au-Père, 1882–1982, Rimouski, Corporation des fêtes du centenaire de Pointe-au-Père, 1982, 461 p. (OCLC 15983265)