Cap Tourmente National Wildlife Area facts for kids
Quick facts for kids Cap Tourmente National Wildlife Area |
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Réserve nationale de faune du cap Tourmente | |
IUCN Category IV (Habitat/Species Management Area)
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Scenery at the Cap Tourmente National Wildlife Area.
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Location | Saint-Joachim, La Côte-de-Beaupré Regional County Municipality, Quebec, Canada |
Area | 23.99 km2 (9.26 sq mi) |
Established | April 28, 1978 |
Governing body | Canadian Wildlife Service |
Official name: Cap Tourmente | |
Designated: | 15 January 1981 |
Reference #: | 214 |
The Cap Tourmente National Wildlife Area is a National Wildlife Area located on the north shore of the Saint Lawrence River in the National Provincial Capital Region of Quebec, established on 28 April 1978. It is one of the critical habitats for the greater snow goose during migration. Flocks of tens of thousands of these birds stop over to feed on the bullrushes in the spring and fall. The tidal marsh was recognized as a wetland of international significance per the Ramsar Convention in 1981, the first North American site to receive that distinction.
Within the wildlife refuge is a historic farm site, La Petite-Ferme du cap Tourmente, which was begun by Samuel de Champlain in 1626, as a food source for the fledgling Habitation at Quebec City. Later, the farm was purchased and run for nearly 300 years by and for the Seminary of Quebec. A farm house built around 1667 still stands, and is at the core of La Petite-Ferme du cap Tourmente National Historic Site, designated in 2018.
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American tree sparrow (Spizelloides arborea)