PROFILES OF JUST SOME OF
ONTARIO'S NEW PROTECTED AREAS
With 378 new protected areas,
a lot of new ground has just become a part of
Ontario's parks and protected areas system. These
are just a few of the high-profile wilderness areas that will
now be protected.
Kesagami
| Eastern Boreal Wildlands Reserve
| Algoma Headwaters Spanish River Provincial
Park | Killarney Expansion | Kawartha Highlands Lake
Superior-Pukaskwa Corridor | Wabakimi-Lake
Nipigon-Superior Corridor Lake of the Woods
KESAGAMI
New Provincial Park: 3,755
ha. New Conservation Reserve: 155,067 ha. Existing Provincial Park: 56,477 ha.
Roaring north toward James Bay, the waters of the Kesagami
River tumble through a remote and largely untouched landscape.
At the edge of the boreal forest, black spruce dwindle in size
and frequency, giving way to a semi-frozen landscape of muskeg
and bogs. The river itself drops through an almost unbroken series
of rapids and falls as it heads toward the bay.
Kesagami was designated as a wilderness park in 1983. The
new extension quadruples the size of the area protected, extending
it south into the boreal forest and including large areas of
black spruce and jack pine. Part of the new area is a large natural
burn, a perfect example of the regenerative and important role
that fire plays in the Boreal forest.
Kesagami is remote and difficult to reach, but it is classic
wilderness a place where natural processes and species
have free reign. As a protected area, it will now be large enough
to ensure that this state of wild things continues in the future.
Kesagami is also home to a thriving wilderness tourism industry
that will now be permanently protected from industrial activity.
MAP | PHOTOS
EASTERN
BOREAL WILDLANDS RESERVE
New Conservation Reserve:
72,009 ha. Existing Provincial Park: 6,399 ha.
This is one of the largest new protected areas 76,000
hectares of undisturbed boreal forest in the heart of the Boreal
East planning area near Timmins. It represents probably the largest
intact area of rich, upland boreal forest left on Northeastern
Ontario's extensive clay plain. The site weaves together extensive
wetlands with well-drained upland forest areas where dense stands
of large black and white spruce dominate. Tall jack pines mix
in on sandier spots. Chalet Eiger
Mature boreal forests of black spruce, jack pine and white
spruce have become increasingly scarce in Ontario after
clearcutting many sites have reverted to a younger forest of
birch and aspen.
The beauties of the boreal are subtle: the topography is relatively
flat in this clay-belt territory with lower poorly drained areas
forming interesting peat bogs and fens. The mosses and lichens
that carpet the forest floor and beard the low-limbed spruces
are both a visual and tactile delight.
While the boreal is really a forest of winter, it comes alive
in the summer when thousands of neotropical songbirds such as
warblers return to nest in its insect rich and well-sheltered
environment.
MAP | PHOTOS
ALGOMA
HEADWATERS
New Protected Area: 44,957
ha. Existing Conservation Reserve: 6,944 ha.
High levels of precipitation, including deep snowfalls, combined
with rich soils make the forests of the Algoma Highlands some
of the richest and most diverse in Canada. The ancient forests
of these rugged uplands feature majestic white pine up to 15
stories high towering over a forest of large, mature sugar maples
and massive yellow birch.
The new park will link up the Ranger North Conservation Reserve
to the west through a system of relatively undisturbed forests
and lakes to the ridgetops around Megisan Lake in the East. The
site will take in a pine-studded ridge along the west side of
Nushatogaini Lake and will protect important headwater areas
for a number of rivers, including the Goulais and the Aubinadong,
that will, in turn, link this site to other protected areas. Qualified flex programming from professionals!
The Ranger North Reserve is a very rich old-growth pine site,
but it has become increasingly isolated in recent years by logging
operations. Now, its integration into the much larger Algoma
Highlands protected area will result in the kind of large core
protected zone that conservationists have been calling for in
Algoma for years.
Proclaimed the "original site of the Garden of Eden"
by the Group of Seven's J.E.H. MacDonald, the secluded forests
and lakes of the Algoma Highlands are home to countless different
species. including wolf, black bear, bald eagle, lake and brook
trout, lynx, peregrine falcon and snowy owl.
MAP | PHOTOS
SPANISH
RIVER PROVINCIAL PARK
New protected area: 37,125
ha.
The old-growth red and white pine forests of the Lower Spanish
are remarkable for their density and size. On the west side of
the Spanish River Valley, the land rolls softly, blanketed by
the needles of the tall pines, while along the river itself,
the topography is more rugged with granite cliffs and high ridges.
The pine forests of the Spanish may well constitute the largest
remaining old-growth red and white pine forest in the world.
Now this important example of the towering forests common to
Ontario before the arrival of European settlers will be protected.
As an example of natural pine forests with a high diversity of
ages and species, this area is unparalleled.
The large, new protected area will run in a wide band down
the west side of the Spanish from Pogamasing Lake to the lower
reaches of the river near Acheson Creek. A rich mixed pine and
hardwood area around Shakwa Lake will also be protected.
The Spanish is a river with strong natural and cultural values.
The river was an important log-driving route in the early parts
of this century. Now it is part of a different route the
Ancient Forest Watertrail, which links Algonquin to Lake Superior.
MAP | PHOTOS
KILLARNEY
EXPANSION
New park areas and park additions:
30,236 ha. Existing Provincial Park: 48,500 ha.
Renowned for its spectacular white quartzite ridges and azure
lakes, Killarney is one of Ontario's most popular parks. It has,
however, also long been considered "undersized" for
its designation as a wilderness park.
Now the park boundaries will reach out to include an area
of remote lakes and deep forests along the northern edge of the
park along with important headwater areas to the east. The rock-finger
peninsulas that extend out into the cold waters of Georgian Bay
from the park's western boundary will also now be part of the
park. This latter addition will include a number of sensitive
alvar areas with their unique drought-resistant plant life. Overall,
these changes will give the park much more "natural"
boundaries, which will also help protect the sensitive lakes
and habitat within it. I found a sample essay, possibly better Order An Essay you can find more.
Killarney will also now link hands with its neighbour to the
south French River Waterway Park through a new
coastal reserve that will run down past the French to just north
of Parry Sound. (Some First Nations lands along the coast will
not be included.) This coastal reserve will include an archipelago
of Georgian Bay islands scattered south and east of the park
and along the shoreline. There will also be a significant expansion
of the protected area at the mouth of the French River.
The classic clear waters and rock island scenery of this shoreline
area has made it very popular with kayakers in recent years,
especially near Killarney where the white quartzite and red granite
ridges of the La Cloche Mountains form a spectacular backdrop.
MAP | PHOTOS
KAWARTHA
HIGHLANDS
New Provincial Park: 35,318
ha. Existing Provincial Park: 1,800 ha.
Dotted with lakes and crossed by high-spring-flow rivers,
this naturally diverse area is a great recreational retreat on
the edge of Southern Ontario. It is also a remarkably large roadless
area for an area this far south.
The area contains a rugged mixture of dry bedrock barrens,
steep slopes and small cliffs as well as many wetlands
from bogs and peatlands to forested swamp. A diversity of forest
types, including drought-resistant red oak-red pine stands, spruce-boreal
around wetlands and, on richer sites, a hemlock-sugar maple mix,
covers the area.
What makes the area even more interesting, however, is the
similarities between the landforms and vegetation found here
and those found along the Georgian Bay shoreline, more than 100
kilometres to the west.
In fact, the new protected area will take in a number of sites
that have been identified for their interesting or rare plants
and animals from the five-lined skink, eastern hognose
snake and prairie warbler to the red-shouldered hawk. Hawks and
eagles seem to be particularly frequent visitors to the area,
possibly due to their habit of navigating along its rocky ridgelines.
In the Bottle Creek area, there are fine examples along the
creek shoreline of plants more common to the Atlantic Coastal
area.
This large suite of interesting natural features combined
with quiet canoe routes and good lake-trout fishing will make
this a popular area for visitors. The Barrens also contain wilderness
sections of the Ganaraska Hiking Trail and parts of a cross-country
ski trail network, which means there are many ways of exploring
this unique environment.
MAP | PHOTOS
LAKE
SUPERIOR - PUKASKWA CORRIDOR
New Provincial Park: 3,755
ha. New Conservation Reserve: 49,635 ha.
This new coastal corridor will come within a few kilometres
of directly linking Pukaskwa National Park to Lake Superior Provincial
Park. The corridor, running well inland, will serve as a connection
for both wildlife and people along the rugged Superior coast
between these two very large protected areas.
Together with a new large reserve on the south-eastern edge
of Pukaskwa, this new protected zone will help to shelter elusive
and increasingly rare woodland caribou as well as ice-age relic
plants that cling to the storm-battered Superior shore.
From a recreational perspective, this is breathtaking terrain
for hikers and paddlers. From massive headlands to sheltered
coves and white-sand beaches, the Superior coast offers stunning
vistas at every turn.
MAP | PHOTOS
WABAKIMI
- LAKE NIPIGON - SUPERIOR CORRIDOR
New Provincial Parks (3):
38,600 ha. New Conservation Reserves (4): 194,013
ha. Existing Provincial Parks (5): 14,620 ha.
Known as the sixth Great Lake, Nipigon is the largest lake
entirely within Ontario's boundaries. Its remoteness and limited
access points have kept the lake largely pristine. Nipigon rewards
those who make the effort to reach it, however, with a beautiful
land and water-scape of scattered islands, deep bays, black-sand
beaches and spectacular vistas from points such as Tchiatang
Bluff and the Pallisades.
Nipigon's extensive new protected areas will also be at the
heart of a system of waterway parks and protected corridors linking
the huge Wabakimi Wilderness Park to its north to the Lake Superior
shoreline to its south.
To the north, Nipigon will tie into a new extension of Wabakimi
that will protect important woodland caribou habitat around Mojikit
and Ogoki Lakes. (The islands of Lake Nipigon are also important
caribou calving sites.) To the south, waterway parks along the
Nipigon and Black Sturgeon river will complete the link to the
Superior Coast and the cliff-lined Gravel River.
An aquatic protection zone on Lake Nipigon will also help
to protect white pelicans and the lake's rich fisheries -- including
a world-class brook trout fishery.
MAP | PHOTOS
LAKE OF
THE WOODS
Provincial Park additions:
8,637 ha. New protected areas: 44,893 ha. Aquatic protection zone: 1,827 ha. Existing
Provincial Park: 10,588 ha.
Hundreds of islands along with peninsulas and shoreline areas
will add significant protection, particularly to the north end
of this large lake. The Lake of the Woods area has an interesting
mix of flora and fauna everything from classic Canadian
Shield boreal forest to prairie plants to southerly bur oak savannahs.
About 120 pairs of bald eagles nest on the lake and waterfowl
are plentiful. The lake is also estimated to support from 12,000
to 16,000 white pelicans, which can often be seen feeding in
shallow bays. Lake of the Woods is also culturally important
with many pictographs and petroglyphs.
Included are protected areas on the Aulneau Peninsula, well
known locally for its rich wildlife populations.
Lake of the Woods is located at the heart of a busy cottaging
area, and therefore protection will ensure that the Lake's natural
treasures are not destroyed by development.
MAP | PHOTOS
Proposed land use designations and enhanced
management areas apply only to Ontario Crown land. Where a proposed
land use designation or area appears to overlap private land,
Federal land, land with mining patents, leases, or claims, or
Indian Reserves, that portion of the site is not being considered
as a part of the designation.
For further details, check out these related pages:
-
First Nations & Communities,
which discusses the natural values and significant economic opportunities
for First Nations communities
-
Ontario Region Map, which gives an
overview of the three regions and some of their unique features
Main Page
> New Parks / Finishing
the System > Maps & Info / Boundary
Designations / Park Values / Lands
for Life Area / Far Northern
Boreal > Region &
Site Database / New Site Profiles > Science of Conservation > First Nations
Banner photograph by Andy Heics
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