National Parks of Quebec

The National Parks of Quebec are protected areas created by the provincial government of Quebec in order to protect territories representative of natural regions of the province or sites of exceptional character while making them accessible to the public for educational purposes or extensive recreation. As of December 2013, there are 29 national parks in Quebec which protect an area of 37,444.91 kilometres (23,267.19 mi), or about 2.2% of the territory of the province.[1][2] Most of them are administered by the Société des établissements de plein air du Québec (Sépaq) with the exception of four parks administered by Nunavik Parks, and one park jointly administered by Parc Canada and Sépaq.

In Quebec, provincial government parks such as those of the federal government are called “national parks”.

History

The first national park in Quebec was created on 12. This is Parc de la Montagne-Tremblante, which is the third provincial park after Algonquin Park, which was created two years earlier.

In order to reinforce the protection in its parks and to respect the criteria of the International Union for the Conservation of Nature for protected areas, the government legislated in 1977 with the Parks Act.[3] This divided the parks into two categories: conservation parks, favoring the protection of the natural territory, and recreation parks, which allowed the installation of intensive recreation equipment.

It was from 1999 that the Société des établissements de plein air du Québec (Sépaq) was given the mandate to manage all the parks in Quebec. In 2001, the government changed the status of recreation and conservation parks to one status, that of national parks. The purpose of this change was to strengthen the conservation component of[3] parks.

Area

The size of Quebec's national parks varies depending on whether they are located in southern Quebec, which is densely populated, or in northern Quebec, which is very sparsely populated. Thus, the parks located in southern Quebec are generally small.

  1. 0 at 100 kilometres (62.14 mi): 11 parks
  2. 100 at 500 kilometres (310.69 mi): 8 parks
  3. 500 at 1,000 kilometres (621.37 mi): 3 parks
  4. 1000 at 10,000 kilometres (6,213.71 mi): 3 parks
  5. 10,000 kilometres (6,213.71 mi) and more: 1 park

Zoning

To meet the conservation objective, a zoning system has been put in place. One of the functions of zoning is to distinguish areas of great fragility and those with good support capacity. The zonings are:

  1. Reception and service area
  2. Ambience zone
  3. Preservation area
  4. Extreme preservation area

The 'welcome and service area' is, as the name suggests, usually where visitors enter the park. Restrictions on development are less severe than in other areas. This is why there is reception, campsites with services, play areas, sanitary blocks.

The “ambience zone” is the region of a park where it is possible to practice sports which allow the discovery of nature while having a low impact on the environment, such as hiking or snowshoeing. Generally, the facilities are smaller than in the service area.

The 'preservation zone' has a limited support and regeneration capacity and often shelters particular, rare or fragile plant and animal species. The use of the territory is reduced and strongly supervised. Apart from a belvedere, the amenities are non-existent.

The preservation zone extreme is prohibited to all traffic and development. To get there, you must have an authorization from the park director and have a scientific purpose. There are often rare species there that are sensitive to disturbance.

The protection of certain fragile or exceptional ecosystems is done through strict regulations. Logging, mining, petroleum and energy exploitation as well as hunting and trapping are strictly prohibited. On the other hand, the practice of outdoor sports such as mountain walking, snowshoeing, canoeing or biking are accepted and fall within the mandate of discovering the parks. Several other natural environment interpretation activities are offered and the many naturalist guides present are there to answer your questions. Since 1999, the management of the activities and services of these environments has been entrusted to the Société des établissements de plein air du Québec (SÉPAQ). In addition, the parks north of the 55th parallel are managed by the Kativik Regional Government.

In 2001, Quebec's parks became national parks. Even if many see it as a political connotation (many people see Quebec as a nation and not as a province) the designation 'national' indicates that the parks comply with standards established by the International Union for the Conservation of Nature (IUCN). According to IUCN, a national park is a protected area managed primarily for the protection of ecosystem and for recreational purposes.

List of national parks in Quebec

  Park that is part of a biosphere reserve
National park Image Area
km²
Constitution MRC Manager
Aiguebelle 268.30 1985 Abitibi-Ouest Regional County Municipality and Rouyn-Noranda Sépaq
Anticosti 571.80 2001 Minganie Regional County Municipality Sépaq
Bic 33.20 1984 Rimouski-Neigette Regional County Municipality Sépaq
Fjord-du-Saguenay 326.70 1983 Charlevoix-Est Regional County Municipality, La Haute-Côte-Nord Regional County Municipality and Le Fjord-du-Saguenay Regional County Municipality Sépaq
Frontenac 156.50 1987 Le Granit Regional County Municipality and Les Appalaches Regional County Municipality Sépaq
Gaspésie [4] 802.00 1981 La Haute-Gaspésie Regional County Municipality and Matane Regional County Municipality Sépaq
Grands-Jardins [5][6] 318.90 1981 Charlevoix Regional County Municipality Sépaq
Hautes-Gorges-de-la-Rivière-Malbaie [7] 224.90 2000 Charlevoix Regional County Municipality and Charlevoix-Est Regional County Municipality Sépaq
Île-Bonaventure-et-du-Rocher-Percé [8] 5.80 1985 Le Rocher-Percé Regional County Municipality Sépaq
Îles-de-Boucherville 8.14 1984 Longueuil Sépaq
Jacques-Cartier [6] 670.60 1981 La Jacques-Cartier Regional County Municipality and La Côte-de-Beaupré Regional County Municipality Sépaq
Kuururjuaq 4,460.80 2009 Kativik Nunavik Parks
Lac-Témiscouata 176.50 2009 Témiscouata Regional County Municipality Sépaq
Miguasha [9] 0.62 1985 Avignon Regional County Municipality Sépaq
Mont-Mégantic [10] 59.90 1994 Le Haut-Saint-François Regional County Municipality and Le Granit Regional County Municipality Sépaq
Mont-Orford 58.37 1979 Memphremagog Regional County Municipality Sépaq
Mont-Saint-Bruno 8.84 1985 Longueuil Sépaq
Mont-Tremblant 1,510.10 1981 Antoine-Labelle Regional County Municipality, Les Laurentides Regional County Municipality and Matawinie Regional County Municipality Sépaq
Monts-Valin 153.60 1996 Le Fjord-du-Saguenay Regional County Municipality Sépaq
Oka 23.70 1990 Deux-Montagnes Regional County Municipality Sépaq
Opémican 252.50 2013 Témiscamingue Regional County Municipality Sépaq
Pingualuit 1,133.90 2004 Kativik Nunavik Parks
Plaisance [11] 28.10 2002 Papineau Regional County Municipality Sépaq
Pointe-Taillon 97.50 1985 Lac-Saint-Jean-Est Regional County Municipality Sépaq
Tursujuq 26,121.00 2013 Kativik Nunavik Parks
Ulittaniujalik 5,293.00 2016 Kativik Nunavik Parks
Yamaska 13.40 1983 La Haute-Yamaska Regional County Municipality Sépaq
Saguenay-Saint-Laurent Marine Park [12] 1,246.00 1998 Charlevoix-Est Regional County Municipality, Kamouraska Regional County Municipality, La Haute-Côte-Nord Regional County Municipality, Le Fjord-du-Saguenay Regional County Municipality, Les Basques Regional County Municipality and Rivière-du-Loup Regional County Municipality Parks Canada and Sépaq

National park reserve

In addition to national parks, the ministry has also designated areas as national park reserves. These territories, although they are protected areas, do not have the same legal protection as that of the parks.[13] These territories are exclusively in Nunavik, the department prefers the status of biodiversity reserve for the other regions of Quebec.

National park reserve Area
km²
Storage MRC
Assinica 3,193.00 2011 Jamésie
Baie-aux-Feuilles 3,868.10 2008 Kativik
Collines-Ondulées 1,659.50 2008 Kativik
Iluiliq 1,263.00 Kativik
Monts-de-Puvirnituq 3,159.00 Kativik

National park projects

Research will be carried out with a view to acquiring knowledge concerning two other projects in Nunavik, namely:

The creation of two parks is also being considered in boreal forest, in partnership with the Cree. These are national park projects:

  • Nibiischii (formerly titled Albanel-Témiscamie-Otish),
  • Assinica.

The Ministère de l'Environnement et de la Lutte contre les changements climatiques (Ministry of Sustainable Development, Environment and Parks of Quebec) has also undertaken preliminary studies concerning other national park projects:

Public consultations were also held for the expansion of Mont-Orford National Park and Pointe-Taillon National Park.

See also

Notes and references

  1. "Existing parks in Quebec". Ministry of Sustainable Development, Environment, Wildlife and Parks. Retrieved December 19, 2013.
  2. On an area of Quebec established at 1,667,441 kilometres (1,036,099.80 mi)
  3. "The Parks Actes". Ministry of Sustainable Development, Environment and Parks. Retrieved August 28, 2009.
  4. Is included in the IBA Monts Chic-Chocs
  5. Central area of the Charlevoix Biosphere Reserve and is part of the ZICO Charlevoix
  6. Park created following the split of Laurentides Wildlife Reserve
  7. Central area of the Charlevoix Biosphere Reserve
  8. Includes the Île Bonaventure IBA and straddles the Île-Bonaventure-et-du-Rocher-Percé National Park
  9. Site of World Heritage of Miguasha National Park
  10. Includes ZICO Mont Mégantic
  11. Includes the ZICO Réserve faunique de Plaisance
  12. Partly overlaps Charlevoix Biosphere Reserve
  13. Ministry of Sustainable Development, Environment and Parks. "National park reserves". Retrieved October 8, 2008.

Further reading

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