Special Marine Areas in Newfoundland and Labrador
The ocean surrounding Newfoundland and Labrador is rich in marine ecosystems that support marine life from the largest whales to the tiniest plankton, upon which generations of people and a cherished way of life has depended on. Our province boasts the Grand Banks, with some of the most important and productive marine ecosystem in the world. We are also known as the ‘Seabird Crossroads of the World’, hosting millions of migratory seabirds every year. We also have a burgeoning eco-tourism industry, centered partly around whale and bird watching experiences. Newfoundland and Labrador has a real chance to be ocean conservation leaders.
However, the continued declines in ocean health, including local fish populations, demonstrate that existing conservation measures are not enough to ensure the long-term survival of species and ecosystems upon which our coastal communities depend, especially in the face of a variety of human activities.
Click the button below to view the Special Marine Areas in Newfoundland and Labrador Guide, 2nd Edition, where with the help of scientists, governments, ENGOs, and community groups, have highlighted 140 special marine areas that include coastal sites, coral beds, bird colonies, fish spawning grounds, and migratory routes.
Priority Coastal Sites
Throughout the process of creating the Special Marine Areas of Newfoundland and Labrador, we have discovered there to be Coastal Areas which have high priority for the need of higher protection and management to sustain its ecosystem. These areas have high biological importance, high risk of current and future threats (natural and anthropogenic), highly unique, and other environmental characteristics.
Click on the tabs below to learn more about these areas!
- Bonavista Bay
- Hamilton Inlet
- Torngat Mountains
- Nain
- Fogo Shelf
- Witless Bay
- Placentia Bay / Cape St. Mary's
- Hermitage Bay
- Gros Morne
- St. George's Bay
- South Coast Fjords
Bonavista Bay
Bonavista Bay is a large exposed bay on the North Atlantic coast of Newfoundland. Due to the cold Labrador Current, icebergs are common in the summer. Bonavista Bay is within the Newfoundland Shelf region of Parks Canada’s National Marine Conservation Areas system.
Special Features
The coast around Bonavista Bay is irregular, comprising narrow bays, sounds, inlets, coves and islands, which provide ideal nesting locations for a number of birds. The area is highly productive due to the cold Labrador Current. Subtidal fauna, seabirds and marine mammals in Bonavista Bay are diverse and abundant. Bonavista Bay provides habitat for many species, and contains many spawning sites for cod, herring, capelin, and lumpfish. There are several seabird breeding colonies within the ecoregion, including Leach’s Storm-Petrel, Common and Arctic Terns, Black-legged kittiwake, Atlantic Puffin, and great Black-backed, Herring and Ring-billed gulls. Common Eiders nest in some parts of the ecoregion; however, their numbers were severely reduced due to hunting around the turn of the century, and are only now increasing slowly.
Within Bonavista Bay is Alexander Bay, which has been called the most ecologically unusual marine area in Terra Nova National Park due to unusually high water temperatures which provide habitat for species not normally found in Newfoundland and Labrador. For example, it contains seaweeds and invertebrates which, with the exception of Prince Edward Island, are normally only found South of Cape Cod. Parks Canada has identified the area from Cape Bonavista to North Head (Notre Dame Bay), and offshore to Funk Island as an Area of Interest, a preferred site for consideration as a possible National Marine Conservation Area in the Newfoundland Shelf region.
Protection
Terra Nova National Park makes up part of the terrestrial and coastal area of Bonavista Bay, but offers limited marine protection, and major capelin spawning beaches are outside the park boundary. There is a 2.1 km² Marine Protected Area (MPA) within Eastport which was created form the community up to protect their lobster stocks. Newman Sound is a Migratory Bird Sanctuary aimed at conserving migratory bird diversity by controlling human activities within important areas.
Threats
Over-fishing, causeways, gill nets causing seabird bycatch, and release of untreated waste into the ocean are all threats to marine diversity and health in Bonavista Bay. Areas of particular concern in Bonavista Bay include Cabot Island, South West Pond, Eastport and Newman Sound.