IBA |
Fraser Island Hudson Strait, Nunavut |
Site Summary |
NU024 |
Latitude Longitude |
63.475° N 78.482° W |
Elevation Size |
0 m 144.41 km² |
Habitats:
tundra, inlets/coastal features (marine), coastal cliffs/rocky shores (marine)
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Land Use:
Not Utilized (Natural Area)
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Potential or ongoing Threats:
Industrial pollution
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IBA Criteria: Continentally Significant: Congregatory Species |
Conservation status: |
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Site Description
Fraser Island is a small island located off the northwestern tip of Nottingham Island (at the western mouth of the Hudson Strait). Apart from the adjacent Nottingham Island, Fraser Island is completely surrounded by the open ocean. It is a rocky place with uneven terrain and only sparse vegetation. Neither Fraser Island nor Nottingham Island is inhabited and the closest community, Cape Dorset, is 120 kilometers to the northeast on Baffin Island.
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Birds
A large number of Common Eiders breed on this remote island. Although precise estimates are unavailable, it thought that between 1,000 and 3,000 pairs were present in the early 1980s (at least 1%, to as much as 3% of the borealis population). More recent surveys have not been completed. This is the northernmost of the eastern Common Eider subspecies; the other two, dresseri and sedentaria, breed along the Atlantic coast and the Hudson Bay and James Bay coasts respectively.
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IBA Criteria |
Species↓ T | A | I |
Links |
Date |
Season |
Number |
G |
C |
N |
Note: species shown in bold indicate that the maximum number exceeds at least one of the IBA thresholds (sub-regional, regional or global). The site may still not qualify for that level of IBA if the maximum number reflects an exceptional or historical occurrence.
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Conservation Issues
There are no known threats to the eider colony on Fraser Island. This is primarily due to the isolated nature of the island. It is likely that the nesting eiders will remain undisturbed unless significant changes in human activity occur within the region. Fraser Island was identified as a Key Migratory Bird Terrestrial Habitat site in the early 1990s.
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