IBA Cap d'Espoir
Cap d'Espoir, Québec
Site Summary
QC035 Latitude
Longitude
48.404° N
64.298° W
Elevation
Size
0 - 15 m
55.24 km²
Habitats:
open sea, coastal cliffs/rocky shores (marine)
Land Use:
Nature conservation and research, Tourism/recreation
Potential or ongoing Threats:
Disturbance, Urban/industrial development
IBA Criteria: Globally Significant: Congregatory Species, Waterfowl Concentrations, Continentally Significant: Congregatory Species
Conservation status: Zone d'Intervention Prioritaire - Quebec (Priority Intervention Zone)
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Site Description
Cap d' Espoir is situated at the east end of the Gaspé Peninsula, on the Gulf of St Lawrence, 4 km east of the village of Sainte-Thérèse-de-Gaspé. Cap d'Espoir is a rounded point with 15 m high cliffs sharply falling to the sea. However, at low tide, there are a few places where gravel and rock outcrops are exposed. The area is mainly used for agriculture and is privately owned; grasses cover most of the area right up the edge of the cliffs. There is a side road that leads to lighthouse at the end of the tip. This area also includes a freshwater marsh, some woods and shrublands. Marine waters are not deep in this area with an off-shore shoal.
Birds
Marine birds in both the summer and winter constitute the main birds of interest at Cap d'Espoir. In winter, tens of thousands of Oldsqaw use the waters off the Cape; in 1992 a high of over 60,000 was estimated. This represents about 2% of the North American population of the species. Also present in winter is a significant portion of the eastern population of Barrow's Goldeneye – in 1985, 57 birds or about 2% of this population were seen. A few of the nationally endangered Harlequin Duck (eastern population) are seen here in the same season.

In the summer, the cliffs hold seven species of cliff-nesting seabirds: Double-crested Cormorants, Great Cormorants (a new nester), Great Black-backed Gulls, Herring Gulls, Black-legged Kittiwakes, Black Guillemots and Razorbills. Most numerous are the Black-legged Kittiwake. In 1989, the year of the most recent survey, 4492 pairs of kittiwake occupied the cliffs of Cap d' Espoir, representing about 2% of the western Atlantic population. If a five-year average of the most recent counts is calculated (in this case including surveys as early as 1974), then the average of 2249 pairs represents just under 1% of the, generally increasing, western Atlantic population.

In spring migration, up to 5000 Common Murres have been seen, as have hundreds of scoters (all three species) and eiders which flock together off the point. The site is also frequented regularly by individual Peregrine Falcons and Short-eared Owls in the spring. Both species are listed by the Committee on the Status of Endangered Wildlife in Canada, as threatened and vulnerable respectively.




IBA Criteria
SpeciesT | A | I Links Date Season Number G C N
Barrow's Goldeneye 2015 - 2018 SP 65 - 120
Barrow's Goldeneye 1985 - 2020 WI 37 - 135
Black Scoter 2015 - 2017 SP 4,100 - 11,604
Black Scoter 2018 SU 4,000
Dovekie 2000 - 2019 FA 8 - 2,475
Dovekie 2003 - 2018 WI 10 - 2,900
Long-tailed Duck 1992 SP 8,000
Long-tailed Duck 1992 SU 60,000
Long-tailed Duck 1980 WI 37,000
Northern Gannet 2016 - 2020 FA 1,500 - 3,500
Northern Gannet 1981 - 2020 SP 2,000 - 3,000
Northern Gannet 2001 - 2019 SU 1,400 - 5,000
Razorbill 2015 - 2016 FA 600 - 1,400
Razorbill 1981 SP 5,000
Razorbill 2018 SU 700
Razorbill 2017 WI 960
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.
 
Conservation Issues
If more houses are built on top of the Cap d' Espoir, in addition to the one house currently present, the risk of disturbance to the colonies will increase, especially as the site is already visited by ecotourists in summer.

This site is part of the Baie des Chaleurs "Zone d' Intervention Prioritaire” (Priority Intervention Area), and World Wildlife Fund and the UQCN (Quebec Union for the Conservation of Nature) recognised that this site had conservation interest by designating it a Natural Site Without Legal Status.

Fish Habitat
This region is typified by a mosaic of habitats which host a wide range of marine and migratory species. The barachois, the eelgrass beds and the river's estuaries are key habitats for many species of fish and shellfish such as sticklebacks, winter flounder and soft-shell clam. At sea, the Atlantic mackerel, the Atlantic herring, the rainbow smelt, the American lobster, the snow crab, the common crab and the scallop are harvested commercially. At the beginning of the summer, capelin is rolling on the beaches to spawn. The presence of several salmon rivers in the area attracts many anglers. These rivers are also home to brook trout and American eel.

The major pressures on the ichthyofauna are overfishing and destruction of fish habitat, such as the draining of wetlands and the modification of the shoreline (erosion, riprap). Forestry is also a threat because it causes significant alterations in the rivers of the area, such as increasing the sediment load, the modification of both water flow and water temperature.

Major species present:
American eel
American sand lance
Atlantic herring
Atlantic mackerel
Atlantic salmon
Atlantic sea scallop
Atlantic tomcod
Blue mussel
Brook trout
Capelin
Commun crab
Iceland scallop
Mummichog
Rainbow smelt
Soft-shell clam
Stickleback
Winter flounder
Witch flounder


The IBA Program is an international conservation initiative coordinated by BirdLife International. The Canadian co-partners for the IBA Program are Birds Canada and Nature Canada.
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