L’océan, l’eau douce et nous

Nirjutiqarvik National Wildlife Area

https://canadaoceanmap.ca/wp-content/uploads/2025/05/Nirjutiqarvik-23298697-Black-legged_Kittiwake_and_Chicks.jpg
Rick Dobson/Can Geo Photo Club
Emplacement: Located in eastern Jones Sound approximately 20 km off the southern tip of Ellesmere Island in Nunavut.
Superficie approximative: 144,236 hectares
Date de désignation: 1995
Objectifs de conservation

To protect a variety of seabirds and marine mammals.

Interdictions

Access to Nirjtuqarvik by anyone other than Inuit enrolled under the Nunavut Agreement is restricted, and any non-Nunavut Inuit must obtain a permit to enter the area. 

Pourquoi (contexte environnemental pour la protection)

Nirjtuqarvik’s coastal cliffs offer ideal nesting habitat for approximately 385,000 seabirds, including 11 per cent and 16 per cent of the Canadian breeding populations of thick-billed murres and black-legged kittiwakes. Other bird species include Atlantic puffins, glaucous gulls and common eiders. Its marine waters provide feeding grounds for many mammals, including polar bears, walrus, and belugas. The plentiful wildlife make it an important place for Inuit from the closest community, Grise Fiord (approximately 100 km away), who harvest much of their food from the sea. Nirjutiqarvik is an Inuktitut word meaning “the place of animals.”