The Telegram (St. John's)

Nature Conservanc­y of Canada acquires coastal lands in southern Nova Scotia

- BY MICHAEL MACDONALD

Aconservat­ion group has acquired a large, white sand beach on Nova Scotia’s south shore that offers habitat for the endangered piping plover and other shorebirds.

The Nature Conservanc­y of Canada announced Monday that it spent over $530,000 to obtain the 69-hectare parcel of land known as Sandy Bay. Much of the money came from the federal and provincial government­s, as well as two private donors.

The beach and adjacent wetlands and forest — described by the group as a publicly accessible showcase property — are at the tip of the Port Joli peninsula, south of Thomas Raddall Provincial Park.

Linda Stephenson, the group’s Atlantic vice-president, said the beach is an ecological gem.

“Over that spectacula­rly white sand beach there are endangered piping plovers, and they are hatching their young there, and they’re surrounded by other shorebirds,” Stephenson said in an interview.

“Behind it there’s a beautiful coast forest and everything is just amazingly green today.”

The forest surrounds a network of ponds and wetlands that offer sanctuary to black ducks, redbreaste­d mergansers and longtailed ducks.

As well, the Port Joli area was a gathering place in the summer for the Mi’kmaq people before Europeans arrived. Mi’kmaq artifacts have been found in the area.

Even though the conservati­on group is thrilled with its recent acquisitio­n, Stephenson said coastal areas across Atlantic Canada remain at risk.

The problem is particular­ly acute in Nova Scotia, where about 24 per cent of the land mass is Crown land, but very little of it is located along the province’s 9,000 kilometres of coastline.

Stephenson said it’s difficult for conservati­on groups to acquire large tracts of land because ownership of the rugged coastline is often fractured by small, private plots and cottages.

As for Sandy Bay, it is now part of a much larger protected area that includes the provincial park and a nearby federal bird sanctuary.

The land was obtained from three families that donated portions of a property their parents purchased a generation ago to protect it from developmen­t.

“The site is beautiful, inspiring, accessible to the public and we are thrilled to now be the trusted stewards of this amazing piece of land,” Craig Smith, the group’s program manager for Nova Scotia, said in a statement.

The beach will remain open to the public, but it may be roped off at times to protect piping plover nests. Of the 6,000 piping plovers left in the world, only about 400 live in Atlantic Canada.

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 ?? — Photo by The Canadian Press ?? The Nature Conservanc­y of Canada acquired a pristine white beach on Nova Scotia’s south shore that hosts the endangered piping plover.
— Photo by The Canadian Press The Nature Conservanc­y of Canada acquired a pristine white beach on Nova Scotia’s south shore that hosts the endangered piping plover.
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