Bras d'Or Lake Biosphere Region


The Bras d'Or Lake Biosphere is a UNESCO Biosphere located at Bras d'Or Lake, Cape Breton Island, Nova Scotia, Canada. It consists of a salt-water estuary watershed 'inland sea' with three passages to the Atlantic Ocean. The Holocene transgression flooded a complex river-lake system of diverse geology, creating the small, deep inland sea with 12 significant watersheds draining both highlands and lowlands.
The terrestrial, marine and coastal habitats provide a home for human populations, as well as other organisms. The original settlers colonized the region following the retreat of glaciers, and today their descendants make up the five Mi'kmaq populations that account for a significant proportion of the population occupying large areas of the watershed.

Area

The biosphere's surface area is. The core area is, surrounded by buffer zone of and transition area of.

Bras d'Or Lake Biosphere Region Association

The Bras d’Or Lake Biosphere Region Association is a group of volunteers who worked to have the Bras d’Or Lake and its watershed designated as a UNESCO Man and the Biosphere Region. The association works with other local organizations already focusing on conservation, sustainable development, and capacity building in their programs. The association is a registered society in the province of Nova Scotia, granted status as a Registered Charity under the Income Tax Act by the Canada Revenue Agency.
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Ecological characteristics

The Bras d'Or Lake is an estuarine system located in the middle of Cape Breton Island. Cape Breton is a rugged and irregularly shaped island covering about. It lies northeast of mainland Nova Scotia, and is joined to the mainland by a causeway constructed in 1955. Differential erosion has resulted in steep hills around the lake and peninsulas within it, which divide the estuarine ecosystem into five long, deep channels in the north half of the lake and a number of bays in the south. Along the west side of the watershed, steep hills rise abruptly to highland plateaus at elevations of.
Extensive wetland and bog deposits occur in the upper reaches of the watershed, specifically in the Cape Breton Highlands, the Boisdale Hills and the East Bay Hills. Large wetlands in the highland portions of the Middle River and Baddeck River serve to store and release water slowly to these major sub-watersheds within the Bras d'Or Lake.
The most common fish of the boreal group found in the area are cod, white hake and winter skate. Representatives of the Arctic-boreal group include alligatorfish and daubed shanny.

Socio-economic characteristics

Indigenous First Nations populations living within the biosphere reserve form part of Mi'kmaq communities, with the majority living in four official reserves: We'koqmaq (Whycocomagh), Wagmatcook, Eskasoni and Potlotek. The fifth reserve, Malagawatch, is also situated within the biosphere region's area. A sixth reserve, Membertou, is located near Sydney, just outside the biosphere region, but is closely associated with indigenous communities within the biosphere region.
The majority of employment in the biosphere is linked to the tertiary service industry, although fishing, resource extraction, trading and research related to natural resources also take place.