| Location | Canada, Québec |
| Central coordinates | 66o 22.97' West 50o 5.06' North |
| IBA criteria | A4i |
| Area | 1,700 ha |
| Altitude | 0 - 59m |
| Year of IBA assessment | 2008 |
Ornithological information An impressive number of colonial waterbirds use Île du Corossol in the breeding season. Three of these waterbirds, all larids, breed on the island in significant numbers. An average of 3,611 pairs of Herring Gull bred here between 1985 and 1998; the maximum colony size was 7,254 pairs in 1985. The average corresponds to about 3% of the North American Herring Gull population. About 1% of the North American population of Great Black-backed Gulls nests here. An average of 464 pairs nest here (1985-1998 average). The colony of Black-legged Kittiwakes is continentally significant. The three-survey average for this species is 2892 pairs - over 4,000 pairs were present in 1985 and 1988. The average represents about 1% of the Atlantic population.
The Double-crested Cormorant nests in close to continentally significant numbers, with just under 1% (or about 900 nests) of the Atlantic population nesting here.
Other breeding seabirds on Île du Corossol are: Black Guillemot (223 birds), Common Eider (581 pairs), Razorbill (815 birds), Common Murre (316 birds), and Leach’s Storm-Petrel (718 birds). Data is from the most recent survey in 1998. The Atlantic Puffin and Great Blue Heron appeared here recently, with puffins first noted during the 1996 surveys, and herons in 1998. The total number of all nesting seabirds was approximately 12,700 individuals in 1993, with a density of approximately 112 pairs per ha, and about 10,500 birds in 1998.
Site description Île du Corossol is located 10 km off the north shore of the Gulf of St. Lawrence, in the bay of Sept-Iles, Québec. Corossol Island is one of several islands in the Sept-Iles Archipelago. The IBA site includes the islets, rocks and water within a 500 metre limit around the island, except in the vicinity of Manowin Island where the limit is midway between the two islands. The island is overall rocky and steep, with three intermittent streams and, being part of the Canadian shield, is underlain by granitic-gneiss bedrock. The vegetation consists mainly of white birch/white spruce mixed forests, which occupy low-lying areas and cover up to 80% of the land area. The remaining habitats consist of shrubs and peat bog. Scrub birch, Serviceberry and Balsam Fir were once harvested in the boggy depressions of the island. There is a lighthouse and a lighthouse keeper’s residence and several other small buildings on the island.
| Species | Season | Period | Population estimate | Quality of estimate | IBA Criteria | IUCN Category |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Great Black-backed Gull Larus marinus | breeding | 1998 | 562 breeding pairs | - | Least Concern | |
| Herring Gull Larus argentatus | breeding | 1985-1998 | 3,611 breeding pairs | unknown | A4i | Least Concern |
| Razorbill Alca torda | breeding | 1998 | 815 individuals | - | Least Concern | |
| A4iii Species group - waterbirds | unknown | - | unknown individuals | poor |
| IUCN habitat | Habitat detail | Extent (% of site) |
|---|---|---|
| Forest | Temperate mixed woods | 8% |
| Shrubland | Scrub | 2% |
| Sea | Open sea | 86% |
| Coastline | Sea cliffs and rocky shores | 3% |
| Other | 1% |
| Land-use | Extent (% of site) |
|---|---|
| nature conservation and research | major |
| tourism/recreation | major |
Conservation response Maritime traffic associated with the Sept-Iles harbour increases the likelihood of an oil spill. Increases in the number of tourists to the area could lead to the excessive disturbance of nesting waterbirds.
The site has been designated a Migratory Bird Sanctuary which has strict regulations that include not allowing anyone to disturb, destroy or take the nests of migratory birds. The site is also within a Priority Intervention Zone and the Archipel des Sept-Iles regional park.
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Recommended citation BirdLife International (2013) Important Bird Areas factsheet: Corossol Island. Downloaded from http://www.birdlife.org on 20/06/2013
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