Nature Conservancy of Canada buys ‘pristine’ area on north shore of Lake Superior
The Nature Conservancy of Canada says it has purchased more than 1,000 hectares of property on the north shore of Lake Superior that is crucial to species such as bald eagles and peregrine falcons.
It says the Big Trout Bay area is one of the last privately owned, undeveloped shorelines between Thunder Bay, Ont., and Duluth, Minn.
The property is composed mostly of coastal boreal forest, which nearly half of Canada’s bird species rely on to complete their life cycle.
The NCC says it also includes 21 kilometres of “pristine” shoreline with cliffs, stretches of open bedrock, and rugged cobble beach, which provide habitat for species such as bird’s-eye primrose, lake trout, and moose.


