Watshishou Migratory Bird Sanctuary (English Wikipedia)

Analysis of information sources in references of the Wikipedia article "Watshishou Migratory Bird Sanctuary" in English language version.

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canada.ca

  • "Watshishou migratory bird sanctuary". Government of Canada. Environment and natural resources. 3 April 2024. Retrieved 1 July 2024. Double-crested cormorant, great black-backed gull, ring-billed gull, common tern, arctic tern, black guillemot, common loon, American black duck, red-breasted merganser, white-winged scoter, surf scoter, black scoter, semipalmated sandpiper and ruddy turnstone
  • "Migratory bird sanctuaries across Canada - Quebec". Gouvernement of Canada. Environment and natural resources. 3 April 2024. Retrieved 1 July 2024. The Watshishou Migratory Bird Sanctuary, located in Minganie, on the north shore of the Gulf of St. Lawrence, was established in 1925 to protect seabird colonies in this important nesting area.

canadianfieldnaturalist.ca

doi.org

gouv.qc.ca

toponymie.gouv.qc.ca

  • "Baie-Ponbriand lookout, rest area". Quebec Gouvernement (in French). Commission de Toponymy Quebec. 31 March 1994. Retrieved 5 July 2024. Belvédère de la Baie-Pontbriand
  • "Jalobert Bay - toponymy". Quebec Gouvernement (in French). Commission de Toponymy Quebec. 5 December 1968. Retrieved 1 July 2024. Its name recalls the memory of Macé Jalobert, brother-in-law of Jacques Cartier, who accompanied the latter during his voyage of 1535-1536, as pilot and captain of the Petite Hermine.
  • "Pontbriand Bay - Toponymy". Gouvernement of Quebec (in French). Commission Toponymy Quebec. 5 December 1968. Retrieved 4 July 2024. Recalls the memory of Claude de Pontbriand, son of the lord of Montcevelles and cupbearer of the Dauphin, member of Jacques Cartier's crew during his second voyage to Canada, in 1535

harvard.edu

ui.adsabs.harvard.edu

ibacanada.ca

ibacanada.org

sciencedirect.com

wikipedia.org

en.wikipedia.org

  • "Pontbriand River - toponymy". Quebec Gouvernement (in French). Commission de Toponymy Quebec. 13 June 1997. Retrieved 1 July 2024. It receives the waters of Lake Caron and flows into Pontbriand Bay, hence its name.

worldcat.org

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