Canada

Sackville

Date of accreditaion

2022.11.11

Total Area

70,500 ha

Sackville is a city located in southeastern New Brunswick, Canada, seeking to change the name to Tantramar after amalgamation 1 January 2023.
For years, locals have called the Sackville Waterfowl Park their community’s “crown jewel.” The 28-hectare oasis boasts kilometres of accessible trails and
boardwalks, provides habitat for 160 bird species, and offers residents and tourists alike with opportunities to immerse themselves in nature.
The park spawned the Tantramar Wetlands Centre, where hundreds of young people have gotten their feet wet through innovative wetlands education
programming. Not to mention, this picturesque wetland—along with the sprawling Tantramar Marshes that surround it—are helping protect the town from
the growing threats of floods caused by a changing climate.

Shepody Bay was designated as a Ramsar Site in 1987. The area is situated at the head of the Bay of Fundy, an area with the largest tidal range in the
world (up to 14 meters in Shepody Bay). Shepody Bay is a large tidal embayment surrounded by low, rolling upland. A narrow band of salt marsh occurs
along the western shore, whereas the eastern side is characterized by a rocky, eroding coastline with sand-gravel beaches. The northern limit of the Bay is
at the confluence of the Petitcodiac and Memramcook rivers.

The most striking feature of the wetlands here is the extensive intertidal mudflats on both sides of the Bay. At Grande Anse and at Daniel’s Flats they extend seaward for over 2 km at low tide. The flats consist of fine silts that have been built up over time through deposition from muddy tidal waters. These extensive areas and their associated invertebrate fauna are critical feeding grounds for migrant sandpipers and plovers during late summer and early autumn.
The particular policies that are in place came about by a direct collaborative effort of the former Town of Sackville with various conservation groups located in the area that have a vested interest in the Waterfowl Park and the surrounding Tantramar Marsh and other wetlands (groups such as The Canadian Wildlife Service and Ducks Unlimited Canada). The municipality itself controls the functioning and use of the Ramsar Site regarding maintenance, education, and continued conservation efforts.
The Waterfowl Park Advisory Board was created to help the municipality manage and properly use the Ramsar Site and the board is strategically comprised of members of key stakeholders in the area including, but not limited to: municipal staff, municipal council, The Canadian Wildlife Service, Ducks Unlimited, Birds Canada, Mount Allison University, the Tantramar Outdoor Club, NatureNB and other conservation and climate-oriented NGOs.
Most of the protected wetland areas within our municipal boundaries are controlled and maintained by government and non-government organizations with the exception of the Ramsar Site of the Waterfowl Park which is within the purview of the municipality with policies and process in place for its continued use and protection.
The municipality has a tourism manager that oversees the promotion and highlight of the Ramsar Site and its impact on the municipality and the surrounding area through internal consultation and key performance indicators (KPIs).
The municipality of Tantramar has a robust water and wastewater treatment facility and regularly works with other conservation groups on compiling water testing data in wetlands, lakes and water courses throughout the municipality.
The tourist information centre at the entrance to the Ramsar Site is used to educate and inform visitors both local and abroad about the Waterfowl Park, the surrounding wetlands and the importance of them in many aspects of our existence within the Bay of Fundy tidal system.
The Tantramar Wetlands Centre has been operating out of our local high school for 25 years offering a first of its kind education experience to school aged kids about the importance and continued conservation efforts of wetlands. Children from across Atlantic Canada and beyond get firsthand experience working and researching wetlands on the edges of the Ramsar Site within the municipality.

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