CA060
Squamish River Area


Country/territory: Canada

IBA criteria met: A4ii (2008)
For more information about IBA criteria, please click here

Area: 4,900 hectares (49.00 km2)

Birds Canada / Nature Canada

Site description (2001 baseline)
This site includes the rivers and shorelines of the Squamish, Mamquam and Cheakamus rivers, and is centred roughly on the village of Brackendale, which is located about 8 km north of Squamish, BC. The site includes the Squamish River upstream to the confluence with the Elaho River. The three rivers flow through narrow but relatively flat floodplains in deep mountain valleys. The surrounding mountains are of the granitic Coast Range, with the valley bottoms consisting of gravel outwash from rivers and glaciers. The rivers are lined with riparian stands of large cottonwood and adjacent forests of Western Redcedar, Western Hemlock, Douglas-fir and Red Alder. The Brackendale area is thinly built up with housing, while the BC Rail Line and Highway 99 (running from Vancouver to Whistler) run through the area. These rivers have an important winter run of Chum and Coho Salmon.

Key biodiversity
This area attracts large numbers of Bald Eagles from December through February, which feed on the spawning Coho and Chum Salmon. Peak numbers of eagles generally occur in mid-January, although this varies from year to year. Christmas Bird Counts usually occur before this peak, and single-day eagle counts often miss the peak as well, but it is likely that about 3,000 eagles are present at the annual peak period. This is about 3% of the global population. Single day counts have been as high as 3,700 (1994). This concentration of eagles is the largest in Canada, and along with to the Chilkat River, near Haines, Alaska has the largest concentrations of Bald Eagles in the world.

These rivers host other birds in winter, some of which are attracted to the salmon runs: American Dipper (approximately 100 birds), mergansers, goldeneyes and ravens. A small wintering population of Trumpeter Swans (30 to 50 birds of the Pacific population) uses the Squamish estuary. A pair of Peregrine Falcons also use the Squamish estuary as hunting grounds.


Recommended citation
BirdLife International (2024) Important Bird Area factsheet: Squamish River Area (Canada). Downloaded from https://datazone.birdlife.org/site/factsheet/squamish-river-area-iba-canada on 26/12/2024.