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Covering 1,781 square kilometers, the "zec de la Rivière-aux-Rats" is the third greatest zec in Quebec in term of area and the largest in the administrative region of Saguenay-Lac-Saint-Jean. The southern boundary of the ZEC is located about 30 km north of Dolbeau-Mistassini. ZEC has a forested road network of 640 kilometers.
Wildlife reserves are public hunting and fishing grounds dedicated to the conservation, development and use of wildlife as well as, incidentally, the practice of recreational activities. There are currently has 21 wildlife reserves in Quebec covering a territory of 66,886 kilometres (41,561.03 mi) and 524 kilometres (326 mi) of salmon rivers. [30]
The hunting is on the ZEC depending the periods, hunting gear used, the sex of animals slaughtered (original) for the following species: moose, black bear, white-tailed deer and hare. Fishing is subject to quotas in the ZEC in terms of limit and possession for the following species: brook trout , lake trout , moulac , perch , Muskie, pike ...
ZECs fill a much larger economic place than fishing and hunting clubs did as they also promote all types of recreational and tourism activities such as hiking, canoeing, canoe-camping, mountain-biking, rock-climbing, vacationing and cottage rental, camping, wildlife/nature observation, wild berry picking, etc. They are open to all recreational ...
La Vérendrye wildlife reserve is one of the largest reserves in the province of Quebec, Canada, covering 12,589 square kilometres (4,861 sq mi) [1] of contiguous land and lake area (Assinica wildlife reserve is the largest in the province, but its territory is broken up in four non-contiguous parts).
The Mastigouche Wildlife Reserve is a Quebec Wildlife Reserve located in the administrative regions of the Mauricie and Lanaudière, Quebec, in Canada.Comprising 1556 square kilometres, it includes 417 lakes and 13 rivers. [2]
Map of Trans-Taiga Road in Quebec The Trans-Taiga Road ( French : Route Transtaïga ) is an extremely remote wilderness road in northern Quebec , Canada . It is 582 kilometres (362 mi) long to Centrale Brisay and another 84 kilometres (52 mi) along the Caniapiscau Reservoir , all of it unpaved.
The tree line, beyond which black spruce, white spruce and tamarack no longer grow, is the boundary between the boreal zone and the Arctic zone. The Low Arctic sub-zone, the only Arctic sub-zone in Quebec, has no trees, continuous permafrost and tundra vegetation. This includes shrubs, herbaceous plants, typically graminoids, mosses and lichens ...