Causapscal River

Causapscal River

Salmon fishers at Les Fourches stream pool at the junction of the Matapedia and Causapscal Rivers
Basin
River mouth Matapedia River
48°21′12″N 67°13′22″W / 48.35333°N 67.22278°W / 48.35333; -67.22278Coordinates: 48°21′12″N 67°13′22″W / 48.35333°N 67.22278°W / 48.35333; -67.22278[1]
Physical characteristics
Length 60.9 km (37.8 mi)

The Causapscal River (/kzɑːpskæl/) is a waterway of 61.0 kilometres (37.9 mi) located in the Matapedia Valley, in La Matapédia Regional County Municipality, in administrative regions of Bas-Saint-Laurent and Gaspésie-Îles-de-la-Madeleine, in Quebec, Canada. It is a tributary to the Matapedia River; where these two meet is called Les Fourches stream pool.

The Causapscal River flows through the following townships successively:

This river of the Matapédia Valley empties into the east bank of the Matapédia River, in the city of Causapscal, at the level of "Les Fourches" salmon pit.

Geography

The Causapscal River rises in the Dunière Wildlife Sanctuary, bordering the cantons of Catalonia (township) and La Verendrye (township). This source is located in the Chic-Choc Mountains (part of the Notre Dame Mountains).

This source is located in the La Verendrye (township):

From its source, the course of the Causapscal River flows 73.4 kilometres (45.6 mi) divided into the following segments:

Upper courses of the river (segment of 43.6 kilometres (27.1 mi))

Lower course of the river (segment of 29.8 kilometres (18.5 mi))

This confluence is located:

Fish and wildlife

The Causapscal River is famous for salmon sport fishing by wading and/or by canoe. The river has 31 kilometres (19 mi) open to fishing, divided into 25 salmon pits in two fishing quota sectors.[3]

The Causapscal River contains large Atlantic salmon specimens that can weigh up to 55 pounds (25 kg).[4] According to GRRMP, between 450 and 600 salmon go up the river annually.[4] The river is divided in two sectors for fishing quotas. The first contains 11 pits and extends 11 kilometres (6.8 mi). The second sector contains 14 pits and extends 20 kilometres (12 mi). There can be four poles each day in each sector.[4] Access rights are drawn.

Salmon pits Municipality
Sector 1
2nd Mille Causapscal
3rd Mille Causapscal
4th Mille Causapscal
Bas Jumeau (Lower Twin) Causapscal
Jumeau Causapscal
Des Aulnes Causapscal
Du Vieux Camp Causapscal
De la Grande Grève Causapscal
De l'Île du 7e Mille Causapscal
Du Pont du Huit-Mille Causapscal
De l'Île du 7e Mille Causapscal
Sector 2
De la Dernière Chance (From Last Chance) Causapscal
Du Grand Remous Causapscal
Neese Causapscal
Potvin Lac-Casault
Florence Lac-Casault
Castonguay Lac-Casault
Du 11e Mille Lac-Casault
Du Bateau Lac-Casault
Des Chutes Lac-Casault
White Horse Lac-Casault
Du Pont des Falls Lac-Casault
Du Camp Draveurs Lac-Casault
Bas Martel Lac-Casault
Martel Lac-Casault

Toponymy

The term Causapscal is related to a dozen toponyms in the Matapedia Valley.

The toponym "Causapscal River" was officialized on December 5, 1968 by Commission de toponymie du Québec (Quebec Place Names Board).[5]

References

  1. Reference number 11597 of the Commission de toponymie du Québec (French)
  2. Segments of the river measured from the Atlas of Canada (posted on the Internet), Ministry of Natural Resources Canada.
  3. Salmon Quebec - Causapscal River - Regulation on sportive fishing
  4. 1 2 3 "Causapscal River". the Rivers Management Corporation Matapedia and Patapédia (GRRMP). Retrieved August 8, 2009.
  5. Commission de toponymie du Québec (Quebec Place Names Board) - Bank of place names - Toponym: "Causapscal River"

See also

Media related to Category:Causapscal, River at Wikimedia Commons

Catégorie:Cours d'eau du Bas-Saint-Laurent

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 8/4/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.