Ontario Parks has designated the area as the Lake Nipigon Basin Signature Site, because of its remarkable range of natural and recreational values. The site includes many provincial parks, conservation reserves, and enhanced management areas around the lake and within its watershed. Protected areas on or at Lake Nipigon include: •
Lake Nipigon Provincial Park - located on the east side of Lake Nipigon. In 1999, the park boundary was amended to reduce the park area from . The area removed from the park was deregulated and transferred to the
Government of Canada for a reserve for the
Sand Point First Nation. • Lake Nipigon Conservation Reserve - reserve, created in 2003, that includes all Crown islands and most of the shoreline of Lake Nipigon. •
Black Sturgeon River Provincial Park - includes the southern-most end of Black Sturgeon Bay of Lake Nipigon. • Kabitotikwia River Provincial Park - nature reserve at Gull Bay, created in 1985, protecting the wetlands at the mouth of the Kabitotikwia River. •
Kopka River Provincial Park - includes the entire shore of and the islands in Wabinosh Bay, on the lake's western shore. • Livingstone Point Provincial Park - nature reserve, created in 1985, protecting regionally rare arctic and alpine plants on a peninsula off the lake's eastern shore. • West Bay Provincial Park - nature reserve, created in 1985, protecting geological features on the north shore of the namesake bay. • Windigo Bay Provincial Park - nature reserve, created in 1989, protecting a migration corridor and wintering sites for woodland caribou on the north shore of the lake, west of the namesake bay. Other protected areas within the lake's basin: • Garden Pakashkan Conservation Reserve - includes the Mooseland River (a tributary of the Gull River), its headwaters, Garden Lake, and Mooseland Lake. The reserve, established in 2004, protects extremely rugged terrain and canyons in a remote area. The headwaters of the
Brightsand River are part of the reserve. •
Gull River Provincial Park - protecting the
Gull River, a tributary to Lake Nipigon. •
Obonga–Ottertooth Provincial Park - waterway park that includes a system of lakes and rivers from Obonga Lake in the east to Kashishibog Lake in the west. • Kaiashk Provincial Park - nature reserve, established in 1989, protecting
post-glacial features such as a
kame knoll,
outwash plain, and
troughs. • Nipigon Palisades Conservation Reserve - reserve, established in 2003, protecting a prominent geological canyon / ravine and
tablelands. It also includes a major moose migration corridor (Cash Creek). • Ottertooth Conservation Reserve - reserve, established in 2003, protecting provincially-significant and unique geological features related to a spillway of glacial
Lake Agassiz. • Pantagruel Creek Provincial Park - nature reserve, established in 1989, protecting Pantagruel Creek that formed part of the spillway of glacial
Lake Agassiz. •
Whitesand Provincial Park - waterway park, established in 2003, includes a system of lakes and rivers that links
Wabakimi Provincial Park, Windigo Bay Provincial Park, and Lake Nipigon. == References ==