Temporary ban on watercraft with sealed
internal water ballast tanks
YELLOWSTONE NATIONAL PARK
Yellowstone National Park encourages the public to get ready for boating and fishing season, which begins May 25. Boaters and anglers should clean, drain and dry all equipment prior to arriving in the park to minimize the risk of introducing aquatic invasive (AIS) species into Yellowstone’s waters.
New this
year, there will be a temporary ban of watercraft equipped with sealed internal
ballast tanks on all park waters. These tanks can be filled with water to
produce specific wakes for waterskiing and wakeboarding, and neither activity
is allowed in the park.
“Boats with
sealed internal water ballast tanks are extremely difficult to clean and drain,
even with our rigorous inspection and decontamination efforts,” said Sue Mills,
AIS Coordinator at Yellowstone. “While fewer than two dozen of these boats
entered the park last year, we believe the ban is prudent because they pose a
high risk of AIS transmission into park waters.”
The regular clean, drain and dry requirements and this temporary boat ban are necessary steps to protect the park and waterways in the states of Montana, Wyoming and Idaho. AIS pose a grave and growing threat to the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem and surrounding economies, and can quickly and drastically alter habitats and food webs, causing permanent declines in sport fish and food resources for native wildlife.
Dreissenid
mussels have caused irreversible changes to waterways in the Midwestern and Eastern
United States and in the Colorado River drainage including Lake Mead and Lake
Powell. If non-native mussels are found in Yellowstone, park waters may close
to all watercraft to prevent the spread to other waterways.
The park
will continue to gather data for an AIS Management Plan and Rapid Response
Framework in collaboration with the surrounding states. Scientists and managers
at Yellowstone will revisit the need for the boat ban at the end of the 2019
season.
Read more about boating, fishing, and aquatic invasive species on the park’s website at nps.gov/yell.