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Home » Golden Mussels Prompt East Bay Boat Launch Closures

Golden Mussels Prompt East Bay Boat Launch Closures

by CLAYCORD.com
3 comments

Invasive mussel attached to infrastructure. Source: California Department of Fish and Wildlife

Tiny aquatic invaders have pulled the plug on this year’s boating season as a public utility agency serving the East Bay Area works to make sure they stay out of the drinking water. The East Bay Municipal Utility District, which provides drinking water for 1.4 million customers in Alameda and Contra Costa counties, announced that it will keep boat launches closed to private vessels for the 2025 season due to the spread of the golden mussel.

The ban is in place at all EBMUD reservoir recreation areas with boat launches: Pardee Reservoir and Camanche Reservoir North and South in the Sierra Foothills, and San Pablo Reservoir in the East Bay. It applies to private boats and other watercrafts, like kayaks and even paddleboards. The only exception is for boats with permanent slips for Camanche that were in the water or in dry storage when boat launches closed in November 2024. EBMUD spokesperson Andrea Pook said the decision was a preventative measure, as the agency does not currently have the invasive creatures in its water supplies.
“We’re working hard and making tough decisions to keep them from getting into our water supplies and into reservoir lakes that are fragile ecosystems,” Pook said, acknowledging that many boaters were disappointed by the news.

“Once they’re in a water body, they’re nearly impossible to remove,” she said. “At East Bay MUD, we consider ourselves a responsible water manager, and we can’t take the risk of getting these mussels into the drinking water supply for 1.4 million people.” No bigger than a fingertip, the invasive golden mussel first made its debut in the Delta in October 2024 after hitching a ride on a freighter from Asia that docked at the Port of Stockton. The California Department of Fish and Wildlife reported the Delta appearance to be the first known occurrence in North America. The Department continues to track the mussels’ presence, which at present is mainly in Delta communities from Antioch and eastward. “These mussels filter out plankton, and they filter out so much of the plankton that there’s not enough for our native fish,” she continued. In 2009, an EBMUD risk analysis determined that all EBMUD reservoirs were vulnerable to a golden mussel infestation. Pook said the study concluded that the temperature and calcium levels in local waters make it prime for the mussels to reproduce and thrive.

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“We’re still learning a lot about them but they are quite resilient and can live in a broader set of conditions than, say, zebra or quagga mussels,” she explained. EBMUD’s press release reported that the agency is working closely with state and federal agencies, research institutions and other water managers to track the spread, monitor boat traffic, test inspection practices and decontamination protocols, and prepare long-term plans in the event the mussel is introduced into the reservoirs. Asked whether EBMUD would reopen boat launches for the 2026 season, Pook said it’s difficult to predict. “There needs to be evidence that any contamination and quarantine and workflow kind of procedure with the boats is indeed going to work,” Pook said. “So we’re not quite there yet.” Pook urged anyone who thinks they have seen a golden mussel to report it to EBMUD at (866) 403-2683 or contact the California Department of Fish and Wildlife at invasives@wildlife.ca.gov or California Department of Water Resources at mussel@water.ca.gov.

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Every year I have to dish out $20 for a Zebra Mussel tag on my boat which supposedly goes to help eliminate Zebra Mussels…. not that I’ve ever seen any results.
I will not be surprised to see a new bill for a Golden Mussel tag arriving in my mail next.

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..the first step to closing down all lakes in CA for recreation, and achieving their goal of no power boat exhaust. You can’t even use a gas weed whacker here, do you think they’re going to make it OK to fire up your V8 wakeboat and plow around the lake all weekend?

Nope, this is just the first shot to get us all to swallow the mussel excuse. Won’t be long before the marinas go out of business and take the fuel docks with them.

Let me know when they ban birds carrying mussel larvae from landing on any lake they choose.

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The mussel problem was introduced to our waters from cargo ships.
Why should California boaters have to pay for the eradication efforts?
We didn’t create the problem.
Speaking of non native invasive creatures one of the most serious problems is the Nutrias digging into our levees.
The DF&W allows licensed hunters to shoot them, but there is a limit of 5 per day WTF? The state spends millions of dollars trying to eradicate these pests but they set a limit on how many we can shoot?
It’s madness!
There is no reason to leave any of them alive in California.

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