Grebe Lake Explained

Grebe Lake
Coords:44.7508°N -110.5586°W[1]
Basin Countries:United States
Length:0.75miles
Width:0.75miles
Area:156acres
Elevation:8023feet
Pushpin Map:Wyoming#USA
Pushpin Map Alt:Location of Grebe Lake in Wyoming, USA.

Grebe Lake is a 156acres backcountry lake in Yellowstone National Park most noted for its population of Arctic grayling. Grebe Lake comprises the headwaters of the Gibbon River. Grebe Lake is located approximately 3.1miles north of the Norris-Canyon section of the Grand Loop Road. The trail to the lake passes through mostly level Lodgepole Pine forest and open meadows. The lake was named by J.P. Iddings, a geologist with the Arnold Hague geologic surveys.[2] There are four backcountry campsites located on the lake.[3]

Arctic grayling

In 1921, U.S. Fish Commission personnel stocked Grebe Lake, at that time fishless, with the Montana strain Thymallus arcticus montanus of a lacustrine form of Arctic Grayling. The original stocks came from Georgetown Lake near Anaconda, Montana. The fluvial form of Arctic Grayling was native to the Madison and Gibbon Rivers below Gibbon Falls. In an effort to re-establish grayling in western states, over 72 million grayling eggs were harvested from Grebe Lake between 1931 and 1956 and distributed to hatcheries. Most lake dwelling grayling in the west today can be genetically traced to the Grebe Lake stocks.[4] [5] Grebe Lake was closed to fishing until 1944 because of the fish culture operations at the lake. Wolf Lake 2miles west and Cascade Lake 3miles east also contain grayling.

Angling

Grebe Lake used to hold both lacustrine arctic grayling and rainbow trout. In 2017, the NPS embarked on a three-year fish restoration project in the upper Gibbon river watershed to remove all non-native trout and grayling. Grebe lake and its tributaries were poisoned with rotenone in the summer of 2017 to remove the grayling and rainbow trout. Westslope cutthroat trout and fluvial arctic grayling were planted in the lake. Both are native to the Gibbon watershed below Gibbon Falls but not indigenous to the upper Gibbon watershed. The NPS hopes to establish a refuge for these species in the upper Gibbon watershed.[6]

The lake is a popular summer angling destination for park visitors. Although the lake can be fished from shore, many anglers carry in float tubes to access the deeper portions of the lake.[7] [8] Using a float tube on Yellowstone lakes requires a park service boating permit.[9] The lake is open to angling during the entire Yellowstone season (end of May to early November) but generally cannot be easily accessed until mid June because of snow on the trail. The trailhead to Grebe Lake is approximately 4miles west of Canyon on the Norris to Canyon road 44.7175°N -110.5494°W.

See also

Notes and References

  1. 1589107. Grebe Lake.
  2. Book: Whittlesey, Lee . Yellowstone Place Names . Montana Historical Society Press . Helena, MT . 0-917298-15-2 . 1988 . 67.
  3. Web site: Yellowstone Backcountry Trip Planner . National Park Service . 2009-12-15 . 2009.
  4. Franke . Mary Ann . A Grand Experiment-100 Years of Fisheries Management in Yellowstone: Part I . Yellowstone Science . Yellowstone Center for Resources, National Park Service . 4 . 4 . Fall 1996.
  5. Book: Schullery, Paul . Varley, John D. . Yellowstone Fishes—Ecology, History, and Angling in the Park . Stackpole Books . Mechanicsburg, PA . 1998 . 0-8117-2777-7 .
  6. Web site: A Day in the Field, Collaboration is Key to Upper Gibbon Fishery Restoration . NPS.gov . February 2022.
  7. Book: Parks, Richard . Parks' Fly Shop

    . Parks' Fly Shop . Fishing Yellowstone National Park . 1998 . Falcon Press . Helena, MT . 1-56044-625-0 .

  8. Book: Mathews, Craig . Molinero, Clayton . The Yellowstone Fly-Fishing Guide—An authoritative guide to the waters of Yellowstone National Park . The Lyons Press . Guilford, CT . 1997 . 1-55821-545-X .
  9. http://www.nps.gov/yell/planyourvisit/upload/boating_regs.pdf Yellowstone National Park Boating Regulations