Laws and Safety Equipment

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1

Laws

2

Numbering

3

Safety Equipment-Life Jackets

4

Fire Extinguishers

5

Visual Distress Signals

6

Ventilation

7

Mufflers

8

Backfire and Flame Control

9

Whistle Bell and Horn

10

Navigation Lights

11

Pollution and Garbage

12

Safe Operation

13

Ecosystem Awareness

14

Age and Education Requirements

15

Personal Watercraft

16

Water Skiing

17

Diving

18

Boating Under the Influence

19

Accidents


ECOSYSTEM AWARENESS

Sea Grasses

Sea grasses are the principle food for endangered marine herbivores, such as manatees and green turtles, act as natural filters to help purify the water and provide a suitable environment for a wide variety of marine life.

  • Boaters should make all available attempts to avoid running through sea grass beds.
  • Navigation charts identify sea grass beds as light green or marked as “grs” on the chart.
  • Boaters should make all possible attempts to stay within channels when unfamiliar with a waterway. Avoid taking shortcuts through sea grass beds to avoid causing propeller scars.
  • It is a violation of Florida law to damage sea grass beds in some areas within state waters

Manatee

  • Manatees are protected by state and federal law.
  • Keep a constant watch for the endangered manatee, especially in designated manatee zone areas.
  • All boat operators need to operate in a prudent manner in and around known manatee habitats and obey designated manatee zone areas.
  • It is illegal to harass, hunt, capture or kill any marine mammal, including manatees. Anything that disrupts a manatee’s normal behavior is a violation of law, punishable under federal law up to a $50,000 fine, one-year imprisonment or both.

   
Copyright © 2004-2007 American Boating Education
Last Modified: May 2, 2005