News

The National Park Service said two bats on the west side of the park and one bat on the east side of the park were found with ...
A fungus that has killed millions of bats has for the first time been found in bats on both sides of the continental divide ...
The disease, called white-nose syndrome, is caused by a fungus called Pseudogymnoascus destructans (Pd). It can sometimes ...
The National Park Service just released a statement confirming the presence of a deadly disease in a popular park, and ...
Park staff have confirmed the presence of white-nose syndrome (WNS) in three bats at Rocky Mountain National Park; two bats ...
Officials at Rocky Mountain National Park said this is the first documented case of the deadly bat disease on the Grand ...
The Indiana bat and the northern long-eared bat are both listed as federally endangered species, while the tricolored bat is proposed endangered. White-nose syndrome has killed over 90% of the bat ...
She set out to compare the bats that died of white-nose syndrome with the few that survived. She sequenced DNA from 29 little brown bats that perished across northern Michigan in 2014.
In 2009, a fungal pathogen called white-nose syndrome first hit bats in the Northeast and spread here to Tennessee. “At the time, it was totally new to science.
Numerous bats have been found in Colorado with white-nose syndrome. The fungus has killed millions of bats in North America, leaving biologists concerned about its impact on bats in the state.