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Wisconsin had over 15,000 bats counted by community scientists, offering hope for populations affected by white-nose syndrome.
National Park Service staff recently confirmed the presence of white-nose syndrome in three bats at the site. Two were on the west side of the park and one was on the east side of the park. The 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 the disease.
Two decades ago squeaks at Hanningfield alerted conservationists to the presence of soprano pipistrelles, which are among the ...
White-nose syndrome has for the first time been found in bats on both sides of the continental divide in Rocky Mountain National Park.
Park officials at Rocky Mountain National Park have confirmed the first case of White Nose Syndrome in a bat in Grand County, providing evidence that the fatal fungus-caused disease is pushing ...
Concern around declining bat population exists because bats are beneficial to our ecosystem. Bats benefit the agriculture ...
Officials at Rocky Mountain National Park said this is the first documented case of the deadly bat disease on the Grand County side of the park.
The disease, called white-nose syndrome, is caused by a fungus called Pseudogymnoascus destructans (Pd). It can sometimes turn the faces of hibernating bats white, giving it its name.
It has been confirmed that three bats at Rocky Mountain National Park were infected with a fungal disease known as white-nose syndrome, the first ever confirmed detection in Grand County of the ...
The disease, called white-nose syndrome, is caused by a fungus called Pseudogymnoascus destructans (Pd). It can sometimes turn the faces of hibernating bats white, giving it its name.