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Smithsonian Magazine on MSNA Fungal Disease Ravaged North American Bats. Now, Researchers Found a Second Species That Suggests It Could Happen AgainWhite-nose syndrome caused millions of bat deaths, and scientists are sounding the alarm that a second fungus could be ...
With their nocturnal habits and behaviour that largely keeps them away from humans, bats can sometimes stay out of sight and ...
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WVNS Bluefield on MSNHow can you help West Virginia’s native bats?West Virginia is home to fourteen species of bats, from the common big brown bat to the very rare Rafinesque’s big-eared bat.
Mollie Byrne recalls spending summers with her family at a camp on the Juniata River in Bedford County, in south central Pennsylvania. In the evenings, visitors gathered near an old farmhouse to watch ...
Scientists have learned that another species of fungus found in Europe and Asia causes white-nose disease, which has ravaged ...
A study published in the journal Nature has analyzed 5,000 samples of a fungus that is responsible for the largest recorded ...
Scientists have gained some guarded optimism in efforts to protect and save bats from white-nose disease. Now there's a whole ...
A deadly fungal disease impacting bat populations has now been detected west of the Continental Divide in Colorado for the first time, raising concerns among wildlife officials.
Stasiak said both animals were big brown bats, the most common form of bats ... deadly fungal disease called white nose syndrome. "We need to balance conservation with public safety," Stasiak ...
BLOOMINGTON – Sycamore Land Trust, a nonprofit conservation organization that protects 11,727 acres in southern Indiana, is ...
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