Dying Bats In The Northeast U.S. Remain A Mystery

PHD

Veteran Member
Dying Bats In The Northeast U.S. Remain A Mystery

Investigations continue into the cause of a mysterious illness that has resulted in the deaths of thousands of bats since March 2008. At more than 25 caves and mines in the northeastern U.S., bats exhibiting a condition now referred to as "white-nosed syndrome" have been dying.

The U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) recently issued a Wildlife Health Bulletin, advising wildlife and conservation officials throughout the U.S. to be on the lookout for the condition known as "white-nose syndrome" and to report suspected cases of the disease.

USGS wildlife disease specialist Dr. Kimberli Miller advises that "anyone finding sick or dead bats should avoid handling them and should contact their state wildlife conservation agency or the nearest U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service field office to report their observation."

Large-scale wildlife mortality events should be reported to the USGS at http://www.nwhc.usgs.gov/mortality_events/reporting.jsp.

The USGS National Wildlife Health Center in Madison, Wis. has received nearly 100 bat carcasses mostly from New York, Vermont, Massachusetts, and Connecticut. The syndrome affects species including the little brown, big brown, northern long-eared and eastern pipistrelle bats.

The condition was first observed in February 2007 in caves near Albany, N.Y. by the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation. Dead and hibernating bats had a white substance on their heads and wings. In early 2008, "white-nosed" bats were once again seen at hibernation sites.

Scientists have collected environmental samples from affected caves and mines in Vermont, New York and Massachusetts in an effort to determine the cause of the deaths. Live, dead and dying bats were documented in and outside of hibernation sites.

The most common findings in the bats have been emaciation and poor body condition. Many of the bats examined had little or no body fat; some exhibited changes in the lung that have been difficult to characterize; and a majority had microscopic fungi on their bodies.

The white substance observed on some bats may represent an overgrowth of normal fungal colonizers of bat skin during hibernation and could be an indicator of overall poor health, rather than a primary pathogen. Scientists from a variety of agencies are investigating underlying environmental factors, potential secondary microbial pathogens and toxicants as possible causes.

http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2008/05/080508170916.htm

Hibernating bats showing white nose syndrome.
(Credit: Al Hicks, New York Dept. of Environmental
Conservation)
 

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Relic

Veteran Member
Hum

Unlike many, I have little or no problems with bats swooping in the evening air, but this is ewch-making.
 

Cardinal

Chickministrator
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poisons in the environment, chemical pesticides on the bugs that the bats eat. This is almost as bad as the honeybee die off, as bats do a good deal of mosquito control.
 

TECH32

Inactive
I wonder if the bats are feeding off the bees that are infected with whatever virus is killing them, and that perhaps it has a negative effect on the bats as well.
 

Richard

TB Fanatic
poisons in the environment, chemical pesticides on the bugs that the bats eat. This is almost as bad as the honeybee die off, as bats do a good deal of mosquito control.

yes but these influences haven't suddenly worsened, a new factor is at fault, probably connected with insect die-offs
 

LoupGarou

Ancient Fuzzball
So, basic malnutrition leading to a naturally occuring organism taking over.

I was talking to one of the people here at MCV (Medical College of VA) that is doing a study on this very epidemic. They are saying that it is a fungus that is thriving in the bat's sleeping areas, and due to an allergic reaction it is causing the bat's "brown fat" (Brown adipose tissue, same thing as our baby fat) to get used up. Once enough of the "brown fat" gets used up, the bat can no longer keep it's body temperature regulated and the bat looses the energy to feed (and to restore it's "brown fat"). This results in the bats weaker and weaker (unable to feed or get water) until they just drop to the floor and die. They are trying to find out what is causing the fungus to get out of hand, so much so that the bat's immune system can't handle it.

Loup
 
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