White-nose syndrome has been confirmed in Mystery Cave in the Pryor Mountains, currently the largest known hibernation cave in Montana, supporting around 600 myotis bats during winter. Mystery ...
A fast-moving disease is killing bats across North America. We need your help to stop it. White-nose syndrome has killed millions of bats since it was first discovered in the U.S. Northeast in 2006.
WNS, the disease caused by the cold-adapted fungus, Pseudogymnoascus destructans (Pd), has killed millions of North American bats since its detection in New York in 2006. WNS has been confirmed in ...
White-nose syndrome has been confirmed in Mystery Cave in the Pryor Mountains, currently the largest known hibernation cave in Montana, supporting around 600 myotis bats during winter. Mystery ...
Why are bats dying in North America? An estimated 6.7 million bats have died since 2006 because of an outbreak of white-nose syndrome, a fast-moving disease that has wiped out entire colonies and left ...
Texas bats are dwindling in numbers as a fungal disease spreads among the species nationwide. In 2020, the first case of white-nose syndrome was detected in a Texas bat at the U.S. Army base ...
The disease hits farmworkers and outdoor laborers disproportionately hard ...
We know that diseases can occasionally jump from species to species, including from other species to humans, but scientists have found why diseases from bats are more deadly to humans than any other.
LAWTON, MI -- A rabid bat has been found at a home in Lawton, marking the first animal found with the deadly disease in Van ...
Oil and gas production, tourism and the federal government drive New Mexico’s economy. Federal technology labs, Los Alamos National Laboratory and Sandia National Laboratories, are two of the ...
In 2016, hospitals in New York state identified a rare and dangerous fungal infection never before found in the United States. Research laboratories quickly mobilized to review historical ...
Andrew Mathis has always been interested in bats. "When I was a kid, we would see them flying around in the dusk all the time," he said. "And as we grew up, and my wife and I moved out of the city ...