Unexplained
"White Nose" Disease Killing Northeast Bats
ALBANY,
New York, January 31, 2008 (ENS) - State environmental officials and caving organizations
are asking people not to enter caves or mines with bats until further notice to
avoid the possible transfer of a mysterious new bat disease from cave to cave.
Thousands
of hibernating bats are dying in caves in New York and Vermont from unknown causes,
prompting an investigation by the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation,
DEC, as well as wildlife agencies and researchers around the nation.
The
most obvious symptom involved in the die-off is a white fungus encircling the
noses of some, but not all, of the bats.
Called
"white nose syndrome," the fungus is believed to be associated with
the problem, but it may not contribute to the actual cause of death. It appears
that the impacted bats deplete their fat reserves months before they would normally
emerge from hibernation, and die as a result.
"What
we've seen so far is unprecedented," said Alan Hicks, DEC's bat specialist.
"Most bat researchers would agree that this is the gravest threat to bats
they have ever seen."
Last
year, some 8,000 to 11,000 bats died at several locations in New York, the largest
die-off of bats due to disease documented in North America. This year, an unknown
number of bats are at risk.
"We
have bat researchers, laboratories and caving groups across the country working
to understand the cause of the problem and ways to contain it," said Hicks.
"Until we know more, we are asking people to stay away from known bat caves."
Craig
Stihler, a bat specialist with the West Virginia Department of Natural Resources,
says, "The fungus has been identified to the genus Fusarium, a common and
widespread genus usually associated with plants. Pathologists that have examined
the carcasses recovered from the New York sites do not believe the fungus is the
main culprit. One guess at this time is that the fungus invades after the bats
are stressed by some other factor."
Bat
biologists across the country are evaluating strategies to monitor the presence
of the disease and collect specimens for laboratory analysis. Biologists are using
sanitary clothing and respirators when entering caves to avoid spreading the disease
in the process.
"Our
primary concern is to limit the disease from spreading further to other caves
and mines that have larger numbers of hibernating bats," said Scott Darling,
Vermont state wildlife biologist. "Here in Vermont, the disease has been
documented in Morris Cave in Danby, and we will be checking other caves and mines."
Bat
populations are particularly vulnerable during hibernation as they congregate
in large numbers in caves - in clusters of 300 per square foot in some locations
- making them susceptible to disturbance or disease.
Because
these bats then migrate as far as hundreds of miles to their summer range, impacts
to hibernating bats can have significant implications for bats throughout the
Northeast.
"Bats
from a cave in Dorset, Vermont have been documented traveling in the spring as
far as Rhode Island and Cape Cod," says Darling.
The
vast majority of the hundreds of thousands of bats known to hibernate in New York
do so in just five caves and mines. Because bats migrate as far as hundreds of
miles to their summer range, impacts to hibernating bats can have significant
implications for bats throughout the Northeast.
Indiana
bats, a state and federally endangered species, are perhaps the most vulnerable.
Half the estimated 52,000 Indiana bats that hibernate in New York are located
in just one former mine - a mine that is now infected with white nose syndrome.
Eastern
pipistrelle, northern long-eared and little brown bats are also dying. Little
brown bats, the most common hibernating species in the state, have sustained the
largest number of deaths.
DEC
has been working closely with the Vermont Fish and Wildlife Department, the U.S.
Fish and Wildlife Service, the Northeast Cave Conservancy and the National Speleological
Society, along with other researchers from universities and other government agencies.