News

Experts provided an update on a disease that had previously wiped out some bats. White-nose Syndrome is a fatal fungal ...
A fungal disease threatening the survival of bats throughout the U.S. was found in a southeast New Mexico cave for the first time in the region, and officials are stepping up efforts to prevent ...
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 ...
Rocky Mountain National Park announced April 3 that lab tests conducted by the U.S. Geological Survey confirmed that a fungus ...
This fungus causes white-nose syndrome, a fatal disease that impacts bats. White-nose syndrome cannot make humans sick, but humans can spread the fungus to new places. Rocky Mountain National Park ...
The fungus appears to be the cause of a disease called white-nose syndrome, which has killed more than a million bats in the past four years. It even threatens some of the continent’s most ...
U.S. bat species devastated by white-nose syndrome now listed as endangered The species is among a dozen U.S. bats suffering from white-nose syndrome, a fungal disease that causes bats to emerge ...
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.
Bats across Rocky Mountain National Park are facing a fatal disease due to an invasive fungus, according to park officials.
DENVER ( KDVR) — An invasive fungus has been detected in bats at Rocky Mountain National Park.
Wisconsin’s bats are seeing a slight resurgence after White-Nose Syndrome depleted populations across the country. The Wisconsin DNR found that bat populations in caves had begun to increase after ...