A Disturbing Unknown: When Will We Learn What is Troubling the Northeast's Bats?

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Tue Sep 2, 2008 3:38pm EDT

HARRISBURG, Pa., Sept. 2 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- Pennsylvania Game
Commission bat biologists still have not found evidence that White-Nose
Syndrome -- responsible for killing tens of thousands of cave bats in New York
and New England -- has reached Pennsylvania. But, the deadly disorder is
expected to once again turn the world of bats upside-down in the Northeast
this winter. 

Wildlife officials say that white-nose syndrome (WNS) is as mysterious today
as when it first surfaced in a cave near Albany, New York, in 2006.  Despite
the coordinated efforts of an incredibly talented team of more than two dozen
wildlife agencies, universities and institutions, WNS continues to baffle
researchers who are trying to unravel the tangled mess cave bats now find
themselves in. There are plenty of clues and few conclusions.

"We still don't know what causes WNS, where it came from, or if we can stop
its spread to other states," said Carl G. Roe, Game Commission executive
director. "But, the Game Commission is committed to finding answers that will
help wildlife managers better understand WNS and hopefully find ways to limit
its impact."

WNS was named originally for the white fungus that grew on the muzzles of
afflicted bats in New York. Whether the fungus is the cause or a symptom of
WNS continues to be debated. Researchers have now isolated and genetically
sequenced the white fungus found on the muzzles of afflicted bats.  They
believe this fungus grows best in the cold, clammy caves and mines bats use as
hibernacula, or hibernation sites.  

"Our window to develop a response strategy to this threat is incredibly
narrow, because we want to have a basic game plan in place before bats head
into hibernation," said Lisa Williams, a Game Commission wildlife diversity
biologist. "If White Nose appears in Pennsylvania this year, we'll be on the
front line of the Syndrome's expansion.  If it doesn't appear, we'll still be
collecting baseline data on our bats and cave environments to help establish
if they might be resistant or if the disorder is geographically isolated or
climate sensitive."

In early June, researchers from eight universities, U.S. Fish and Wildlife
Service personnel, and biologists from across the country got together in
Albany to discuss what has been learned to date about WNS. These discussions
included developing hypotheses on what may be causing WNS and team-building to
mount a coordinated response to this taxing enigma. 

"We're networking to minimize the potential expansion of WNS and working
together to determine what the cause may be," Williams said.  "At the Albany
meeting, we developed several hypotheses to try and find the cause of WNS."

Greg Turner, a Game Commission biologist who is leading Pennsylvania's WNS
field investigation, summarized the hypotheses, which explore a variety of
possibilities. 

"Why do bats appear to be starving to death?" Turner questioned. "Is it that
they're not putting on enough fat in the fall to make it through the winter,
or is it that they are able to store enough fat, but something is happening to
them while they are in hibernation that causes them to burn up body fat at a
much quicker pace than normal? Is the fungus or some unknown pathogen directly
causing the mortality, or are contaminants somehow involved by directly
affecting either the bats or their food supply? Or is there some sort of
combination of factors?"

Bats are a tremendous asset to wildlife communities and people. Collectively,
they eat insects by the tons and spare Pennsylvanians from myriad backyard
flying pests and crop-damage problems. Unfortunately, most people know more
about elephants than they do bats. So misinformation about bats often
overshadows the good they do and their importance in Pennsylvania's
biodiversity.

Pennsylvania is in the unenviable position of being one of the next likely
destinations for this troubling bat disorder that has spread to Connecticut,
Massachusetts and Vermont since it was uncovered in New York. It already has
been confirmed in a cave just 11 miles north of Pennsylvania. Game Commission
biologists consequently have been concentrating on monitoring summer roosts
and maternity colonies and developing a strategy to assess the condition of
bats heading into hibernacula this fall.

So far this summer, Game Commission biologists have checked the state's
largest bat maternity colonies for both juvenile and adult mortality. Agency
employees also have trapped bats with mist-nets at several locations
throughout the state to check bats for abnormalities. The fieldwork indicated
there was no abnormal mortality at the maternity colonies. However, small
white spots were found on the same bats' wing membranes when they were backlit
with a flashlight.

"This is the first summer following documentation of a high mortality event
and since wing membranes were not scrutinized to this degree in the past,
exactly what the white spots represent is open to discussion," Turner
explained. "Some researchers believe they may be the early stages of WNS.
Others suggest they are the result of parasite bites. The jury's still out on
that. But we're about 99 percent sure that bats spread WNS bat-to-bat, because
it has appeared in gated hibernacula that haven't been visited by people for
years. We also know none of the dead bats in the affected areas had rabies --
they all were tested. After that, nothing is certain."

At the moment, everything seems relatively normal across Pennsylvania, with
the exception of these small white wing spots, which may mean something -- or
may not. The good news is there wasn't significant summer mortality. The next
hurdle will come when bats head underground to hibernate this fall.

The only way to identify WNS in bats currently is when they are thoroughly
consumed by the disorder. Dead bats at the entrance to hibernacula, large
numbers of bats flying during the day and leaving their hibernacula in
midwinter, and white fungus on muzzle, ears, and wings are the primary signs. 
Although a great deal of time and effort have been poured into coordinating
WNS research and fieldwork at the state and regional level since spring,
researchers are still in the dark about where it came from and how exactly it
compromises a bat's health.

"Bats are starving to death and our job is to find out why," Turner said. "We
are preparing to mount an aggressive campaign that will monitor the physical
condition of bats from the time they enter hibernacula in the fall until they
leave in the spring. Our plan is to select large hibernacula across
Pennsylvania and check for abnormalities and dead bats. We'll use a small
experienced party of three to check bats with fungus, dead bats, and for
shifts in roosting or hibernating bats from deep within hibernacula to areas
near entrances -- a behavior documented in affected areas in New York and New
England." 

Efforts also will focus on the hibernating patterns of bats. Working with Dr.
DeeAnn Reeder, a bat eco-physiologist at Bucknell University, Turner will try
to uncover whether bats are heading into hibernation ill-prepared, or if there
is a problem occurring during hibernation that causes premature depletion of a
bat's energy reserves. 

There's hope that bats can hang in there until wildlife managers can figure
out a way to intervene or help. But the truth is there may not be a silver
bullet for this bat disorder. Nature may have to run its course, like it
currently is with Chronic Wasting Disease in elk and white-tailed deer.

Bat conservation is still in its infancy when comparing it to the time and
money dedicated to managing deer, wild turkeys and waterfowl over the past 50
years. But to be fair, up until recently, most people didn't care about bats,
because they didn't understand their importance as insect predators. Attitudes
are changing, however, because of outreach by the Game Commission and
organizations such as Bat Conservation International. Technological advances
-- minute transmitters, night scopes, specialized traps -- also have improved
the ability of researchers to study bats. 

One of the largest obstacles bats -- and their wildlife managers -- still must
face is the lack of funding available to get the job done. Insufficient
funding to manage non-hunted species has been a problem for decades. Although
there is great cooperation among agencies and research institutions, a lack of
funding has limited investigations into WNS. The problem is wildlife
management dollars are always limited -- more so now than ever -- and agency
budgets simply can't handle much more than routine management. 

"It's not that wildlife management agencies aren't concerned," explained
Calvin W. DuBrock, Game Commission Bureau of Wildlife Management director.
"Their budgets just aren't equipped to handle unexpected expenses and threats
of this magnitude. Pennsylvania, like many of our neighboring states, is doing
everything it can -- within reason and budgetary restrictions -- but if things
get worse, we'll be hard-pressed to ramp up our efforts. The public can help
by making donations."

Donations to the Game Commission can be made by visiting the agency's website
at www.pgc.state.pa.us and clicking on the "Donations" icon in the right
column.

"The upcoming winter will shed light on whether WNS has expanded to
Pennsylvania," DuBrock said. "But for now, it is important to remember that
all we have in Pennsylvania currently is great concern and suspicion. No
significant numbers of dead bats have been found anywhere in the Commonwealth
to date." 

This fall, the Game Commission is asking the public to keep an eye on
Pennsylvania's bats. It is not unusual to see bats hanging in odd places
around buildings in September and October as they fatten up before
hibernation. However, if you find multiple dead bats or you repeatedly find
dead bats in a particular area, please report the incidents to the nearest
Game Commission region office. Office phone numbers are available on the
agency's website -- www.pgc.state.pa.us -- and in local telephone directories.
Throughout winter, if you see multiple bats flying outside caves from November
through April - the annual hibernation period - please report this sighting to
the Game Commission region office in your area. 

For more information on bats, visit the Game Commission's website
(www.pgc.state.pa.us), select "Wildlife" and then click on the photo of the
bat.  To learn more about WNS, visit the USFWS's website at
www.fws.gov/northeast/white_nose.html.

This was written by Joe Kosack, Wildlife Conservation Education Specialist
Pennsylvania Game Commission 

NOTE: A series of four photos to accompany the following article are available
from the Game Commission's website (www.pgc.state.pa.us) by clicking on
"Release #093-08."

Note to Editors: If you would like to receive Game Commission news releases
via e-mail, please send a note with your name, address, telephone number and
the name of the organization you represent to: PGCNews@state.pa.us

CONTACT:  Jerry Feaser of Pennsylvania Game Commission, +1-717-705-6541,
PGCNews@state.pa.us



SOURCE  Pennsylvania Game Commission

Jerry Feaser of Pennsylvania Game Commission, +1-717-705-6541,
PGCNews@state.pa.us
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