Nearly 14 years after white-nose syndrome began devastating bat populations in New Brunswick, researchers see signs the ...
There have not been any bats with white-nose syndrome found to date in BC. The fungus (WNS) that causes the disease, was ...
The public is being asked to help keep the BC bat population healthy. The BC Community Bat Programs, in collaboration with the Province of BC, are asking the public for help in the effort to detect ...
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.
A decade after the emergence of white-nose syndrome, bats in national parks and around the country continue to die. Can researchers save them before it’s too late? We’re driving along the northern ...
Bat conservationists throughout North America are holding their breath this winter, waiting nervously for the grim news of spring: how much farther has white-nose syndrome (WNS) spread and how many ...
Across the United States, bat populations have been devastated due to a fungal disease called white-nose syndrome (WNS). It is caused by the fungus Pseudogymnoascus destructans, which grows around ...
In western Oklahoma, the tiny species first tested positive for the fungus that triggers white-nose syndrome in 2019. White fuzz on the bat’s face normally shows up a couple of years after the ...
After a decline of over 90 per cent in little brown bats and northern long-eared bats in Nova Scotia, researchers are hopeful ...