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White-Nose Syndrome: Study describes the impact on native bat populations

White-Nose Syndrome: Study describes the impact on native bat populations
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White-Nose Syndrome Killed Over 90% of Three North American Bat Species

White-Nose Syndrome Killed Over 90% of Three North American Bat Species New Study Unveils the Impacts of the Disease on Native Bat Populations Release Date: April 21, 2021 White-nose syndrome has killed over 90% of northern long-eared, little brown and tri-colored bat populations in fewer than 10 years, according to a new study published in Conservation Biology. Researchers also noted declines in Indiana bat and big brown bat populations. Annual change in winter colony size of little brown bats (2000 – 2019) as WNS spread across the eastern U.S. and Canada. Shrinking red circles indicate bat colony size; expanding gray shading depicts WNS-positive counties by detection year. (Public domain.)

Scientists Discover a New Kind of Bat with Orange Fur

Scientists Discover a New Kind of Bat with Orange Fur Twitter 0 comments Bats are a staple of Halloween decor. But researchers have found a new species of nocturnal flyer that may make for an even better spooky season mascot. A newly discovered bat combines black wings with an orange body. And that color combination makes for one very cool creature. The orange-colored bat, Myotis nimbaensis (which we first learned about at The New York Times), was first found in 2018 by a team of of scientists led by the American Museum of Natural History and Bat Conservation International. They were surveying a habitat for endangered bat species in the Nimba Mountains of West Africa’s Guinea. (The bat’s scientific name means “from Nimba.”)

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