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Smithsonian Magazine on MSNA Fungal Disease Ravaged North American Bats. Now, Researchers Found a Second Species That Suggests It Could Happen AgainWhite-nose syndrome caused millions of bat deaths, and scientists are sounding the alarm that a second fungus could be ...
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Arizona bats test positive for possibly deadly fungus; wildlife agency seeks public's helpBats in southeastern Arizona have tested positive for a fungus that poses a threat to the species, prompting wildlife officials to urge the public to report any potential infections. A bat that ...
Samples collected from a cave myotis bat at Fort Huachuca last summer tested positive for the fungus that causes the deadly disease white-nose syndrome. Arizona joins a list of 40 states and nine ...
is a critical hibernation site for hundreds of bats — three species use the cave, with little brown myotis being the most common. Colonies return to roost here every winter — to slumber inside ...
destructans fungus has been present on bats in Texas since 2017, the first confirmed case of a P. destructans infection resulting in WNS in Texas occurred in 2020, when dozens of cave myotis were ...
Unless you're interviewing a particularly chatty cave myotis bat named Mindy who spends her summers at Kartchner Caverns State Park. In a 10-minute audio clip, Mindy dishes on everything from what ...
A bat that was part of the cave myotis species in Fort Huachuca, just west of Sierra Vista, tested positive for a fungus known as Pseudogymnoascus destructans (Pd) that can cause deadly white-nose ...
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