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A study from Conservation Biology found white nose syndrome killed 90% of exposed bat populations in three species in less than 10 years. More: Deadly fungus reaches New Mexico bats.
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AZ Animals on MSNSupersized Bats: Nature’s Largest Winged MammalsResearchers recently investigated hammer-headed bat populations in southern Cameroon. The mixed-methods investigation was ...
Erica Kahn was visiting Arizona last year when a wild bat managed to wedge itself between her camera and her mouth.
Bats, ecologically and economically important, suffered through the 2010s. But experts are cautiously optimistic about the ...
White-nose syndrome was first discovered in Colorado in March 2023 in a Yuma bat collected by National Park Service staff at Bent’s Old Fort near La Junta — just over 70 miles southeast of Pueblo.
Last year, white nose syndrome was found on lands managed by the Bureau of Land Management in Lincoln and DeBaca counties. More: Deadly bat fungus found in New Mexico caves.
Eighteen bat houses in southern Alberta have been sprayed with a probiotic cocktail, aimed at preventing white-nose syndrome ...
UPDATED: March 27, 2024 at 2:47 PM MDT A bat infected with a fungus that has killed millions of bats across the country was found in Longmont last month.
A Massachusetts woman was left with over $20,000 worth of hospital bills after a bat flew into her mouth. Here's what happened ...
Mexican long-nosed bats were listed under the Endangered Species Act in 1988, but according to Bat Conservation International, the population has decreased by 50% in recent decades.
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