Bat Fungus Found in  Avery   
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eSZjYXRpZD0x)     Written by Steve Frank    Wednesday, 09 February 2011 
10:31 AM    
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White-nose syndrome, the disease that has killed hundreds of thousands  of 
bats in the Eastern United States, has been discovered in a retired  Avery 
County mine and in a cave at Grandfather Mountain State Park,  marking the 
arrival of the disease in North Carolina.  
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“White-nose syndrome is confirmed in 
Virginia and  Tennessee, so we expected we would be one of the next states 
to see the  disease,” said Gabrielle Graeter, a biologist with the N.C. 
Wildlife  Resources Commission. “This discovery marks the arrival of one of the 
most  devastating threats to bat conservation in our time.”

Although  scientists have yet to fully understand white-nose syndrome, 
current  knowledge indicates it’s likely caused by a newly discovered fungus,  
Geomyces destructans , which often grows into white tufts on the muzzles  of 
infected bats, hence the disease’s name. The first evidence of this  fungus 
was collected in a New York state cave in 2006. Since then, it  appears to 
have spread north into Canada and as far south as Tennessee,  which reported 
its first occurrence last winter, and now North Carolina.  In the Northeast, 
the disease has decimated some species of bats. It seems  to be most fatal 
during the winter months, when hundreds of bats are  hibernating together in 
caves and mines. It’s not known if the disease  will similarly affect all 
species in all regions of the country, though  bat mortality and the 
diversity of species affected in the Northeast  suggest the impacts will be 
significant.

On Feb. 1, a team of  Commission biologists were conducting a bat inventory 
of the closed mine  where they saw numerous bats displaying symptomatic 
white patches of  fungus on their skin. Five bats from the mine were sent to 
the  Southeastern Cooperative Wildlife Disease Study unit at the University of 
 Georgia for testing, which confirmed the presence of white-nose syndrome.  

In late January, a team of state, federal, and private biologists  were 
conducting a bat inventory of a cave at Grandfather Mountain when  they 
discovered a single dead bat. Following state white-nose syndrome  surveillance 
protocols, the bat was sent for testing and it has been  confirmed for 
white-nose syndrome.  

The discovery of  white-nose syndrome comes as Commission biologists work 
through bat  inventory and white-nose syndrome surveillance efforts at 
numerous caves  and mines in western North Carolina this winter as part of a 
grant 
awarded  by the Service to several states on the leading edge of the disease
’s  spread.

North Carolina is home to three federally endangered bats,  the Virginia 
big-eared, Indiana, and gray. Virginia big-eared bats are  known from the 
Grandfather Mountain cave and have been seen in the Avery  county mine, though 
not recently. Thus far, the disease has not been  observed in Virginia 
big-eared bats farther north, however it has greatly  impacted Indiana bat 
populations at infected caves and mines. Both of the  North Carolina sites have 
Eastern small-footed, little brown, Northern  long-eared, and tri-colored bats 
while big brown bats are also found at  the mine – all bat species that have 
been affected to some degree by  white-nose syndrome in the Northeast.

“The discovery does not bode  well for the future of many species of bats 
in western North Carolina,”  said Sue Cameron with the U.S. Fish & Wildlife 
Service. “Although  researchers are working hard to learn more about the 
disease, right now so  little is known. There has been some evidence that 
humans 
may  inadvertently spread the disease from cave to cave, so one simple step 
 people can take to help bats is to stay out of caves and  mines.”

“Cavers are passionate about what they do and we truly  understand that 
asking them to stay out of caves is no small request and  we greatly appreciate 
their sacrifice,” said Cameron, noting that the  western North Carolina 
caving club, Flittermouse Grotto, has been very  supportive of efforts to 
protect the area’s bats.

In 2009, fearing  the disease could be transferred from cave to cave by 
humans, the Service  released a cave advisory asking people to refrain from 
entering caves in  states where white-nose syndrome has been confirmed and all 
adjoining  states. The North Carolina Wildlife Resources Commission holds a  
protective easement on the mine and both it and the Grandfather Mountain  
cave have been gated and closed to the public for years to protect  
hibernating bats.   
Last Updated on Wednesday, 09 February 2011 10:43 AM 
 
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