3000 insects per night? Is that correct? Assuming a 12 hour night...that's 
eatting one insect every 14.4 seconds.....
Or 1000 Mosquitos every hour? That's  1 mosquito every 3.6 seconds...
I know bats are beneficial....but these numbers just don't seem 
plausible.....could one of our bat experts confirm these numbers?

Sent from my iPhone

On May 13, 2009, at 1:14 AM, [email protected] wrote:

Bat Illness Spells Trouble For Farmers
Disease Killing Off Primary Natural Predator Of Pests
By Jenny Jones


HARRISONBURG - Although they are largely misunderstood, bats are considered 
among the most beneficial animals in the United States.

So the recent discovery of a rapidly spreading fatal disease called White-Nose 
Syndrome in Virginia bats, possibly including those in Endless Caverns near New 
Market, has biologists and elected officials scrambling to save the 
small-winged mammals.

The syndrome takes its name from the ring of white fungus that often appears on 
infected bats' snouts and other body parts. Bats       infected with the 
disease also typically have low body fat, dehydration and demonstrate abnormal 
behavior.

Scientists don't know what's causing the disease that has wiped out hundreds of 
thousands of bats since first showing up in the northeast about three years 
ago. They also don't know how the disease is spread or how to stop it from 
infecting more bats, which, in most cases, are disease resilient.

The country's first cases of WNS were identified in several caves near Albany, 
N.Y., in 2006. The disease has since spread to neighboring states, including 
Pennsylvania, New Jersey, Vermont and West Virginia, wiping out hundreds of 
thousands of bats in the region.

In Virginia, the first cases of WNS were confirmed earlier this year in 
Breathing Cave in Bath County and Clover Hollow Cave in Giles County.

A couple of weeks ago, biologists discovered more bats with symptoms of the 
disease in a cave in Bland County, on a building in Cumberland County and in 
Endless Caverns, a show cave in Rockingham County.

Biologists sent samples of those bats to a national testing facility, but the 
results are not back yet. 

No. 1 Predator Of Pests

While many people think the mysterious deaths of thousands of bats may not 
affect them, the animals in fact play a vital role in the environment and are a 
key ally in the fight against crops-eating pests, according to Rick Reynolds, a 
wildlife biologist with the Virginia Department of Game and Inland Fisheries.

Bats are the main predator of night-flying insects, with one bat eating 
anywhere from 600 to 1,000 mosquitoes and other insects in just one hour, 
according to the United States Fish and Wildlife Service.

In addition to eating many backyard pests, bats are chief predators of many 
insects that destroy crops, including cucumber beetles, cotton bollworms and 
June bugs, Reynolds said.

"All of these are pests that cause a lot of damage to agricultural crops," said 
Reynolds, who is based in of the department's Verona office. "A lot of our bats 
are out there feeding over agricultural fields."

If white-nose syndrome wipes out large numbers of the state's bats, as 
biologists expect it will, farmers likely will have to resort to using more 
chemicals to control pests, a measure that could prove quite costly.

In a letter to the U.S. Department of the Interior Secretary Ken Salazar, 25 
senators and congressmen, including Virginia Sens. Jim Webb and Mark Warner, 
outlined the role bats play in pest control.

"A single bat can easily eat more than 3,000 insects in a night and an entire 
colony will consume hundreds of millions of these crop-destroying and 
disease-carrying pest every year," the letter states. "Bats reduce the need for 
pesticides, which cost farmers billions of dollars every year and are harmful 
to human health."

In addition to being a primary predator of insects, bats have a highly evolved 
sense of hearing called echolocation, which involves sending out sounds that 
bounce off of objects and emit back to the bats.

From those sounds, bats can determine the size of an object, how far away it 
is, its texture and how fast they are traveling, all in a split second, 
according to Defenders of Wildlife.

By studying bats' hearing capabilities, scientists have developed technologies 
such as echolocation sonar and aircraft radar as well as navigation aids for 
the blind, Reynolds said.

Scientists also have made advancements in artificial insemination by studying 
reproduction in bats, some of which demonstrate delayed fertilization or 
delayed implantation.

Studying "what these animals do and how they operate has given us insight into 
other areas," Reynolds said. "They're unique animals."

So far, WNS has been found in three species of bats in Virginia, including the 
Little Brown, Northern Long-Eared and Eastern       Pipistrelle, and will 
likely spread to other species soon, Reynolds said.

"The way this thing is progressing, if it continues at the rate that it's 
going, we're probably going to lose species of bats here in the East," he said. 
"We'll be talking about millions of bats once it starts getting into the 
southern states."

In an effort to ward off the spread of the disease, 11 states, including 
Virginia, and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service have committed $1.37 million 
to research WNS, according to a release from the Pennsylvania Game Commission.

Also, in their letter to Salazar, the region's senators and congressmen have 
asked that his department provide funding for federal and state wildlife 
agencies to address the issue.

"As the bats emerge from their hibernation caves, it is vital that researchers 
have the resources in place to conduct tests this summer," the letter states. 
"We must do everything we can to stop the spread of WNS or it will continue to 
spread across the country, decimating our bat populations." 

http://www.rocktownweekly.com/news_details.php?AID=37711&CHID=1


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