What is Killing the Bats?
Can scientists stop white-nose syndrome, a new disease that is killing bats in catastrophic numbers?
- By Michelle Nijhuis
- Smithsonian magazine, July-August 2011, Subscribe
(Page 3 of 6)
Barton’s experience schooled her in the tenacity of these tiny life-forms. For her PhD research, she studied a bacterium that infects the lungs of cystic fibrosis patients, and she came to think of caves as somewhat like human bodies—complex places that host a vast variety of organisms, each adapted to its environment in a different way. Yet when Barton heard that a bat-killing fungus had managed to spread from caves in New York State all the way to West Virginia in just two years, even she was surprised by its velocity.
“if you sat down and thought, ‘What would I design to kill bats, and how would I design it?’ and you took time to think about the worst possible combination of factors that a pathogen would have, this would be it,” says Barton.
Because G. destructans thrives in cool temperatures, it attacks bats while they hibernate for the winter, when their immune systems are effectively shut down. The fungus may spread from bat to bat, and when the animal colonies disperse in the spring, the fungus may persist in cave sediment, poised to infect the next winter’s arrivals. Bats with white-nose syndrome rouse more frequently from their winter torpor, which causes them to waste precious body fat at the coldest time of the year. (In what’s been dubbed the “itch and scratch” hypothesis, some scientists posit that the bats are disturbed by the fungus, which accumulates on their muzzle and wings.) The fungus also infects the bats’ delicate wing membranes, eating away at the skin until the wings resemble torn, crumpled tissue paper.
The disease was discovered in early 2007, when bats in upstate New York started behaving oddly. Instead of hibernating through the winter, they flew into neighborhoods during the day, wandering dangerously far from their caves. “There would be three feet of snow and it would be 20 degrees—not bat-flying weather—and you’d see bats flying out and taking off into the distance,” says Al Hicks, then a wildlife biologist for the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation. “You’d know every darn one of them was going to die. It was awful.”
Later that winter, during a routine cave survey, New York State biologists found thousands of dead bats in a limestone cave near Albany, many encrusted with a strange white fuzz. During the winters that followed, dead bats piled up in caves throughout the Northeast. The scientists would emerge filthy and saddened, with bat bones—each as thin and flexible as a pine needle—wedged into their boot treads.
By the end of 2008, wildlife-disease researchers had identified the fuzz as a fungus new to North America. Today the fungus has spread to 19 states and 4 Canadian provinces, and infected nine bat species, including the endangered Indiana and gray bats. A 2010 study in the journal Science predicted that the little brown bat—once one of the most common bat species in North America—may go extinct in the eastern United States within 16 years.
“When it first hit, I thought, ‘OK, is there anything we can do to keep it within this cave?’” remembers Hicks. “The next year it was, ‘Is there anything we can do to secure our largest colonies?’ And then the next year it was, ‘Can we keep any of these colonies going?’ Now we’re asking if we can keep these species going.”
G. destructans also infects bats in Europe—but it doesn’t kill them, at least not in large numbers. G. destructans may have swept through European caves in the distant past, leaving only bats that could withstand the fungus. Researchers don’t know when and how the fungus made its way to North America, but they speculate that it may be so-called “pathogen pollution,” the inadvertent human transport of diseases—in this case possibly by a cave-visiting tourist—into new and hospitable habitats.
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Related topics: Bats Microbes, Bacteria, Viruses Conservation Biologists North America
Additional Sources
"Economic Importance of Bats in Agriculture," Justin G. Boyles et al., Science, April 1, 2011
"An Emerging Disease Causes Regional Population Collapse of a Common North American Bat Species," Winifred F. Frick et al., Science, August 6, 2010
"Bat White-Nose Syndrome: An Emerging Fungal Pathogen?" David S. Blehert et al., Science, October 30, 2008









Comments (8)
I am doing a report on little brown bats and this helps me learn a lot.
Posted by Jade on October 24,2012 | 06:20 PM
I have been following this for years - it certainly reinforces the importance of science and the funding needed to work out these important issues. Just something to think about... is anyone studying the bats predators? It said that raccoons ate some of the bats - clearly they were infected bats. How does this affect the raccoons? Are they carriers now? Do they get infected? Good luck - we all need this to be solved.
Posted by Mike Chodroff on August 4,2011 | 08:03 AM
Have written politicians about the bat problem. Common sense says if bats decline we will be inundated with insects. Precious little beings. Hope you can help them. Any chance their drinking water could be spiked with colloidal silver? I don't know if this would be even possible. I do know CS does kill pathogens (fungal, bacterial and viral) I wish you well. I wish them well. How they must be suffering.
Posted by vicki hood on July 15,2011 | 02:23 PM
This is terrible! I'm talking about the fungus, not the article. I've always loved bats, call me weird but I think they're quite charming.
Posted by Joshua Hatcher on July 14,2011 | 05:48 PM
My sons and I visited Mammoth Cave National Park last month. Prior to our cave tour, we were informed that at the end of the tour, we would be required to walk on top of mats that were soaked with a chemical solution, so that if white nose syndrom had reached Mammoth Cave, we would not transport it elsewhere.
Hopefully these dedicated scientists and Park Rangers will be able to stem the spread of this disease, and perhaps find a cure in the not too distant future.
Posted by Pete Iseppi on July 12,2011 | 02:24 PM
While I feel badly about what is happening to bats, I must admit that my thoughts turned to our human species. I felt that I was reading an account of bats which could very well be a preview of what happens to humans when some virus or bacteria appears and takes us out by the millions or more. Can our turn be far away?
Posted by GARY P CAMPANELLA on July 4,2011 | 07:43 PM
Inorder to prove that Geomyces destructans is the cause of the disease, one has to infect healthy bats, and get the same symptoms!
Posted by E.S. Kuttin Prof.Dr.Vet.Med. on July 3,2011 | 12:54 AM
The vector for WNS has been proven to be bats themselves with a small, occasional possibility of transmission by humans. Please review the latest research findings which support this and take down your video indicating that humans are the primary vector.
Thank you
Posted by Rich Kline on July 1,2011 | 08:49 PM