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 4 of 6)
With their undeserved association with creepy folk tales, bats don’t have much of a constituency. But bat biologists say the consequences of the North American die-off stretch far beyond the animals themselves. For instance, one million bats—the number already felled by white-nose syndrome—consume some 700 tons of insects, many of them pests, every year. Fewer bats mean more mosquitoes, aphids and crop failures. A study published in Science this spring estimated that bats provide more than $3.7 billion in pest-control services to U.S. agriculture every year.
With G. destructans reaching farther each winter, Barton, Slack and an array of other biologists are racing to understand the fungus in time to contain it. Since scientists aren’t sure how easily people may spread the fungus, many caves have been closed, and tourists, recreational cavers as well as scientists are advised to clean their gear between trips underground. Barton and her students have shown that common cleaning products, such as Woolite and Formula 409, kill G. destructans without harming caving gear.
But even as Barton, Slack and their colleagues patrol the perimeter of the disease, they acknowledge that the syndrome is likely to continue its spread across the continent.
“Who’s going to live, and who’s going to die?” asks DeeAnn Reeder. “That’s the big thing I think about all the time.” Reeder, a biology professor at Bucknell University in central Pennsylvania, spends her days surrounded by white-nose syndrome. G. destructans thrives in nearby caves and mines, on many of the bats in her campus laboratories, and even on a set of petri dishes secured in an isolated laboratory refrigerator. Up close, the epidemic is more complicated than it first appears, for some bat species—and some individual bats—are proving more resistant than others. Reeder wants to know why.
Reeder never expected to study white-nose syndrome, but like Barton, she was perfectly prepared for the job. Fascinated by mammals since her childhood summers in the Sierra Nevada, she studied primate physiology and behavior before switching to bats. At first, the reasons were practical—bats were easy to catch and sample in large numbers—but “I just fell in love with them,” Reeder says. “They’re so tough. I’ve always said that nothing will take them down, that they’re completely resilient. And then we got this fungus,” she says, shaking her head. “It caught us all off guard—and it caught them off guard, too.”
After Reeder came to Pennsylvania in 2005, she outfitted her laboratory with a set of climate-controlled chambers designed to mimic natural cave conditions. She and her students had just begun to collect data on bat hibernation patterns when white-nose syndrome emerged. Suddenly, biologists all over the continent had questions about how bats behaved during hibernation, and Reeder was one of the only researchers well-positioned to answer them. “They’d say, ‘What do we know about hibernation?’ and I’d say, ‘Well, we know this much,’” says Reeder, holding a finger and thumb close together.
Like Barton and the rest of the small corps of researchers pursuing the disease, Reeder abruptly reoriented her career to deal with it. She and her students picked up the normally stately pace of science, running experiments in the field and lab as quickly as they could devise them. These days, the hallway outside her laboratory is crowded with worn backpacks and other scuffed field gear. “Sometimes I feel like a rat on an electrified grid,” she says with a laugh.
In Kentucky, Barton was also working overtime, sampling skin secretions and hair from bats in caves throughout the state. In her laboratory, she and her students cataloged naturally occurring antifungal compounds produced by bacteria and other fungi, identifying some compounds that might protect vulnerable bats from white-nose syndrome. But to test the most promising compounds, she needed something Kentucky didn’t yet have: sick bats.
Single Page « Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 Next »
Subscribe now for more of Smithsonian's coverage on history, science and nature.
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