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Rhode Island Scientists Receive $500K To Study Dying Bat Populations

Little Brown Bat with fungus on its nose.
Ryan von Linden
/
flickr/New York Department of Environmental Conservation
Little Brown Bat with fungus on its nose.

Rhode Island researchers have received $500,000 in federal grant money to investigate a fungus that’s killing native bats. The mysterious illness has attacked bats across North America.

Little Brown Bat with fungus on its nose.
Credit Ryan von Linden / flickr/New York Department of Environmental Conservation
/
flickr/New York Department of Environmental Conservation
Little Brown Bat with fungus on its nose.

Over the last decade, biologists believe an illness known as white-nose syndrome has killed some six-million bats in North America. The fungus appears on the bat’s muzzle. It targets hibernating bats, causing serious infections on their wings, and bodies.

Brown University scientist Dr. Richard Bennett has been leading research with the University of California San Francisco into the fungus.

“We think that that causes the bats to wake up during hibernation, they deplete their fat stores and they basically don’t survive the winter,” said Bennett.

Bennett said this poses a serious problem because bats feed on insects like mosquitoes, helping to keep bug populations at bay.

“One of the biggest worries is in the agricultural industry, it’s estimated that bats as a pest control, save the industry up to about 23 billion dollars.”

Bennett said about seven of the 47 bat species in North America are affected by white nose syndrome. Rhode Island's Department of Environmental Management is also receiving federal funds for its bat monitoring program.  

https://vimeo.com/115572501

Editor's note: a previous version read as if the university researchers and the DEM scientists received the same grant. While the two groups are both studying bat populations, they received two different grants. The DEM grant was worth about $20,000.

Copyright 2015 The Public's Radio

John Bender is RIPR's Morning Edition Producer; he researches stories, interviews newsmakers and writes scripts for the morning news. He also does additional reporting throughout the day for general reporting and special projects.

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