Volume 6, Number 2 - February 2008            Current Circulation: 15297 Return to Archive
Mystery Disease Kills U.S. Bats
A mysterious malady is killing thousands of hibernating bats in New York and Vermont, with yet another outbreak reported in a Massachusetts mine. Scientists are working desperately to unravel the cause. The disease is called “white-nose syndrome,” because a fungus appears around the muzzle of some affected bats. Researchers do not know whether the fungus is causing or contributing to the deaths or is merely a symptom of another problem. Bat Conservation International has established a fund that is accepting donations to help finance this critical research. BCI is working with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (USFWS) and other agencies to help find solutions to this critical problem. ...more

Bats in the News
Flying Came First
A 52 million-year-old bat seems to have answered a long-standing puzzle: which did bats acquire first, flight or echolocation. “The most primitive bat ever discovered could fly but [could] not navigate by sound,” the New York Times reported....more

Protecting Mexico’s Corn
Corn is the heart and soul of Mexico’s agriculture. It accounts for more than 60 percent of the nation’s total agricultural output and 62 percent of its cultivated land. Up to 18 million people – some 17 percent of Mexico’s...more

BCI Notice: The application deadline for BCI Student Research Scholarships is Dec. 15, 2009
 
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 Species Profile
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Parastrellus hesperus
Canyon bats do not seem to migrate far and may stay in the same area year round....more

Bat Fact: Did you know...African heart-nosed bats can hear the footsteps of a beetle walking on sand from a distance of more than six feet.
© Bat Conservation International, Inc., 2009. Absolutely no rights of distribution by sale or other transfer of ownership or by rental, lease or lending, preparation of derivative works, or reproduction, in whole or in part, is granted. Bat Conservation Times™ is a division of Bat Conservation International Inc,.

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