White-Nose Bat Deaths: Fungus Behind Mysterious Deaths In U.S. And Canada Came From Europe

Posted: 04/ 9/2012 4:04 pm Updated: 04/ 9/2012 6:59 pm

Bats White Nose Syndrome

LOS ANGELES, Calif. - The mysterious deaths of millions of bats in Canada and the United States over the past several years were caused by a fungus that hitchhiked from Europe, scientists reported Monday.

Experts had suspected that an invasive species was to blame for the die-off from "white nose syndrome." Now there's direct evidence the culprit was not native to North America.

The fungal illness has not caused widespread deaths among European bats unlike in the U.S. and Canada. In North America more than 5.7 million bats have died since 2006 when white nose syndrome was first detected in a cave in upstate New York. The disease does not pose a threat to humans, but people can carry fungal spores.

It's unclear exactly how the fungus crossed the Atlantic, but one possibility is that it was accidentally introduced by tourists. Spores are known to stick to people's clothes, boots and caving gear.

White nose syndrome has killed bats in four Canadian provinces and 19 U.S. states, mostly in the Northeast and South. Last week, the illness marched west of the Mississippi River, infecting bats in Missouri.

Now that scientists have pinpointed the apparent origin of the epidemic, what can be done to protect bats? They play a crucial role in the ecological food chain by devouring insects.

"There is still not much we can do beyond making absolutely sure we don't make things worse by accidentally spreading the fungus," said biologist Craig Willis of the University of Winnipeg.

Willis and a team of U.S.-Canadian scientists set out to determine whether the fungus behind white nose syndrome was native to this continent or invaded from abroad. To do this, they collected 54 little brown bats from an uninfected cave in Manitoba.

The bats were divided into three groups: One group was infected with spores collected from Europe; another group was sickened with spores from North America. A third group was not infected. Researchers used infrared cameras to monitor the bats' behaviour and disease progression over several months.

Both infected groups developed symptoms, including the telltale trace of white powder on the nose that gives the disease its name and scarring on the wings. Compared with uninfected bats, infected bats were roused more often from hibernation. This depletes their fat reserves and ultimately leads to death.

The findings were reported online Monday in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

Since the infected groups showed similarly severe symptoms, scientists concluded the fungus originated in Europe. Had the pathogen been native to North America but with a mutation that made it more deadly, scientists would have expected to see milder symptoms in the group infected with the European fungus.

The team planned to repeat the experiment next year with European bats and compare results.

Why European bats have not died off en masse is unknown. It's possible they developed immunity to the fungus or learned to avoid places that favour the spread of the disease. North American bats have shown little protection against white nose syndrome and there's active research into whether populations can rebound.

"We are still working to understand if it is possible for bats to develop resilience or resistance to the fungus," said Jeremy Coleman of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service who had no role in the latest work.

___

Online:

Journal: http://www.pnas.org

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LOS ANGELES, Calif. - The mysterious deaths of millions of bats in Canada and the United States over the past several years were caused by a fungus that hitchhiked from Europe, scientists reported Mon...
LOS ANGELES, Calif. - The mysterious deaths of millions of bats in Canada and the United States over the past several years were caused by a fungus that hitchhiked from Europe, scientists reported Mon...
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10:16 PM on 04/10/2012
Let's hope it abates. Bats are important to the ecosystem.
07:06 PM on 04/10/2012
European bats are "resistant," not "immune" to the fungus. Immunity is something that happens during he lifetime of a given individual and is not inherited. Resistance is normally genetic and thus is inherited. When we invent antibiotics, for example, even with the best of them, not all the target bacteria are killed. As a result, resistant bacteria survive and gradually become the dominant version and the antibiotic is not useful any longer. The same thing happens when we invent chemical poisons to spray on insect pests. In about fifteen years, the insecticide quits being effective enough to control the pest and we have to invent something new.
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niko73
Dem belly full but we hungry
04:37 PM on 04/10/2012
Well, at least that should but an end to the baseless conspiracy theories that Monsanto is responsible. Let’s hope WNS stays contained.
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PlayTOE
Morals evolved due to cooperative group living
01:11 AM on 04/10/2012
looks like they will have to introduce some European bats wit immunity to this disease into the North American and South American bat populations.
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dboiani
You're going to need a bigger boat ...
02:15 PM on 04/10/2012
not if the immunity is diet based
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05:36 PM on 04/10/2012
I was thinking that too. Of course the more rabid environmentalists would scream horrors because it means condemning the native species to death, but the fact is that there are no "pristine" ecologies left. All we can do is plug another species into the hole left when one dies off and hope it can expand to fill the gap.
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Jim Milks
Ecologist
09:30 PM on 04/09/2012
Finally some progress on yet another invasive species wrecking havoc in North America. Hopefully, they can pinpoint what makes European bats immune and figure out how to introduce that immunity into North American bat species.
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MJinCanada
Safe from zombies until my 2nd cup of coffee
08:19 PM on 04/09/2012
Thousands of years of separation between European bats and North American bats would do it. Remember what mumps, measles and TB did to the indigenous humans of North America.
05:19 PM on 04/09/2012
wind farms take out lots too!
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10:55 PM on 04/09/2012
It is a minuscule number compared to how many are being killed by the fungus.

The fungus is like the Black Death, the wind vanes are like pedestrians get run over crossing the street.
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Debbie338
What we manifest is before us
10:25 AM on 04/10/2012
True for now, but the more wind turbines there are, the greater the number of dead bats, and wind turbine numbers are going up exponentially. I fear they may be the straw that broke the bats' back.
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earthotter
micro-bio is a science course
10:06 PM on 04/10/2012
Too all of you anti-alternative energy people hiding behind this "green" argument of wind farms killing birds and bats: Millions more birds and bats are killed by buildings every year. So it makes far more sense for you to waste your energy being anti-building if you are pro-bird/bat.
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fromdnorth
OK I checked my micro-bio (didn't know I had one
05:09 PM on 04/09/2012
Good
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Debbie338
What we manifest is before us
10:37 AM on 04/10/2012
Good? You're glad the fungus came from Europe?
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fromdnorth
OK I checked my micro-bio (didn't know I had one
04:35 PM on 04/10/2012
No. That the scientist found the cause and that it may lead to a cure. Most plant pests and pathogens have come from Europe. The starlings are a good example, but the coddling moth, dutch elm disease and dandelion are but a few.

Why would you think otherwise?