Here is an exerpt from a related news release:
White Nose Syndrome
Something is killing whole populations of bats in the eastern U.S. as they hibernate in caves
and mines. Bats are losing their fat reserves (which are needed to survive hibernation) long
before the winter is over and dying of starvation. Scientists estimate over a million
bats have already died.
The earliest evidence of WNS was in a 2006 photograph taken in Howe's Cave, NY,
the rarely visited, non-commercial section of Howe Caverns. However, the condition wasn't
recognized until a year later, after hundreds of bats were found dead in four nearby caves.
Scientists describe WNS as the most serious known decline in North American wildlife.
It threatens cave ecosystems and presents new challenges for broader cave conservation
efforts.
For more than 65 years, the NSS and its members have been at the forefront of efforts
to conserve and study caves, their unique geology and environments, and the life they
contain. Now, we are collaborating with wildlife managers and scientists to combat WNS.As with everything else that ends up resulting in more laws and regulations...I don't know how much of this stuff is real. However, there are groups really up at arms about this threat.
http://caves.org/WNS/index.htmOKJohn