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Police and pro-Palestinian demonstrators clash in tense scene at UCLA encampment; PA groups monitoring soot pollution pleased by new EPA standards; NYS budget bolsters rural housing preservation programs; EPA's Solar for All Program aims to help Ohioans lower their energy bills, create jobs.

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Campus Gaza protests continue, and an Arab American mayor says voters are watching. The Arizona senate votes to repeal the state's 1864 abortion ban. And a Pennsylvania voting rights advocate says dispelling misinformation is a full-time job.

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Bidding begins soon for Wyoming's elk antlers, Southeastern states gained population in the past year, small rural energy projects are losing out to bigger proposals, and a rural arts cooperative is filling the gap for schools in Pennsylvania and West Virginia.

Bats Get a Bad Rap – But They’re Really in Trouble

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Tuesday, July 24, 2012   

BISMARCK, N. D. – A fungus that has killed up to 6.7 million bats in North America has not yet been confirmed in North Dakota, although it's likely only a matter of time.

Patrick Isakson, conservation biologist with the North Dakota Game and Fish Department, says there are 13 species of bats in the state. Some of them are migratory, and it's thought that the fungus is spread by bat-to-bat transmission, he explains.

"Species like the little brown bat, which is one of the more commonly affected species, will travel pretty good distances from where they hibernate to the areas that they get together in a maternity roost to have their babies. So, that seems to be the way that we will probably get it in North Dakota."

The bats don't die directly from the fungus itself, says Isakson; rather, it leads them to starve or die of exposure to the cold.

"When a bat gets white nose syndrome, it agitates them, wakes them up from their hibernation, and the fat stores that they've put on before hibernation are burned up much quicker. So generally, they starve to death or, if they do go out looking for food, they tend to die from exposure."

Scott Bearer, a senior scientist with the Nature Conservancy, says if bats keep dying, American consumers will begin to feel the effects at the grocery store – because bats eat tons of insects.

"That means that the farmers are going to have to spend more money to spray pesticides on their crops – which, of course, the farmer is going to pass on those costs."

Bearer says another worry is that insects carry diseases, and there's concern about the possibility of an increase in diseases spread by mosquitoes.

According to Isakson, the state is putting together a surveillance program for the disease. White nose syndrome was first found in the northeastern United States in 2006, but has since been discovered as far south as Alabama - and as close as Iowa.

Information from the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service about the bats and fungus is online at whitenosebats.wordpress.com.




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