The 2012 White-nose Syndrome (WNS) Symposium, being held 4-7 June 2012 in Madison, WI, aims to advance research and management of this devastating disease in bats through communication, facilitated discussion, and collaboration. FORT scientists Paul Cryan and Laura Ellison will be participating in the symposium. Cryan is giving a presentation entitled “Lights, camera, action: Behaviors of hibernating bats before and after WNS revealed by surveillance video,” which will provide an update on efforts to non-invasively watch bats in caves and mines of VA, TN, NY, and OH over the past three winters. Ellison is leading the Data and Technical Information Management Working Group and will demonstrate two Web-based database applications: the WNS Disease Tracking System and the USGS Bat Population Data (BPD) Project.
For more information contact: Laura Ellison
White-Nose Syndrome Threatens the Survival of Hibernating Bats in North America
Find more news stories from:
[New York]
[Ohio]
[Tennessee]
[Virginia]
[Wisconsin]
Find more news stories about:
[BIG BROWN BAT]
[LONG-EARED MYOTIS]
[GRAY MYOTIS]
[EASTERN SMALL-FOOTED MYOTIS]
[LITTLE BROWN MYOTIS]
[INDIANA OR SOCIAL MYOTIS]
[Tricolored bat]
[Geomyces destructans]
White-nose Syndrome threatens the survival of hibernating bats in North America
White-nose syndrome in bats: A primer for resource managers
Wing pathology of white-nose syndrome in bats suggests life-threatening disruption of physiology
Bat White-Nose Syndrome in North America
Bat ecology as it relates to white-nose syndrome
Control and mitigation of White-Nose Syndrome in the face of uncertainty
White-nose Syndrome Disease Tracking System (v.1)
Development of a North American Bat Population Monitoring and Modeling Program