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17 Feb 2018

t was the winter of 2006-2007. In what may be the worst calamity to hit bat populations in the United States, a mysterious affliction began to decimate bat colonies in upper New York State. On average, 90 percent of the hibernating bats in four caves and mines in New York succumbed that winter. The affliction, now known as White-Nose Syndrome (WNS), is estimated to have killed over six million bats in the eastern United States and has spread as far west as Missouri since that time. Read the following article about WNS White-Nose Syndrome Threatens the Survival of Hibernating Bats in North America and answer the questions that follow.

1. What is the causative agent of WNS and to what phylum does it belong?

2. What is unique about this causative agent that makes it particularly well adapted to its lifestyle (adapted to persist in caves and mines and to colonize the skin of hibernating bats)?

3. What makes a hibernating bat a particularly easy target for the pathogen?

4. You are a wild-life biologist assigned the task of protecting bats from this disease. What one question would you like answered before you take on this challenge and why?

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Bunny Greenfelder
Bunny GreenfelderLv2
20 Feb 2018

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