For the first time in Oregon, a deadly fungal disease has been detected in the state's population of bats.
Two Columbia County bats and one Benton County bat have tested positive for white-nose syndrome, an invasive fungus thought to have come from Europe. Once infected, bats will begin acting erratically ...
A Little Brown Myotis and Long-eared Myotis (also known as Western Long-eared Bat) collected in 2025 from Bonner County, and one bat collected in 2026 from Kootenai County, tested positive for ...
A deadly fungal disease that has put at least one bat species on the federal Endangered Species List has been detected in ...
White-nose syndrome - which has killed millions of bats across North America - has been detected for the first time in Oregon bats, found in Columbia and Benton counties, the Oregon Department of Fish ...
A disease that has devastated North American bat populations for nearly 20 years has been confirmed in Idaho bats for the ...
Three bats in north Idaho have tested positive for white-nose syndrome, the first cases of the disease in the state.
White-nose syndrome has been detected in bats for the first time in Oregon, impacting Columbia and Benton counties. Six Yuma myotis and one little brown myotis tested positive for the disease in March ...
KOIN Portland on MSN
Bat-killing disease hits Oregon bats for first time ever, ODFW reveals
Officials announced the detection of Pseudogymnoascus destructans, the fungus that causes the disease, in 2025.
Idaho wildlife officials are asking residents to report dead or sick bats after the first confirmed cases of white-nose ...
The B.C. government says it’s monitoring the local bat population after a fungus that causes a deadly disease in bats was recently detected in guano.
Capito questioned witnesses during a Senate hearing on the Endangered Species Act, asking about expanding the role of states in species management.
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