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Changes in Population Size and Clustering Behavior of Hibernating Bats in the Upper Peninsula of Michigan After Arrival of White-Nose Syndrome

Allen Kurta, Steven M. Smith

2020Northeastern Naturalist11 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

We examined populations of bats hibernating in 50 abandoned mines in Michigan during the 3 years before and 4–6 years after arrival of the fungal disease white-nose syndrome. Overall size of the regional population fell by 89.9%. Myotis lucifugus (Little Brown Bat), which represented 90% of the pre-epidemic population, declined by 89.9%. Myotis septentrionalis (Northern Long-eared Bat) and Perimyotis subflavus (Tricolored Bat) decreased by 98.5% and 93.9%, respectively, and both species appear threatened with regional extinction. Eptesicus fuscus (Big Brown Bat), in contrast, increased by 11.7%. The disease also impacted social patterns, with the proportion of Little Brown Bats that were solitary during hibernation in 10 of the mines increasing from 23% to 46% after onset of the disease.

Topics & Concepts

Myotis lucifugusEptesicus fuscusHibernation (computing)Threatened speciesPopulationBiologyPopulation declineExtinction (optical mineralogy)EcologyZoologyWhite (mutation)Population sizeGeographyDemographyHabitatBiochemistryAlgorithmGeneState (computer science)PaleontologySociologyComputer scienceBat Biology and Ecology StudiesViral Infections and VectorsYersinia bacterium, plague, ectoparasites research
Changes in Population Size and Clustering Behavior of Hibernating Bats in the Upper Peninsula of Michigan After Arrival of White-Nose Syndrome | Litcius