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The National Park Service said two bats on the west side of the park and one bat on the east side of the park were found with the disease.
The disease, called white-nose syndrome, is caused by a fungus called Pseudogymnoascus destructans (Pd). It can sometimes turn the faces of hibernating bats white, giving it its name.
GRAND COUNTY, Colo. – Three bats with a disease that kills bat populations were found in Rocky Mountain National Park. The disease, called white-nose syndrome, is caused by a fungus called ...
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Park officials at Rocky Mountain National Park have confirmed the first case of White Nose Syndrome in a bat in Grand County, providing evidence that the fatal fungus-caused disease is pushing ...
CaveCreek4.jpg Penelope Donahue points out fossils in the limestone of the opening of Cave Creek Cave while on a June 8 hike in Santa Fe National Forest. The limestone, which is around 300 million ...
Sunday, July 6 was the last operating day for Tom Sawyer Island , Liberty Square Riverboat and Rivers of America at Magic ...
It has been confirmed that three bats at Rocky Mountain National Park were infected with a fungal disease known as white-nose syndrome, the first ever confirmed detection in Grand County of the fun… ...
Reports of looting led archaeologists to explore an easily overlooked cave in northern Mexico. Eventually, the team found ...
Turns out there are snowmelt-fed underground streams that flow through the cave and drain into the Kaweah River system, ...