British Columbia

B.C. ecologists brace for spread of fungal disease that has eradicated bat populations across North America

Ecologists are asking British Columbians to report to the B.C. Community Bat Program when they spot a sick or dead bat amid the spread of the deadly white-nose syndrome, which has wiped out bat populations in different parts of North America.

Province said it first detected fungus associated with white-nose syndrome on bats in Grand Forks, B.C.

Bats with white patches of fungus on their noses are pictured on the rock.
An undated photo from the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service shows little brown bats with the fuzzy white patches of fungus typical of white-nose syndrome. (U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service via The Associated Press)

Ecologists in different parts of B.C. are bracing for the possible spread of a fungal disease which has eradicated bat populations in multiple parts of North America and has now been detected in the Kootenays.

On Monday, B.C.'s Ministry of Water, Land and Resource Stewardship said it had discovered the fungus that causes white-nose syndrome in bat guano — or bat droppings — in the Grand Forks area of B.C., about three kilometres north of the Canada–U.S. border.

They have not yet found bats in the province with the disease, known as white-nose syndrome, but researchers fear what will happen if it starts to spread.

"It would be devastating," said Paula Rodriguez de la Vega, co-ordinator for the B.C. Community Bat Program in the Okanagan region. "Bats are incredibly important."

White-nose syndrome has killed millions of bats across North America since first appearing in North America in New York State, probably through shipping. It's spread mostly bat-to-bat, although humans can play a role by carrying spores on their clothes or gear.

White-nose syndrome does not affect humans, but it starves bats to death by interrupting their hibernation, draining them of the energy needed to get through the winter. The disease spreads quickly because bats huddle together to keep warm.

The province said staff have been testing for the disease in B.C. since the fungus reached the west coast of the United States in 2016.

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Researchers are looking into a new method of protecting against white nose syndrome, which is decimating bat populations. It slowly weakens the animals until they die of starvation, and has wiped out entire populations in the U.S.

Bats are important part of the ecosystems: ecologists

Brian Paterson, a wildlife biologist and bat researcher in Dawson Creek in northeastern B.C., says it comes as a "sad surprise" that the fungal disease has finally arrived in B.C. because he doesn't want to see a negative impact on the ecosystem due to bats' death.

"A little brown bat might be able to eat, say, 600 mosquitoes in a night. They also prey on a number of forest pests, including moths, so their contribution to pest control is immeasurable," Paterson told host Carolina de Ryk on CBC's Daybreak North, adding that the species also plays an important role in pollination.

De la Vega adds that bats are also an important source of food for predators such as owls.

"I've actually sat watching bats coming out of their roost [and] doing bat counts, and an owl was perched just beside there hunting the bats and having a feast," Rodriguez de la Vega said on CBC's Daybreak South.

"They're a really important part of the food chain of the ecosystems."

De la Vega said it's important for the public to play a role in tracking bat populations so researchers can have a strong understanding of their health across the province through the Community Bat Program.

According to its website, the Community Bat Program is a network of community bat projects across the province that are carried out in partnership with the Ministry of Environment to monitor the bat populations and protect bat roost sites.

In light of the risks around white-nose syndrome, the program has been asking British Columbians to report a dead or sick bat on its website or via email at info@bcbats.ca or call 1-855-922-2287.

During the white-nose syndrome period from Nov. 1 to May 31, the program recommends people not touch a dead bat with bare hands but instead collect it by wrapping it with a paper towel and putting it into a zip lock bag, 

The program also recommends refrigerating or freezing the specimen if it takes more than 48 hours for a program co-ordinator to pick it up. 

With files from The Canadian Press, Daybreak North and Daybreak South