White-nose syndrome (WNS) is a new disease of bats that has devastated populations in eastern North America. Infection with the fungus, Geomyces destructans, is thought to increase the time bats spend out of torpor during hibernation, leading to starvation. Little is known about hibernation in healthy, free-ranging bats and more data are needed to help predict consequences of WNS. Trade-offs presumably exist between the energetic benefits and physiological/ecological costs of torpor, leading to the prediction that the relative importance of spring energy reserves should affect an individual's use of torpor and depletion of energy reserves during winter. Myotis lucifugus mate during fall and winter but females do not become pregnant until af...
1. The persistence of populations declining from novel stressors depends, in part, on their ability ...
Critical to our understanding of wildlife diseases is the recovery phase, a period during which indi...
In multi-host disease systems, differences in mortality between species may reflect variation in hos...
White-nose syndrome (WNS) is a new disease of bats that has devastated populations in eastern North ...
White-nose syndrome (WNS) is a new disease of bats that has devastated populations in eastern North ...
White-Nose Syndrome (WNS) is a large-scale epidemic that is killing cave-dwelling bats in the easter...
Host responses to infection with novel pathogens are costly and require trade-offs among physiologic...
Bats can be found in almost all climatic zones. They have to deal with unfavorable conditions of env...
White-nose syndrome (WNS), an emerging infectious disease caused by the novel fungusPseudogymnoascus...
The persistence of populations declining from novel stressors depends, in part, on their ability to ...
White-nose syndrome (WNS) is a disease that has caused the mass mortality of hibernating bat species...
1. The persistence of populations declining from novel stressors depends, in part, on their ability ...
1. The persistence of populations declining from novel stressors depends, in part, on their ability ...
Processes associated with recovery of survivors are understudied components of wildlife infectious d...
Processes associated with recovery of survivors are understudied components of wildlife infectious d...
1. The persistence of populations declining from novel stressors depends, in part, on their ability ...
Critical to our understanding of wildlife diseases is the recovery phase, a period during which indi...
In multi-host disease systems, differences in mortality between species may reflect variation in hos...
White-nose syndrome (WNS) is a new disease of bats that has devastated populations in eastern North ...
White-nose syndrome (WNS) is a new disease of bats that has devastated populations in eastern North ...
White-Nose Syndrome (WNS) is a large-scale epidemic that is killing cave-dwelling bats in the easter...
Host responses to infection with novel pathogens are costly and require trade-offs among physiologic...
Bats can be found in almost all climatic zones. They have to deal with unfavorable conditions of env...
White-nose syndrome (WNS), an emerging infectious disease caused by the novel fungusPseudogymnoascus...
The persistence of populations declining from novel stressors depends, in part, on their ability to ...
White-nose syndrome (WNS) is a disease that has caused the mass mortality of hibernating bat species...
1. The persistence of populations declining from novel stressors depends, in part, on their ability ...
1. The persistence of populations declining from novel stressors depends, in part, on their ability ...
Processes associated with recovery of survivors are understudied components of wildlife infectious d...
Processes associated with recovery of survivors are understudied components of wildlife infectious d...
1. The persistence of populations declining from novel stressors depends, in part, on their ability ...
Critical to our understanding of wildlife diseases is the recovery phase, a period during which indi...
In multi-host disease systems, differences in mortality between species may reflect variation in hos...