UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. — For summer visitors at Shaver’s Creek Environmental Center, the show started at dusk.
Like a dependable flock of third-shift insect-control workers, little brown bats emerged from the wildlife educational center’s bat boxes and fluttered in a cloud over the heads of the families pausing during night hikes to watch the show. This spectacle was a nightly summer tradition for thousands of area residents that rivaled drive-ins and double-headers.
For the past few years, these families waited alone.
During the last decade, a mysterious fungal disease has decimated much of the region’s cave-dwelling bat populations, the once plentiful nocturnal master of the summer nights in the northeast, and cratered entire bat species. In some areas, colony populations fell 80 to 100 percent.
Penn State researchers are still holding out hope that these mammals, often considered the official “spokescreature” of horror movies and spooky Halloween tales, won’t remain forever relegated to the fringes of folklore and the recesses of the human imagination, but will be restored to the inky black night time skies and returned to their important ecological function.
About 10 years ago, researchers documented the first case of the fungal disease — later dubbed white-nose syndrome (WNS) — affecting bats in New York, according to Michael Gannon, professor of biology at Penn State Altoona and one of the experts on the front lines of preserving the bat population. A few years later, millions of bats — including some of the area’s most common, such as the little brown bat, the Indiana bat and the small-footed bat — were dead, and colonies of the area’s leading consumer of insects and pests were whittled down to fractions of their former sizes.
While the exact mechanism behind the disease is still unknown, researchers suggest that the white-nose fungus causes the cave-dwelling bats to wake early from their winter hibernation. Once roused, without any insects to feed on and facing cold winter temperatures, the bats starve to death or die from exposure.