They call it a 'bat apocalypse.' The fungus causing it is spreading across Texas
FORT WORTH, Texas The fungus that kills bats showed up in Texas only two years ago, but now it is marching across the state
So far, no cases of white-nose syndrome have been discovered in Texas.
But it usually takes two to four years before the fungus starts causing white-nose syndrome, said Jonah Evans, a Texas Parks and Wildlife mammalogist.
Texas Parks and Wildlife announced this week that the fungus was found in 22 sites in 16 counties in 2019. Eleven of those counties are new and it has now been found in 21 Texas counties.
The fungus spread across the U.S. has led some scientists to warn that it could lead to a regional extinction of some bat species. The syndrome gets its name from the white fuzz found on the noses of infected bats as they overwinter in caves.
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