Minnesota's bat population, devastated by a fungal disease known as white-nose syndrome, has become so shrunken and fragile that state biologists are giving up their annual December "bat count" as a lost cause.
Researchers believe that even if their cave count did turn up a few survivors, the naturalists might risk disturbing bats when they're most vulnerable, said Gerda Nordquist, mammalogist for the Minnesota Department of Natural Resources. "Best to just leave them alone," Nordquist said. "There's just nothing left to find."
The bats' plight is especially troubling because of their far-reaching impact on the region's economy and environment. The four species at risk of extinction here — the little brown bat, northern long-eared bat, tri-colored bat and big brown bat — all eat their weight in mosquitoes, beetles and crop-damaging moths every night. Scientists fear that their extinction would result in significant crop damage and increased use of chemical pesticides, to say nothing of the increased nuisance for people.
The DNR is placing its hopes on artificial bat houses and boxes for the state's four hibernating bat species. This spring, they'll study if the bats can hibernate successfully without caves and try to discover why some of the animals — albeit very few — survive the destructive fungus.
White-nose syndrome was discovered in Minnesota in 2015. Since then, the disease is believed to have killed more than 90% of bats in important hibernation spots such as Mystery Cave in southeastern Minnesota and the Soudan Underground Mine on the Iron Range. It is not known to affect other animals, humans or livestock. States and federal agencies have been trying to find a treatment or antidote since the fungus was first discovered in North America, in upstate New York in 2007. Logistically, that's proving impossible, Nordquist said.
The fungal spores can cling to just about anything and are now so firmly established in North America that there is little hope they'll ever be removed. "Even if you had the time and money to sterilize a cave or any one place, new bats will come in every year and just reinfect it," she said. "It's frustrating."
The fungus is estimated to have killed more than 6 million cave bats in 33 states and Canada. The spread shows no signs of slowing.
The best, and perhaps only, hope lies in the few individual bats that have been able to survive a winter with white-nose syndrome. In some Eastern states that have been infected longer than Minnesota, a few bats tagged by researchers were found to live through multiple winters while the rest of their populations were eliminated.