Researchers race to study probiotic before white-nose syndrome spreads to B.C. bats
VANCOUVER — Researchers say a deadly fungus that has nearly wiped out a North American bat species hasn’t yet spread to British Columbia, giving them valuable time to study whether probiotics prevent the disease.
B.C. scientists have been researching the bacteria-laden powder’s effect on white-nose syndrome for the last three years.
The condition kills the bats by forcing them to wake from hibernating and use their energy to groom the fungus off their bodies.
Little brown myotis bats were once considered the most populous species of bats in North America. The disease has decimated them, and the species was declared endangered by the federal government in 2012, just six years after the first case of white-nose syndrome was documented on the continent.