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White-Nose Syndrome Has Been Found In Texas. Here's What That Means.

Mexican free-tailed bats fly out from underneath the Congress Avenue Bridge as part of their nightly feeding routine.
Gabriel C. Pérez
/
KUT
Mexican free-tailed bats fly out from underneath the Congress Avenue Bridge as part of their nightly feeding routine.

Texas' first case of white-nose syndrome in bats has been confirmed.

The fungus that causes the disease  was first detected in Texas bats in 2017, but the disease itself, which has killed millions of bats on the East Coast, hadn't been found by Texas Parks and Wildlife until Feb. 23 in Gillespie County.

Officials say they're also testing as many as 30 bats in the Central Texas area for the disease; results are pending. 

Credit Texas Parks and Wildlife Department

White-nose syndrome (as the name suggests) comes from a fungus that grows on their noses. It disrupts sleep cycles of hibernating bats while also emaciating them, so when they come out of hibernation, they're weakened and can easily starve. In some colder climates, the disease has led to declines of up to 90% of bat populations.

If or when it spreads, Nate Fuller of Texas Parks and Wildlife says, the disease will most affect bats that live in caves. But that doesn't mean white-nose syndrome ends there. Practically speaking, he says, a die-off of those bats could have far-reaching effects on agriculture in Texas.

Bats tend to feed on moths and beetles, insects with breeding cycles that can stunt or even jeopardize harvests, he said.

"These are the kinds of bugs that will lay eggs, and their juvenile phases will consume a lot of crops to the point where it causes farmers to use more pesticides and things like that on their crops to make sure that their plants stay viable until harvest season," Fuller said. "So, without bats, we have a significant increase in the amount of pesticides and other nasty chemicals that we have to spray onto our agriculture."

It should be noted, that the disease will not immediately affect Austin's bats, which are Mexican free-tailed bats. Fuller says they're more likely to be vectors of the disease, rather than victims, because their hibernation isn't as extensive as it is among cave bats, and they don't spend their winters in colder climates.

"We suspect that the bats in Austin should be safe," he said. "But those guys can also move the fungus around quite a bit, because they're wide-ranging animals that can fly 70 kilometers each night when they go to feed."

Because of recent die-offs, Texas Parks and Wildlife is testing around 30 bats for white-nose syndrome in the Central Texas area.

On top of that, Fuller says, the department's rabies lab has also seen a spike in the number of bats suspected of having rabies. In any given February, Fuller says, the lab will get two bats to test for rabies. Last month, it tested 60.

Fuller emphasized that bats infected with white-nose syndrome aren't aggressive or harmful and that the disease doesn't affect humans. Rabid bats could transmit rabies, however.

He urges people who encounter  any bat acting erratically to just leave it alone and call the Texas Parks and Wildlife or their local public health department.

Copyright 2020 KUT 90.5. To see more, visit .

Andrew Weber is a freelance reporter and associate editor for KUT News. A graduate of St. Edward's University with a degree in English, Andrew has previously interned with The Texas Tribune, The Austin American-Statesman and KOOP Radio.