A fungus that has killed millions of bats across North America has arrived in Arizona, state wildlife officials announced on Thursday.
An Arizona bat has tested positive for Pseudogymnoascus destructans (Pd), the fungus that causes the deadly white-nose ...
A cave myotis bat in Arizona has tested positive for the fungus Pseudogymnoascus destructans, which causes white-nose ...
Researchers and citizen scientists took samples of environmental DNA from saliva on backyard hummingbird feeders and agave ...
After testing hundreds of samples, B.C. bats are happily white-nose syndrome-free so far, despite knowing the fungus that ...
Researchers analyzed saliva the nocturnal mammals leave behind when sipping nectar from plants and residential hummingbird ...
Arizona has added a new species of bat to the list of night-flying creatures that frequent the state. The recent confirmation ...
(AP) — Scientists have long suspected that Mexican long-nosed bats migrate through southeastern Arizona, but without capturing and measuring the night-flying creatures, proof has been elusive.
FLAGSTAFF, Ariz. (AP) — Scientists have long suspected that Mexican long-nosed bats migrate through southeastern Arizona, but without capturing and measuring the night-flying creatures ...
He spread the virus by allowing it to mutate in the nose of a ferret and then implanted the animal ... from Wuhan’s Institute of Virology who found that China’s horseshoe bats were natural reservoirs ...
Morales et al. found that, in rhinolophid (horseshoe) and hipposiderid (Old World leaf-nosed) bats — which carry coronaviruses closely related to SARS-CoV-2 — the ISG15 protein is missing a ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results