For Immediate Release,  April 11, 2012  
             Contact: Mollie  Matteson, (802) 318-1487 
             White House Petitioned to Take National Action on Fast-moving Disease  Killing Millions of Bats 
                          WASHINGTON— The Center for  Biological Diversity today petitioned the White House Council on Environmental Quality to take immediate action to  stem the spread of white-nose  syndrome, a rapidly spreading disease that has killed nearly 7 million bats  across the eastern United States and is quickly moving west. The Center urged the  council to direct federal land management agencies to take measures to prevent the  further spread of the disease, which in just six years has expanded from a single  cave in upstate New York to affect bats in 19 states and four Canadian  provinces.  
             “The loss of bats to  white-nose syndrome is an unprecedented natural disaster that will have real financial  consequences for many Americans,” said Mollie Matteson, conservation advocate  for the Center. “Not only do some bats species face extinction, but American  farmers stand to lose an estimated $22 billion in lost insect-eating services  that bats provide. This crisis is deepening by the day and it’s time for the  highest reaches of our government to take action.”  
             The Center's petition  asks the White House to direct federal land management agencies — including the  U.S. Forest Service, Bureau of Land Management and National Park Service, which  collectively manage millions of acres across the United States — to enact  consistent regulations limiting human entry to caves on public lands in order  to prevent spread of the disease to the western United States and other  areas.   
             Those steps are needed  because white-nose syndrome has been found to be caused by a newly described  fungus, aptly named Geomyces destructans,  that is easily carried on the shoes, clothes or gear of any person visiting  contaminated caves and is very likely being spread by people. Indeed, all  evidence indicates that the disease was recently and inadvertently introduced  to North America by a cave visitor on both continents. Recognizing these  realities, some agencies have enacted cave closures and decontamination  procedures, but many have not, including  most federal land management agencies in the West, where the disease has  not yet spread and can still be prevented. 
            
              “Despite the severity and  rapid spread of this disease, the response  from federal land managers has been inconsistent and in many cases lackluster,”  said Matteson. “This crisis begs a comprehensive response that only the White  House can provide.”  
             Already this winter,  white-nose syndrome has spread to new areas in the Southeast and Midwest,  showing up for the first time in Missouri, Alabama and Delaware and in more  areas in Indiana, Kentucky and Ohio. Bats also transmit the fungus, but they  are not capable of migrations longer than a few hundred miles. Concern about  long-distance transport of the fungus by people has prompted calls by  scientists, including those with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and the  U.S. Geological Survey, for restrictions on all but essential access to bat  caves. In 2010, the Center petitioned federal agencies to enact comprehensive  restrictions on nonessential human access to caves, but those restrictions have  not been enacted in many areas. 
             The Center is calling on  President Barack Obama's closest environmental leaders, housed at the Council  on Environmental Quality, to bring federal agencies together to enact  consistent bat cave restrictions on federal lands, require proper  decontamination procedures for anyone entering caves, and initiate inventories  of caves and bats on federal lands where little is presently known about  them.   
             Nine species of bat have  been found with the white-nose fungus, and of these, six species have  experienced mortality, several of them at rates approaching 100 percent in  affected caves. Biologists fear that several bat species, including the  once-common little brown bat, may soon become extinct. Scientists do not  yet have an effective treatment; the only known way to contain the spread of  white-nose is to reduce the risk of human transport of the fungus by closing  caves to nonessential access and requiring decontamination procedures of those  still entering caves.  
             For more information,  visit SaveOurBats.org.  
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             The Center for Biological Diversity is a national,  nonprofit conservation organization with more than 350,000 members and online  activists dedicated to the protection of endangered species and wild places.             
            
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