![]() |
A healthy little brown bat (U.S. Fish & Wildlife photo) |
University of Michigan biologists have discovered the first genetic evidence of resistance in some bats to white-nose syndrome, a fungal disease that has killed millions of bats in North America, according to a newly published study.
Translation: bats that are genetically prone to be a little fatter or sleep more deeply may be less susceptible to the disease. The disease kills bats two ways: when the fungus grows on them while they're hibernating, it causes them to use twice as much energy as normal to maintain bodily functions, and sometimes they waste away before making it to spring. The fungus also kills bats when it irritates them so much that they wake up during hibernation and, disoriented, leave the cave in the middle of the winter and starve.
The rapid genetic changes in those areas suggest the bats may be evolving because of natural selection. As bats with these genes continue to procreate, more bats could survive the disease, say the authors.
"While the study was small—involving tissue samples from 25 little brown bats killed by white-nose syndrome and nine bats that survived the disease—the authors say their sample size is large enough to detect genetic changes driven by natural selection," Erickson reports. "A larger follow-up study is underway, expanding both the number of bats and the areas affected by the disease, to develop a fuller picture of adaptive change that may be key to the species’ survival."
from The Rural Blog https://ift.tt/2SZgNGa Researchers find some bats evolving to be more resistant to white-nose syndrome - Entrepreneur Generations
0 Response to "Researchers find some bats evolving to be more resistant to white-nose syndrome - Entrepreneur Generations"
Post a Comment