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Deanna Rapczynski of Bellmawr, TD Bank Employee, Eucharistic Minister

RESIDENTS ENCOURAGED TO PARTICIPATE IN APPALACHIAN BAT SURVEY

 

HARRISBURG – Pennsylvania Game Commission biologists are seekinassistance from residents in a regional monitoring effort to collect bat maternity colony data this summer. This monitoring is especially important to measure bat mortalitiecauseby White-Nose Syndrome (WNS), a disease that affects hibernating bats in Pennsylvania and other parts of the eastern United States.

WNS primarily kills during the winter, but the true impact of WNS on bat populations cannot be determined using estimatefrom winter hibernacula alone,” said Nate Zalik, Game Commission wildlife biologist. Pennsylvanians can help us more fully gauge the impactof WNS on bats by hosting a bacount this summerWe are especially urging people who have ever conducted a bacount for the GameCommission in the past to redo a count this year.”

 

To obtain applications and information on how to participate, visit the GamCommissions website (www.pgc.state.pa.us) anput your cursor over Wildlife in the menu bar at the top of the homepage, clicoWildlife in the drop-down menu, scroll down and choosePennsylvania Bats” in the Wild Mammals section, and theclick on AppalachiaBaCount.” Forms on the website guide interested participants through the steps of timingconducting a survey and submitting their findings to the Game CommissionScout groups, 4-Hclubs, locaenvironmental organizations, and individual homeownercaall participate in this important effort. 

Pennsylvania’s two moscommon bat species, the little brown baand the big brown bat, use buildingas their summer roosts,” Zalik said. Abandonehouses, barns, church steeples – and evecurrently-occupied structures – can provide a summer home to femalebats and their young.

Monitoring these maternity colonies’ can give biologists a good idea of how bat populations in aarea are doing from year to year.With the occurrence of WNS in Pennsylvania, monitoring these colonies is more important thaever.

Zalik noted that the fieldwork isnt difficult to do, and Pennsylvanians can play a huge role in helping the Game Commission get abetter understanding of what is happening to bats this summer.

We’re looking for some help, and we hope youll consider becoming part of the Appalachian BaCount monitoring team,” Zaliksaid. Its a chance to make a difference for bats and to get involved in assessing the impact of WNSPlease consider lending a hand.”

For more information on WNS, visit the Game Commissions website (www.pgc.state.pa.us) anput your cursor on Wildlife in the menu bar at the top of the homepage, click on Wildlife in the drop-down menu, scroll down and choose “White-Nose Syndrome in the Wildlife Disease section.


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