April 29, 2008
Bats tested for white-nose syndrome
Page 2 of 2
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The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, Federal Highway Administration, Army Corps of Engineers, Department of Defense, Tennessee Valley Authority, National Park Service and U.S. Forest Service were the agencies named in the letter.

Judy Rodd, director of the Friends of Blackwater, said a recent draft environmental impact statement by the U.S. Forest Service on the planned co-use of Blackwater Canyon Trail as an access road for a lumber company "is woefully inadequate" in light of the white-nose syndrome threat.

Rodd said the environmental impact statement should be "withdrawn and revised to take into account this proven threat to endangered species in the canyon."

She said Fish and Wildlife's biological opinion and incidental take permit for the Blackwater Canyon Trail project should also be withdrawn.

The endangered Indiana bat is known to live in caves in Blackwater Canyon and numerous other locations in West Virginia.  Ninety-five percent of the known population of the endangered Virginia big-eared bat hibernates in a single cave in Pendleton County.

The bats found at Trout Cave were little brown bats, one of the region's more common species of bats.

In February, more than 40 West Virginia bat hibernation caves were closed to guard against the possible spread of white-nose syndrome via spelunking clothes and caving gear.

In March, six bat caves in the Monongahela National Forest were closed for similar reasons.

For more information on white-nose syndrome, visit the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service's white-nose syndrome Web site at www.fws.gov/northeast/white_nose.html.

To contact staff writer Rick Steelhammer, use e-mail or call 348-5169.

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