Mother Nature is getting pissed at
us.......
ed
http://www.naturalnews.com/022989.htmlFirst It Was Bees, Now
It's Bats That Are Dying
Friday, April 11, 2008 by: Heidi Stevenson
(NaturalNews) Though bats are a bit spooky looking, inviting thoughts of
Dracula, the real horror story is that bats are becoming sick and perishing. A
massive bat die-off is happening. Their extinction in the United States is
threatening -- and no one knows why.
Just as news of the massive bee die off is fading away -- though
not actually ending -- the plight of bats in the United States is starting to
come out.
The loss of bats may be an even
worse concern than the loss of bees, which are exclusively tame and mass-raised
-- over-stressed, over-bred, and grown to be over-sized. They're used to
pollinate crops, especially ones that are not natural to the areas in which
they're grown, such as almonds in California. Wild bees are doing just fine.
In contrast, the lost bats are all wild.
They are the world's greatest insect eaters. A single nursing bat can eat half
its weight in insects every day. A small brown bat can eat as many as 600
mosquitoes in an hour. The implications for agriculture are enormous. The spread
of severe communicable diseases could be devastating.
The epicenter of this annihilation
is New York, but there are reports of die offs from as far away as Texas.
Reports began trickling in last year. It started with hikers noticing dead and
dying bats littered outside the caves where they hibernate. They do not normally
fly during the winter or daytime, and it was quickly realized that bats flying
when they should be hibernating do not survive. They are, therefore, being
called "dead bats flying". The loss of bats has cascaded this winter to the
point where researchers are expressing fear that an extinction is underway.
The cause is unknown, though there is
a name for the phenomenon, White Nose Syndrome. It's the result of a fungus
that's particularly obvious on the nose and face, though it's found dotted all
over the bats' bodies. It is believed, though, to be only a symptom of an
underlying problem, as yet unknown. There are theories, of course. Causes like
virus and bacterial infections are possible. Many bats have been found to have
pneumonia, but it is considered to be a secondary symptom, like the fungus.
A more likely cause of bat die off is
the use of pesticides. Bats are known to be sensitive to the same toxins used to
kill insects -- just as we humans are. The fact that there are newly-introduced
pesticides, specifically designed to stop West Nile Virus, is suspicious. It may
be that the bats are starving from lack of food as a result of the new
pesticides' effectiveness. This could be the worst possible scenario, since the
ultimate effect of all pesticides has been the development of
pesticide-resistant insects. If the bats disappear because of starvation, then
eventually, when the insects have become resistant, there will be nothing to
control them.
There is reason to
believe that starvation is the primary cause of death. Dead bats' fat reserves
are depleted. Whether this is the result of infection, toxins, or loss of food
is unknown.
The bats' behavior is
severely disturbed. As previously noted, they never fly during the day or in
winter. Only sick and dying bats have been emerging from their caves during the
day in the winter, when they are normally hibernating. They are also noted to be
hibernating close the the caves' entrances, in contrast with their usual
inclination to go deeper inside. This might be the result of being forced to
search for food, but may also be caused by another disturbance. Many diseases
change the behavior of their victims. A well-known example of this is
aggressiveness and fear of water in rabies victims.
What Bat Die-Off Means to Humanity
The first problem
people note may be a profusion of mosquitoes this year. Bats are nature's
primary means of controlling mosquito populations. Although it's possible that
the excessive use of pesticides will keep this under control temporarily, the
day must come when the piper will be paid, as new toxin-resistant mosquitoes
develop. Ultimately, these diseases are likely to multiply aggressively -- but
by then, the bats that keep them under control may be gone.
Major diseases borne by mosquitoes
include West Nile Fever, Eastern Equine Encephalitis, Malaria, and Dengue Fever.
All of them are severe and life-threatening.
Crops may be affected. Bats are significant controllers of many
crop-destructive insects. As with diseases, the severity of the risk is
dependent on how long it takes to manifest -- the longer, the worse the effects.
If pesticide use results in crop loss occurring later, after the bats are gone,
then it is likely to be devastating.
What the Experts Are Saying
The president of Bat
Conservation International, Merlin Tuttle, has stated, "So far as we can tell at
this point, this may be the most serious threat to North American bats we've
experienced in recorded history.
"
A wildlife biologist with Vermont's Fish and Wildlife
Department, Scott Darling says, "Logic dictates when you are potentially losing
as many as a half a million bats in this region, there are going to be
ramifications for insect abundance in the coming summer." "Ramifications for
insect abundance" can be translated as massive mosquito outbreaks.
Unfortunately, there is much about
bats that is unknown. Even how many exist is in question, as new hibernacula
(caves where bats hibernate) are being discovered as bat bodies littered at
previously unknown cave entrances are discovered. This means that the benefits
of bats' voracious insect-eating habits have gone unrecorded, indicating that
the cost of their loss may be even greater than realized. Elizabeth Buckles, an
assistant professor at Cornell who coordinates bat research, has said, "We're
going to learn an awful lot about bats in a comprehensive way that very few
animal species have been looked at. That's good. But it's unfortunate it has to
be under these circumstances.
"
A
study of the impact of Brazilian free-tailed bats of southwestern Texas has
shown their economic value to cotton farmers to be worth between one-eighth and
one-sixth of the commercial value of the crops.
Further complicating the issue is the fact that most bats can
raise only one offspring a year. Thomas French, assistant director for natural
heritage and endangered species of MassWildLife in Massachusetts, says, "High
bat mortality is a major concern because bats have a low reproductive rate. Most
bats raise one pup per year. It will take decades for bat populations to rebound
after a large die-off.
"
Al Hicks, of
New York's Environmental Conservation Department, was the first New Yorker to
study the issue. Ironically, he came into this issue attempting to delist a
species called pink-nosed bats. Now, though, he says, "If we assume only 50
percent decline at the new sites, we are talking hundreds of thousands of bats
that could die." New York has seen at least one bat cave's population crash by
90% this winter.
Conclusion
Once again, we're seeing the results of
arrogance in ignoring nature's balance. In thinking that we can do it better
than nature, the result is devastation. Whether it's pesticides or something
else wrought by behavior that results from short-term profit-oriented thinking,
rather than concern for the planet that has nurtured us, the bats are under
threat. Whether it's the loss of bees or bats or some other creature or plant,
in the end, we lose, too. Ultimately, the lesson that Mother Nature cannot be
fooled will be learned.
Will it require the
extinction of humans?
About the author
Heidi Stevenson
Fellow,
British Institute of Homeopathy
Gaia Therapy (http://www.
gaia-therapy. com)
The author is a homeopath who became concerned with
medically-induced harm as a result of her own experiences and those of family
members. She says that allopathic medicine is the arena that best describes the
motto, "Buyer beware.
"
Iatrogenic disease
is illness, disability, and death caused by medical practice. It is common,
resulting in huge costs to society and individuals. It's possible - even common
- to suffer an iatrogenic illness without realizing its source. Heidi Stevenson
provides information about medically-induced disease and disability so members
of the public can protect themselves.
http://www.naturalnews.com/022989.html
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