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美国东北部夏季蝙蝠的白鼻综合征和翅膀损伤指数得分

White-nose syndrome and wing damage index scores among summer bats in the northeastern United States.

作者信息

Francl Karen E, Sparks Dale W, Brack Virgil, Timpone John

机构信息

Radford University, Department of Biology, Box 6931, Radford, Virginia 24142, USA.

出版信息

J Wildl Dis. 2011 Jan;47(1):41-8. doi: 10.7589/0090-3558-47.1.41.

Abstract

White-nose syndrome (WNS) adversely affects millions of bats hibernating in caves of the eastern United States. Beginning in 2009, the US Fish and Wildlife Service supported use of a wing damage index (WDI) scoring system (scale of 0 to 3, or no damage to severe) to assess wing damage of bats captured during summer. Based on bat captures at 459 mist net sites in Pennsylvania, New York, Maryland, Virginia, and New Jersey, USA, we questioned whether WDI scores varied by species group, date, and distance to the closest known affected hibernaculum. We also compared relative health (body mass index [BMI] scores) to WDI scores. Of 3,419 bats (nine species), only four individuals (0.1%; little brown [Myotis lucifugus] and northern bats [Myotis septentrionalis]) were scored as a 3 and 47 (1.4%; big brown [Eptesicus fuscus], little brown, and northern bats) as a 2. All tree bats (eastern red [Lasiurus borealis], hoary [Lasiurus cinereus], and silver-haired bats [Lasionycteris noctivagans]) scored a 0 or 1, suggesting that these species were not affected by WNS. The average WDI score decreased as summer progressed, although trends were weak. Average WDI score and number of bats with class 2 and 3 damage increased with proximity to a known WNS-positive hibernaculum. Similarly, the number of bats with severe wing damage (scoring 2 or 3) was greater at sites closer to infected hibernacula, but little variance was explained by the trend. When species-specific BMI was examined, trends were consistent by sex (female BMI scores were higher than those of males), but no relationship was discovered between BMI and WDI scores. We conclude that, at this larger geographic scale, WDI is not a clear indicator of bat health.

摘要

白鼻综合征(WNS)对美国东部洞穴中数百万只正在冬眠的蝙蝠产生了不利影响。自2009年起,美国鱼类及野生动物管理局支持使用翅膀损伤指数(WDI)评分系统(范围为0至3,即从无损伤到严重损伤)来评估夏季捕获的蝙蝠的翅膀损伤情况。基于在美国宾夕法尼亚州、纽约州、马里兰州、弗吉尼亚州和新泽西州459个雾网站点捕获的蝙蝠,我们探讨了WDI分数是否因物种组、日期以及与已知受影响冬眠地的距离而有所不同。我们还将相对健康状况(体重指数[BMI]分数)与WDI分数进行了比较。在3419只蝙蝠(9个物种)中,只有4只个体(0.1%;小棕蝠[棕蝠]和北方蝙蝠[北方棕蝠])被评为3分,47只(1.4%;大棕蝠[大棕蝠]、小棕蝠和北方蝙蝠)被评为2分。所有树栖蝙蝠(东部红蝙蝠[红蝙蝠]、霜蝙蝠[霜蝙蝠]和银毛蝙蝠[银毛蝠])的得分均为0或1,这表明这些物种未受WNS影响。随着夏季的推进,平均WDI分数有所下降,尽管趋势较弱。平均WDI分数以及损伤等级为2级和3级的蝙蝠数量随着与已知WNS阳性冬眠地距离的接近而增加。同样,翅膀严重损伤(得分2或3)的蝙蝠数量在更靠近受感染冬眠地的站点更多,但该趋势所解释的差异较小。在检查特定物种的BMI时,按性别来看趋势是一致的(雌性BMI分数高于雄性),但未发现BMI与WDI分数之间存在关联。我们得出结论,在这个更大的地理尺度上,WDI并非蝙蝠健康状况的明确指标。

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