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UID:https://saratogareads.org/events/diminishing-bat-population-and-white-nose-syndrome/
URL:https://saratogareads.org/events/diminishing-bat-population-and-white-nose-syndrome/
DTSTAMP:20171117T091902
CREATED:20171117T091902
DTSTART:20180208T120000
TITLE:Diminishing Bat Population and White-nose Syndrome
SUMMARY:Diminishing Bat Population and White-nose Syndrome
DESCRIPTION:Diminishing Bat Population and White-nose
  Syndrome\nExperience Al Hicks’ presentation on white-nose syndrome, a
  phenomenon that threatens the survival of bat species in North America.
  White-nose syndrome was first discovered in Schoharie County in 2006, and
  has since spread rapidly to regions in the U.S. and Canada.\nHicks was
  the mammal specialist for the New York State Department of Environmental
  Conservation&#8217;s endangered species program from 1978 until his
  retirement in 2010. He will discuss the current status of WNS, as well as
  the ongoing winter acoustic monitoring of hibernating colonies of bats, a
  program Hicks had initiated. This bat surveillance model has now been
  adopted by over a dozen states. Hick continues his work as the co-founder
  of an environmental consulting firm specializing in bat management issues
  and white-nose syndrome recovery.
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:<html><head><title></title></head><body><div
  class="field field-name-body field-type-text-with-summary
  field-label-hidden"><div class="field-items"><div class="field-item
  even"><em>Diminishing Bat Population and White-nose
  Syndrome</em><br>\n<p>Experience Al Hicks’ presentation on white-nose
  syndrome, a phenomenon that threatens the survival of bat species in
  North America. White-nose syndrome was first discovered in Schoharie
  County in 2006, and has since spread rapidly to regions in the U.S. and
  Canada.</p><p>Hicks was the mammal specialist for the New York State
  Department of Environmental Conservation&#8217;s endangered species
  program from 1978 until his retirement in 2010. He will discuss the
  current status of WNS, as well as the ongoing winter acoustic monitoring
  of hibernating colonies of bats, a program Hicks had initiated. This bat
  surveillance model has now been adopted by over a dozen states. Hick
  continues his work as the co-founder of an environmental consulting firm
  specializing in bat management issues and white-nose syndrome
  recovery.</p></div></div></div></body></html>
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