Dead Bats Found in Bulgarian Cave after ‘Expendables 2′ Filming: Bats Died in Bulgarian Cave over ‘Expendables 2′ Filming – Novinite.com – Sofia News Agency

 

The bats inside Bulgarian Devetashka cave, a key spot for spending the winter season, have come out of hibernation much earlier than usual and it is unclear how many will survive until spring.

Dead Bats Found in Bulgarian Cave after ‘Expendables 2′ Filming: Bats Died in Bulgarian Cave over ‘Expendables 2′ Filming – Novinite.com – Sofia News Agency

BBC News – First superfast muscles in mammals help bats catch prey

 

Bats are able to locate their prey using echolocation produced by a special kind of “superfast” muscle, scientists have found.

BBC News – First superfast muscles in mammals help bats catch prey

Historic Victory: 757 Species Closer to Protection#.TmrcP7oFXws.facebook

 

On July 12, 2011, the Center for Biological Diversity struck a historic legal settlement with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, requiring the agency to make initial or final decisions on whether to add hundreds of imperiled plants and animals to the endangered species list by 2018. The Endangered Species Act is America’s strongest environmental law and surest way to save species threatened with extinction.

Historic Victory: 757 Species Closer to Protection#.TmrcP7oFXws.facebook

ABC News and Diane Sawyer are wrong about bats!

I was stunned while watching World News with Diane Sawyer that they did not go into the disease affecting bats (White Nose Syndrome (WNS), but more important, all the negative sensationalism about bats.

Teen Dies of Rabies After Getting Bit by Vampire Bat in Mexico

Lets discuss this story in detail:

“”I got two shots in each arm and four shots directly into my stomach muscles, and then two months later, I was getting  follow-up shots every other week,” said Giroux. “It was pretty serious, but it was better than the alternative.”"

This sounds a little outdated. I was explained that it was fewer shots, not in the stomach anymore and there is one gluten shot with a big needle that will hurt, and the gluten is think so it will (forgot what nurse said exactly) make you uncomfortable and slight pain. To make a story worse, go with the outdated scarier stuff.

While most people think of dogs, raccoons or skunks as potential rabies carriers, bats are a major source of the disease in the United States, experts say. And on Thursday, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention announced that a Mexican teenager had become the first person on U.S. soil to die from rabies after getting bit by a vampire bat.

And if you click on the link, bats are a major source… You get:

In the United States, most rabies cases before 1960 were also in domestic animals, but today more than 90 percent of all animal cases reported annually to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control occur in wildlife, most frequently in raccoons, bats, skunks and foxes.

Odd, they just said bats and nothing else. That is odd isn’t it? Here are two ways animals react to rabies:

  1. Animal has rabies, does not go insane and attack people. They just die from it. Unless of course you touch it and it tries to fight you off like any other sick animal would: Bats
  2. Animal has rabies, they get insane, they approach and attack other humans or animals. This is a mechanism to keep rabies alive. raccoons, skunks and foxes.

Which would you be more scared of? I thought so!!

According to the CDC’s Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report, the 19-year-old man arrived to work on a Louisiana sugar cane plantation in July 2010. After one of day working in the field, he began to experience fatigue… …and on Aug. 21, he died of rabies. …had been bitten by a vampire bat in Mexico, 10 days before arriving in the U.S.

OK, where did this come from? Seems like it was copied and pasted in the story. The person was bitten in Mexico by a bat that is only in Mexico…. I see then it goes on to the importance of this world wide. I will spare you the quoted text.

Experts say that as soon as exposure to a rabid animal is suspected, it’s important to consult a doctor and receive a post-exposure prophylaxis vaccine. The vaccine will prevent them from getting rabies, which is almost always fatal.

The paragraph before this, and this one, is talking about wildlife in general trying to get people to think it is about bats only.

But as this vampire bat continues to make headlines, it’s important to understand that there are bats already carrying the deadly rabies virus in the United States.

Along with racoons, skunks, foxes, dogs….. More hype! Just don’t touch a wild bat! or any other wild animal. If it is in category 2 I listed above, go inside.

In 2009, U.S. health officials tested 30,000 bats from several dozen different species for rabies. Dr. John Williams of the department of pediatric infectious disease medicine at Vanderbilt  said that 6 percent, or about one out of 15 bats, tested positive for rabies.

Why should this scare me? 6%? How about raccoons, foxes, skunks, dogs and other mammals?

“A lot of times, people don’t even recall being bit by a bat,” said Williams. “The bites are small and not particularly painful. But even if someone handles a wild bat, they should receive the prophylactic vaccine because bats shed a lot of the virus through urine and other secretions. They don’t even have to bite to infect.”

I have been bitten by a captive Big Brown Bats for animal care that have had thier rabies shot. I have my Pre-exposure shots and sometimes you do not feel it. I do not know if it broke skin, so if it were a wild bat, I would have to get a few more easy shots. (Because of the Pre-x). I never heard of getting an infection without biting. I do not have time to research it. I could see it happen if you had a tiny cut you didn’t know you had, or went in your eye or mouth…

Will Vampire Bats Travel North?
But experts said those changes are complex and difficult to predict.

Lets worry about this when IF it ever happens.

What’s needed is more environmental monitoring, including information about prevalence of different viruses in various animal species as well as data on land use, weather and so forth,” said Alcabes. “This would allow for a richer understanding of how transmission of viruses to humans, as in this unfortunate case, arises from changes in ecosystems.”

Yes, why are we so worried? Lets just wait and see if it even happens. Pre-exposure rabies shots are no big deal. 3 different shots. You may get sick like from shot 2 or 3, but it is worth the extra peace of mind. Then again, I am not concerned about getting the pre-exposure if I didn’t have it. For what I do it is a requirement.

So there you have it! More proof that the media like ABC News, Diane Sawyer and her editor just likes to get you scared and give you incorrect information.

Photo: Straw Colored Fruit Bat
Photo Credit: Copyright 2011, Eric Vogel. www.ecvogel.com

Tracking bands can harm penguins

 

Tracking bands can harm penguins

Increased mortality, decreased energy among side effects, study says

Tracking bands can harm penguins – Technology & science – Science – LiveScience – msnbc.com

DailyTech – Increasing Cut-in Speed of Wind Turbines Results in Fewer Bat Fatalities

 

Tiffany Kaiser - November 2, 2010 10:18 PM

Raising the cut-in speed to 11 mph could result in as much as a 93 percent reduction in bat-turbine related deaths

Wind power has become an important competitor in the race for clean energy, but like many newer developments, it needs some work. One issue associated with wind power is bat and bird-related fatalities due to the spinning blades of the turbines. However, researchers may have solved this problem with a slight change in speed.

DailyTech – Increasing Cut-in Speed of Wind Turbines Results in Fewer Bat Fatalities

Airport Security Discovers Real Tiger Cub Among Toy Tiger Dolls In Suitcase – The Consumerist

 

By Chris Morran on August 27, 2010 1:15 PM 0 views

When security workers at a Bangkok airport thought they’d spotted a real cat hidden among the plush toys of a passenger’s suitcase, they were right… in a big way. That feline was more than your garden variety house cat; it was a 2-month-old tiger cub.

Airport Security Discovers Real Tiger Cub Among Toy Tiger Dolls In Suitcase – The Consumerist

Would You Like Fries With Your Lion Burger? – The Consumerist

 

Would You Like Fries With Your Lion Burger?

By Chris Morran on June 24, 2010 2:15 PM

By now, you’ve probably heard about the small Mesa, Arizona, restaurant that caused an up-roar this week by making a limited-time addition to its menu — Lion Burgers. If you hadn’t heard about it, well now you have. But putting any judgment aside for the moment, one has to ask — Where in the world do you get lion meat from?

Would You Like Fries With Your Lion Burger? – The Consumerist

Gulf of Mexico Spill: Expert Recommends Killing Oil-Soaked Birds – SPIEGEL ONLINE – News – International

I though this was interesting. I have nothing else to back it up by and have mixed feelings about it myself.

A German biologist says that efforts to clean oil-drenched birds in the Gulf of Mexico are in vain. For the birds’ sake, it would be faster and less painful if animal-rescue workers put them under, she says. Studies and other experts back her up.

Gulf of Mexico Spill: Expert Recommends Killing Oil-Soaked Birds – SPIEGEL ONLINE – News – International

Dawn Is Best For Washing Oily Birds — But Don’t Use It For Pets – The Consumerist

 

By Meg Marco on May 14, 2010 12:28 PM 0 views

It’s true that a scrub with Dawn dishwashing detergent is the method of choice for removing oil from various wildlife — but you really shouldn’t use it on your pets, says a Procter & Gamble spokesperson.

Dawn Is Best For Washing Oily Birds — But Don’t Use It For Pets – The Consumerist