America’s National Parks Podcast
Society & Culture:Places & Travel
The National Park Service manages 84 million acres, in 419 parks, 1 in 4 of which have caves, and 1 in 3 of which have mines. Many of these caves and mines provide habitat for hibernating bats.
Bats are an essential part of many American ecosystems, but they're under threat from a hidden illness called white-nose syndrome. Since 2006, this fungal disease has killed millions of bats in North America. In some caves and mines, 90-100% of bat populations have died.
Parks in more than half of the United States are affected by the presence of White Nose Syndrom. Losing an important predator so quickly may have a drastic effect on the ecology of a given park. As the disease spreads, scientists consider the impact and potential for impact on national parks to be very high.
Today on America's National Parks, Bats of the Greater Yellowstone area - and how National Park Service scientists are working to learn how to protect them.
Rangers Make the Difference
The 14th Colony
The Land That Made a President
Unleashing a Tamed River
Acadia National Park and the Year Maine Burned
The Gateway to Arizona
Alcatraz and the Civil War
The Curse of the Petrified Forest
Drunken Subterranian Terrorism
Dred and Harriet Scott
Legends of Denali
Lady Liberty
Delicate Arch, and the Strange 1950s Schemes to Reinforce It
Muir, Roosevelt, and Yosemite: A Camping Trip That Changed the World
California Condors
An Island Prison
The Voyageurs
Pirates and Parks
37 Days in Yellowstone
The Grand Dame of the Everglades
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