BOSTON, April 1, 2011 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- Thomas Kunz, Warren
Distinguished Professor in Boston University's Department of Biology,
has coauthored an analysis published this week in the journal Science
that shows how declines of bat populations caused by a new wildlife
disease and fatalities at industrial-scale wind turbines could lead to
substantial economic losses on the farm.
Natural pest-control services provided by insect-eating bats in the
United States likely save the U.S. agricultural industry at least $3
billion a year, and yet insectivorous bats are among the most
overlooked economically important, non-domesticated animals in North
America, noted the study's authors, scientists from the University of
Pretoria (South Africa), the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS), the
University of Tennessee, and Boston University.
"People often ask why we should care about bats," said Paul Cryan, a
USGS research scientist at the Fort Collins Science Center and one of
the study's authors. "This analysis suggests that bats are saving us
big bucks by gobbling up insects that eat or damage our crops. It is
obviously beneficial that insectivorous bats are patrolling the skies
at night above our fields and forests-these bats deserve help."
The value of the pest-control services to agriculture provided by bats
in the U.S. alone range from a low of $3.7 billion to a high of $53
billion a year, the authors estimated. They also warned that
noticeable economic losses to North American agriculture could well
occur in the next 4 to 5 years because of the double-whammy effect of
bat losses due to the emerging disease white-nose syndrome and
fatalities of certain migratory bats at wind-energy facilities. In the
Northeast, however, where white-nose syndrome has killed more than one
million bats in the past few years, the effects could be evident
sooner.
"Bats eat tremendous quantities of flying pest insects, so the loss of
bats is likely to have long-term effects on agricultural and
ecological systems," said Justin Boyles, a researcher with the
University of Pretoria and the lead author of the study. "Consequently, not only is the conservation of bats important for the
well-being of ecosystems, but it is also in the best interest of
national and international economies."
A single little brown bat, which has a body no bigger than an adult
human thumb, can eat 4 to 8 grams (the weight of about a grape or two)
of insects each night, the authors note. Although this may not sound
like much, it adds up-the loss of one million bats in the Northeast
has probably resulted in between 660 and 1,320 metric tons of insects
no longer being eaten each year by bats in the region.
"Additionally, because the agricultural value of bats in the Northeast
is small compared with other parts of the country, such losses could
be even more substantial in the extensive agricultural regions in the
Midwest and the Great Plains, where wind-energy development is booming
and the fungus responsible for white-nose syndrome was recently
detected," said Kunz.
Although these estimates include the costs of pesticide applications
that are not needed because of the pest-control services bats provide,
Boyles and his colleagues said they did not account for the
detrimental effects of pesticides on ecosystems or the economic
benefits of bats suppressing pest insects in forests, both of which
may be considerable.
The loss of bats to white-nose syndrome has largely occurred during
the past 4 years, after the disease first appeared in upstate New
York. Since then, the fungus thought to cause white-nose syndrome has
spread southward and westward and has now been found in 15 states and
in eastern Canada. Bat declines in the Northeast, the most severely
affected region in the U.S. thus far, have exceeded 70 percent.
Populations of at least one species, the little brown bat, have
declined so precipitously that scientists expect the species to
disappear from the region within the next 20 years.
The losses of bats at wind-power facilities, however, pose a different
kind of problem, according to the authors. Although several species of
migratory tree-dwelling bats are particularly susceptible to wind
turbines, continental-scale monitoring programs are not in place and
reasons for the particular susceptibility of some bat species to
turbines remain a mystery, Cryan said.
By one estimate, published by Kunz and colleagues in 2007, about
33,000 to 111,000 bats will die each year by 2020 just in the
mountainous region of the Mid-Atlantic Highlands from direct
collisions with wind turbines as well from lung damage caused by
pressure changes bats experience when flying near moving turbine
blades. In addition, surprisingly large numbers of bats are dying at
wind-energy facilities in other regions of North America.
"We hope that our analysis gets people thinking more about the value
of bats and why their conservation is important," said Gary McCracken,
a University of Tennessee professor and co-author of the analysis. "The bottom line is that the natural pest-control services provided by
bats save farmers a lot of money."
The authors conclude that solutions to reduce the impacts of white-
nose syndrome and fatalities from wind turbines may be possible in the
coming years, but that such work is most likely to be driven by public
support that will require a wider awareness of the benefits of
insectivorous bats.
The article, "Economic importance of bats in agriculture," appears in
the April 1 edition of Science. Authors are J.G. Boyles, P. Cryan, G.
McCracken and T. Kunz.
Founded in 1839, Boston University is an internationally recognized
institution of higher education and research. With more than 30,000
students, it is the fourth largest independent university in the
United States. BU contains 17 colleges and schools along with a number
of multi-disciplinary centers and institutes which are central to the
school's research and teaching mission.
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