AUSTIN PEAY STATE UNIVERSITY
THE CENTER OF EXCELLENCE FOR FIELD BIOLOGY

Welcome to the "Bat Project"

 



Contact Information

P.O. Box 4718
Clarksville,
TN 37044

Room: SSC C125

Phone: 931-221-6489

Fax:
931-221-6372

 

barrassa@apsu.edu

All pictures and text are copyrighted information. Please send a request for permission to use.




Bat Project Links


Dunbar Cave WNS Research

Bat Banding

Dunbar Cave Restoration

Dunbar Cave Microscale GIS Studies

Land Between The Lakes Acoustic monitoring of the bat population

Additional Links

TN Bat Working Group

Bat Conservation Intl.

SCCI

WNS Links

White Nose FAQs PDF

TN.gov Newsroom

batcon.org

Joint Oversight Hearing

US Fish & Wildlife Service

www.caves.org

DCG Grotto

Introduction

Sleeping Bat

Dr. Andrew Barrass, Associate Professor of Biology at APSU, is the Project Manager and Principal Investigator working with the APSU Center of Excellence for Field Biology to monitor the potential spread of WNS (White Nose Syndrome) in the state of Tennessee. Fellow researchers, Graduate student Morgan Kurz, and undergraduate student Seth McCormick, are studying bats using transect monitors at Dunbar Cave and Land Between The Lakes. The APSU research team is also developing a microscale GIS map of Dunbar Cave to help aid in the understanding of bat habitation. APSU is currently the only university asked by the state to monitor and develop research concerning the White Nose outbreak.

Sleeping Bat

White Nose Syndrome Research in Dunbar Cave State Natural Area

Program Manager & principal investigator at the Center for Field Biology:

Dr. Andrew Barrass

Bat Project Students:

Seth McCormick and Morgan Kurz

In February 2006 some 40 miles west of Albany, N.Y., a caver photographed hibernating bats with an unusual white substance on their muzzles. He noticed several dead bats. The following winter, bats behaving erratically, bats with white noses and a few hundred dead bats in several caves came to the attention of New York Department of Environmental Conservation biologists, who documented white-nose syndrome in January 2007. Hundreds of thousands of hibernating bats have died since. Biologists with state and federal agencies and organizations across the country are still trying to find the answer to this deadly mystery. - From US Fish & Wildlife ArticleWNS in NY State