
'They're not these malicious creatures of the night': UBC researchers collect bat data after deadly fungus found
CTV
Vancouver's nightlife stretches further than just the Granville strip. Bats are letting loose and can be seen flying across the city's night sky and coexisting with its urban environment.
Vancouver's nightlife stretches further than just the Granville strip. Bats are letting loose and can be seen flying across the city's night sky and coexisting with its urban environment.
UBC bat researchers Dr. Matthew Mitchell and Aaron Aguirre are bringing the small creatures to light by collecting data on their activity throughout the summer.
"Forget what you know about bats from pop culture. They're not these malicious creatures of the night," said Aguirre.
The project will look to better understand how bats use urban and natural landscapes and how their environment impacts them.
The project comes at a time when a fungus that has led to some Canadian bat populations becoming endangered was found last month in the Grand Forks area.
The province's Ministry of Water, Land and Resource Stewardship said in April the fungus that causes white-nose syndrome, which has no proven treatment, had been detected in bat guano, or bat droppings.
"It's really irritating for them; it arouses them out of their torpor, and they want to groom it off. It's like trying to sleep with an athlete's foot on your face," said Aguirre.