Michael Pitts / Sand tiger shark (Carcharias taurus) on the wreck of the 'Aeolus'. North Carolina, USA, September 2013.
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Michael Pitts / Sand tiger shark (Carcharias taurus) on the wreck of the 'Aeolus'. North Carolina, USA, September 2013.
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Michael Pitts / Sand tiger shark (Carcharias taurus) on the wreck of the 'Aeolus'. North Carolina, USA, September 2013.
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Gerrit Vyn / A Little Brown Bat ( Myotis lucifugus) clings to a tree on 20 degree F day outside Aeolus Cave. Despite the apparent health of this individual, it is supposed to be in deep hibernation. White-nose syn...
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Gerrit Vyn / Vermont Department of Fish and Wildlife biologist Scott Darling holds dead bats found outside Vermont's Aeolus Cave. Bats are infected with White nose syndrome with causes a distinctive ring of fungal...
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Gerrit Vyn / A researcher holds a dead Little Brown Myotis (Myotis lucifigus) found in the snow outside Aeolus Cave. The bats hibernating within the cave are infected with the deadly White-nose Syndrome. This dise...
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Gerrit Vyn / Live and dead Little Brown Bats (Myotis lucifugus) in fected with White nose syndrome, in Aeolus Cave, the largest bat hibernacula in New England. This disease causes a distinctive ring of fungal grow...
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Gerrit Vyn / Live and dead Little Brown Bats (Myotis lucifugus) in fected with White nose syndrome, in Aeolus Cave, the largest bat hibernacula in New England. This disease causes a distinctive ring of fungal grow...
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Gerrit Vyn / Live and dead Little brown Bats (Myotis lucifugus) hang outside Vermont's Aeolus Cave, the largest bat hibernacula in New England. Starving bats infected with white-nose syndrome often exit their hib...
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Gerrit Vyn / Dead Little brown Bats (Myotis lucifugus) in a crevice outside of Vermont's Aeolus Cave. Starving bats infected with the deadly White-nose syndrome often exit the hiberncula where they quickly freeze....
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Gerrit Vyn / The entrance to Vermont's largest bat hibernacula, Aeolus Cave. White-nose syndrome is decimating the caves bat population. Bennington County, Vermont, USA, March 2009
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Gerrit Vyn / The entrance to Vermont's largest bat hibernacula, Aeolus Cave. White-nose syndrome is decimating the caves bat population. Bennington County, Vermont, USA, March 2009