<p>(Reuters) – A illness that has killed millions of hibernating bats in a United States has been rescued for a initial time in involved gray bats in Tennessee, a anticipating that <span>government scientists</span> on Tuesday described as “devastating.”</p>
<p> White-nose syndrome, a illness named for a fungal excess left on a muzzles of putrescent bats, does not seem to have killed any gray bats so far. But sovereign biologists pronounced a latest presentation of a illness constitutes a grave hazard to a cave-dwelling swift mammals combined to a U.S. <span>endangered class list</span> in 1976.</p>
<p> The gray bat is now a second federally stable species, and a seventh class in all, documented with a mildew in 19 states easterly of a Rocky Mountains. White-nose syndrome, initial rescued in New York state in 2006, has killed an estimated 5.5 million bats that hibernate in caves and mines.</p>
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