This scholarship page was last updated on 05 October 2022. Some details may have changed since then. Please check the Department of the Interior Fish and Wildlife Service website or the Department of the Interior Fish and Wildlife Service page for current opportunities.

Research and Development of Biotechnological Tools for White-nose Syndrome

Department of the Interior Fish and Wildlife Service
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Start Date:

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Type

Fellowships

Reference Number

F23AS00037

The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (Service) is making funding available in 2022 and 2023 for research and development of enduring solutions to manage white-nose syndrome (WNS) in bats. The Service provides financial and technical assistance to nongovernmental, university, and private researchers, as well as state and local governments, Native American tribes, and federal agencies, for the management of WNS and conservation of bats. Projects supported under this funding opportunity will investigate, develop, evaluate, and implement innovative biotechnologies to eliminate the threat of WNS to bats in North America. Since 2007, white-nose syndrome has caused the deaths of millions of bats in North America. The disease is caused by an invasive fungus, Pseudogymnoascus destructans (Pd), in the Phylum Ascomycota, that grows best in cold, damp, dark environments like those preferred by hibernating bats. Twelve species of bats in temperate North America are known to be susceptible to infections by Pd, but the severity of WNS varies considerably among them. Several species suffer high rates of mortality from WNS while others suffer only minor infections. An additional six North American bat species are known to have been exposed to Pd but have not been shown to suffer infection. In Europe and Asia, where Pd likely originated, multiple bat species are known to be susceptible to WNS, but with only minor infections and no evidence of mass mortality from the disease. As of August 2022, WNS is confirmed or suspected in bats in 39 states and eight Canadian provinces, and evidence of the causative fungus, Pd, has been detected in at least four additional states without signs of the disease. For information on WNS and previously funded projects, please see: http://www.whitenosesyndrome.org/ Growth in our scientific understanding of WNS, Pd, and susceptible bats has been rapid since the disease was first identified in 2007. Evidence from multiple lines of investigation, along with recent advances in biotechnology, have laid the groundwork for developing biotechnological tools that may put an end to the threat this invasive species poses to bats in North America. Funding through the Research and Development of Biotechnological Tools for WNS grant opportunity will advance projects that leverage knowledge about WNS, fungal pathogens, invasive species, wildlife diseases and other relevant topics to produce enduring solutions to WNS in North America. We seek management solutions that are pathogen-specific, effective, scalable, and safe for native biota and environments. For this opportunity, we consider biotechnological tools to be those that involve the modification of an organism or genome for the purposes of acting on the function of an organism (in this case, Pd). Projects submitted to this opportunity should clearly achieve progress toward an implementable management tool. Collaborations are encouraged and applicants are invited to contact a member of the Service’s WNS coordination team (below) while developing their projects. Goal: Eliminate the threat of Pd to hibernating bats in North America. Objective 1: Develop biotechnological tools that remove or suppress Pd’s pathogenic properties, making it unable to cause severe disease. Objective 2: Develop biotechnological tools that reduce or eliminate the environmental reservoir of Pd in treated sites.
Categories: Recovery Act.

More Information

Posted on:

Start Date:

Date limite d´inscription:

Expired

Type

Fellowships

Reference Number

F23AS00037

North%20Royalton%2C%20%C3%89tats-Unis

North Royalton , États-Unis