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Dive into the research topics where Winifred F. Frick is active.

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Featured researches published by Winifred F. Frick.


Science | 2010

An emerging disease causes regional population collapse of a common North American bat species.

Winifred F. Frick; Jacob F. Pollock; Alan C. Hicks; Kate E. Langwig; D. Scott Reynolds; Gregory G. Turner; Calvin M. Butchkoski; Thomas H. Kunz

Threats to and from Bats Bats appear to be able to host an assortment of alarming pathogens, which, if they do not extirpate the bats, have implications for human health (see the Perspective by Daszak). For example, exposure to bats is the main source of human rabies in the Americas. But rabies is not generally transmitted among people; humans are a dead end for the virus. Streicker et al. (p. 676, see the cover) show that rabies virus lineages tend to be specific for bat lineages. It seems that although rabies viruses have the potential for rapid evolution, this property alone is not enough to overcome genetic barriers, which inhibit the onward transmission of rabies virus into a new species. White-nose syndrome, an exotic fungal infection of bats, has, over the past 3 years, spread from upstate New York to West Virginia, killing on average 70% of the animals in a hibernating colony. The infection makes bats restless over winter when they should be dormant, which makes them exhaust their fat reserves, resulting in the death of over a million bats. Frick et al. (p. 679) have analyzed population data collected on bats in the northeastern United States for the past 30 years and show that, mainly owing to white-nose syndrome, the once abundant little brown bat is heading for regional extinction in the next 16 years or so. This scale of loss of an insectivorous mammal is expected to have repercussions for ecosystem integrity and for the economic costs of agricultural pest control. Like the passenger pigeon, millions of little brown bats face the possibility of rapid extinction, this time from disease. White-nose syndrome (WNS) is an emerging disease affecting hibernating bats in eastern North America that causes mass mortality and precipitous population declines in winter hibernacula. First discovered in 2006 in New York State, WNS is spreading rapidly across eastern North America and currently affects seven species. Mortality associated with WNS is causing a regional population collapse and is predicted to lead to regional extinction of the little brown myotis (Myotis lucifugus), previously one of the most common bat species in North America. Novel diseases can have serious impacts on naïve wildlife populations, which in turn can have substantial impacts on ecosystem integrity.


Ecology Letters | 2012

Sociality, density-dependence and microclimates determine the persistence of populations suffering from a novel fungal disease, white-nose syndrome.

Kate E. Langwig; Winifred F. Frick; Jason T. Bried; Alan C. Hicks; Thomas H. Kunz; A. Marm Kilpatrick

Disease has caused striking declines in wildlife and threatens numerous species with extinction. Theory suggests that the ecology and density-dependence of transmission dynamics can determine the probability of disease-caused extinction, but few empirical studies have simultaneously examined multiple factors influencing disease impact. We show, in hibernating bats infected with Geomyces destructans, that impacts of disease on solitary species were lower in smaller populations, whereas in socially gregarious species declines were equally severe in populations spanning four orders of magnitude. However, as these gregarious species declined, we observed decreases in social group size that reduced the likelihood of extinction. In addition, disease impacts in these species increased with humidity and temperature such that the coldest and driest roosts provided initial refuge from disease. These results expand our theoretical framework and provide an empirical basis for determining which host species are likely to be driven extinct while management action is still possible.


Proceedings of the Royal Society of London B: Biological Sciences | 2014

Host and pathogen ecology drive the seasonal dynamics of a fungal disease, white-nose syndrome

Kate E. Langwig; Winifred F. Frick; Rick Reynolds; Katy L. Parise; Kevin P. Drees; Joseph R. Hoyt; Tina L. Cheng; Thomas H. Kunz; Jeffrey T. Foster; A. Marm Kilpatrick

Seasonal patterns in pathogen transmission can influence the impact of disease on populations and the speed of spatial spread. Increases in host contact rates or births drive seasonal epidemics in some systems, but other factors may occasionally override these influences. White-nose syndrome, caused by the emerging fungal pathogen Pseudogymnoascus destructans, is spreading across North America and threatens several bat species with extinction. We examined patterns and drivers of seasonal transmission of P. destructans by measuring infection prevalence and pathogen loads in six bat species at 30 sites across the eastern United States. Bats became transiently infected in autumn, and transmission spiked in early winter when bats began hibernating. Nearly all bats in six species became infected by late winter when infection intensity peaked. In summer, despite high contact rates and a birth pulse, most bats cleared infections and prevalence dropped to zero. These data suggest the dominant driver of seasonal transmission dynamics was a change in host physiology, specifically hibernation. Our study is the first, to the best of our knowledge, to describe the seasonality of transmission in this emerging wildlife disease. The timing of infection and fungal growth resulted in maximal population impacts, but only moderate rates of spatial spread.


Trends in Ecology and Evolution | 2011

White-nose syndrome: is this emerging disease a threat to European bats?

Sébastien J. Puechmaille; Winifred F. Frick; Thomas H. Kunz; Paul A. Racey; Christian C. Voigt; Gudrun Wibbelt; Emma C. Teeling

White-nose syndrome (WNS) is a newly emergent disease that potentially threatens all temperate bat species. A recently identified fungus, Geomyces destructans, is the most likely causative agent of this disease. Until 2009, WNS and G. destructans were exclusively known from North America, but recent studies have confirmed this fungus is also present in Europe. We assembled an international WNS consortium of 67 scientists from 29 countries and identified the most important research and conservation priorities to assess the risk of WNS to European bats. Here, we review what is known about WNS and G. destructans and detail the conservation and research recommendations aimed at understanding and containing this emerging infectious disease.


Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment | 2015

Context-dependent conservation responses to emerging wildlife diseases

Kate E. Langwig; Jamie Voyles; M. Wilber; Winifred F. Frick; Kris A. Murray; Benjamin M. Bolker; James P. Collins; Tina L. Cheng; Matthew C. Fisher; Joseph R. Hoyt; Daniel L. Lindner; Hamish McCallum; Robert Puschendorf; Erica Bree Rosenblum; Mary Toothman; Craig K. R. Willis; Cheryl J. Briggs; A. Marm Kilpatrick

Emerging infectious diseases pose an important threat to wildlife. While established protocols exist for combating outbreaks of human and agricultural pathogens, appropriate management actions before, during, and after the invasion of wildlife pathogens have not been developed. We describe stage-specific goals and management actions that minimize disease impacts on wildlife, and the research required to implement them. Before pathogen arrival, reducing the probability of introduction through quarantine and trade restrictions is key because prevention is more cost effective than subsequent responses. On the invasion front, the main goals are limiting pathogen spread and preventing establishment. In locations experiencing an epidemic, management should focus on reducing transmission and disease, and promoting the development of resistance or tolerance. Finally, if pathogen and host populations reach a stable stage, then recovery of host populations in the face of new threats is paramount. Successful management of wildlife disease requires risk-taking, rapid implementation, and an adaptive approach.


PLOS ONE | 2015

Bacteria Isolated from Bats Inhibit the Growth of Pseudogymnoascus destructans, the Causative Agent of White-Nose Syndrome

Joseph R. Hoyt; Tina L. Cheng; Kate E. Langwig; Mallory M. Hee; Winifred F. Frick; A. Marm Kilpatrick

Emerging infectious diseases are a key threat to wildlife. Several fungal skin pathogens have recently emerged and caused widespread mortality in several vertebrate groups, including amphibians, bats, rattlesnakes and humans. White-nose syndrome, caused by the fungal skin pathogen Pseudogymnoascus destructans, threatens several hibernating bat species with extinction and there are few effective treatment strategies. The skin microbiome is increasingly understood to play a large role in determining disease outcome. We isolated bacteria from the skin of four bat species, and co-cultured these isolates with P. destructans to identify bacteria that might inhibit or kill P. destructans. We then conducted two reciprocal challenge experiments in vitro with six bacterial isolates (all in the genus Pseudomonas) to quantify the effect of these bacteria on the growth of P. destructans. All six Pseudomonas isolates significantly inhibited growth of P. destructans compared to non-inhibitory control bacteria, and two isolates performed significantly better than others in suppressing P. destructans growth for at least 35 days. In both challenge experiments, the extent of suppression of P. destructans growth was dependent on the initial concentration of P. destructans and the initial concentration of the bacterial isolate. These results show that bacteria found naturally occurring on bats can inhibit the growth of P. destructans in vitro and should be studied further as a possible probiotic to protect bats from white-nose syndrome. In addition, the presence of these bacteria may influence disease outcomes among individuals, populations, and species.


Ecological Applications | 2003

ESTIMATION OF HABITAT-SPECIFIC DEMOGRAPHY AND POPULATION GROWTH FOR PEREGRINE FALCONS IN CALIFORNIA

Matthew J. Kauffman; Winifred F. Frick; Janet Linthicum

American Peregrine Falcons in California (Falco peregrinus anatum) have been managed in one of the largest reintroduction programs in the history of endangered species management. However, as for most other widespread natural populations, the spatial and temporal dynamics of California Peregrines have remained poorly understood. Long- term monitoring data on this highly managed species present a unique opportunity for retrospective analysis of the factors contributing to the successful recovery of Peregrine Falcons in California, as well as demographic differences between habitat types. We used a newly developed mark-recapture model (the Barker model), which allows the simulta- neous use of recaptures, dead recoveries, and live resightings, to provide estimates of first- year, second-year, and adult survival of Peregrine Falcons in the mid- and south-coast regions of California. Annual survival rates for second-year and adult Peregrines were estimated at 86%. Through model fitting, we show positive effects of urban habitats on first-year survival. In our best-fit models, first-year birds fledged in urban areas had a survival rate of 65%, whereas rural (non-urban) first-year survival was only 28%. The introduction method also influenced first-year survival after dispersal; in rural areas, es- timated survival of hacked young (after independence) was lower than estimated survival of wild-reared young. We also show that birds in urban habitats have significantly higher fecundity rates than birds in rural habitats, even though the fecundity of rural breeders has increased significantly over the last two decades. We argue that the strong habitat differences in first-year survival combined with lower fecundity rates in rural habitats (due to slower improvement in eggshell thinning rates) facilitates spatial structuring of the California Peregrine population. Matrix population models constructed for both rural and urban hab- itats support this assessment. The temporally averaged population growth rate in urban habitats was estimated as X = 1.28, compared to X = 0.99 in rural habitats. Yearly analytical X values in rural habitat predict declining population growth (X 1) in the 1990s due to improved reproductive performance. These results indicate that the introduction effort was pivotal in recovering the rural population in this portion of its former habitat, because intrinsic growth rates alone would have been insufficient to yield the observed population recovery.


Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society | 2012

Partly cloudy with a chance of migration: Weather, radars, and aeroecology

Phillip B. Chilson; Winifred F. Frick; Jeffrey F. Kelly; Kenneth W. Howard; Ronald P. Larkin; Robert H. Diehl; John K. Westbrook; T. Adam Kelly; Thomas H. Kunz

Aeroecology is an emerging scientific discipline that integrates atmospheric science, Earth science, geography, ecology, computer science, computational biology, and engineering to further the understanding of biological patterns and processes. The unifying concept underlying this new transdisciplinary field of study is a focus on the planetary boundary layer and lower free atmosphere (i.e., the aerosphere), and the diversity of airborne organisms that inhabit and depend on the aerosphere for their existence. Here, we focus on the role of radars and radar networks in aeroecological studies. Radar systems scanning the atmosphere are primarily used to monitor weather conditions and track the location and movements of aircraft. However, radar echoes regularly contain signals from other sources, such as airborne birds, bats, and arthropods. We briefly discuss how radar observations can be and have been used to study a variety of airborne organisms and examine some of the many potential benefits likely to aris...


Biology Letters | 2011

Risk factors associated with mortality from white-nose syndrome among hibernating bat colonies

Aryn P. Wilder; Winifred F. Frick; Kate E. Langwig; Thomas H. Kunz

White-nose syndrome (WNS) is a disease responsible for unprecedented mortality in hibernating bats. First observed in a New York cave in 2006, mortality associated with WNS rapidly appeared in hibernacula across the northeastern United States. We used yearly presence–absence data on WNS-related mortality among hibernating bat colonies in the Northeast to determine factors influencing its spread. We evaluated hazard models to test hypotheses about the association between the timing of mortality and colony-level covariates, such as distance from the first WNS-affected site, colony size, species diversity, species composition and type of hibernaculum (cave or mine). Distance to origin and colony size had the greatest effects on WNS hazard over the range of observations; the type of hibernaculum and species composition had weaker effects. The distance effect showed a temporal decrease in magnitude, consistent with the pattern of an expanding epizootic. Large, cave-dwelling bat colonies with high proportions of Myotis lucifugus or other species that seek humid microclimates tended to experience early mortality. Our results suggest that the timing of mortality from WNS is largely dependent on colony location, and large colonies tend to be first in an area to experience high mortality associated with WNS.


PLOS ONE | 2012

Climate and weather impact timing of emergence of bats.

Winifred F. Frick; Phillip M. Stepanian; Jeffrey F. Kelly; Kenneth W. Howard; Charles M. Kuster; Thomas H. Kunz; Phillip B. Chilson

Interest in forecasting impacts of climate change have heightened attention in recent decades to how animals respond to variation in climate and weather patterns. One difficulty in determining animal response to climate variation is lack of long-term datasets that record animal behaviors over decadal scales. We used radar observations from the national NEXRAD network of Doppler weather radars to measure how group behavior in a colonially-roosting bat species responded to annual variation in climate and daily variation in weather over the past 11 years. Brazilian free-tailed bats (Tadarida brasiliensis) form dense aggregations in cave roosts in Texas. These bats emerge from caves daily to forage at high altitudes, which makes them detectable with Doppler weather radars. Timing of emergence in bats is often viewed as an adaptive trade-off between emerging early and risking predation or increased competition and emerging late which restricts foraging opportunities. We used timing of emergence from five maternity colonies of Brazilian free-tailed bats in south-central Texas during the peak lactation period (15 June–15 July) to determine whether emergence behavior was associated with summer drought conditions and daily temperatures. Bats emerged significantly earlier during years with extreme drought conditions than during moist years. Bats emerged later on days with high surface temperatures in both dry and moist years, but there was no relationship between surface temperatures and timing of emergence in summers with normal moisture levels. We conclude that emergence behavior is a flexible animal response to climate and weather conditions and may be a useful indicator for monitoring animal response to long-term shifts in climate.

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Jeffrey T. Foster

University of New Hampshire

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Joseph R. Hoyt

University of California

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Paul A. Heady

University of California

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Tina L. Cheng

University of California

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