Chicago Tribune (Sunday)

A ‘hidden gem’ reopens

Illinois Caverns in southwest Illinois is back after being closed for more than a decade to protect its bat population

- By Talia Soglin

About 150,000 years ago, the area that is now known as Monroe County in southwest Illinois was covered in ice hundreds of feet thick.

When the ice melted, the water flowed into fractures in the area’s limestone bedrock. Over time, the water eroded a vast undergroun­d landscape of caves, springs and sinkholes.

A tourist attraction dating back more than a century, the Illinois Caverns is the second larg- est cave in the state.

But in 2010, officials closed the cave to the public in an effort to slow the spread of white nose syndrome, a fungus that kills bats — including the species that roost in Illinois Caverns in winter.

Last month, the Illinois Department of Natural

Resources announced the cave would reopen. Visitors can once again don hard hats and wade through an undergroun­d stream to explore the cave’s geological treasures.

“It’s such a unique experience that no other place offers in Illinois,” said Mic Middleton, the site supervisor for the natural resources department. “We had so many people where, now they’re 50, 60 years old that said, ‘I remember going down there as a kid, and now I’m bringing my grandkids down there.’ It’s really neat to see that this little hidden gem in southwest Illinois is reopening.”

Gregory Valent, a retired caver who helped map Illinois Caverns in the late 1970s, said the cave was a good one for beginners to get their feet wet in — literally.

Being in a cave, “it’s like nowhere else on Earth,” Valent said. “Well, you’re not on Earth, you’re in Earth.”

Locking down

In 1904, tourists flocked to the cave during the St. Louis Worlds’ Fair, when it was still situated on private farmland. The state of Illinois purchased the cave in 1985, and by the 2000s, the site averaged around 750 monthly visitors, according to Middleton, who has overseen the cave for 16 years.

Last week, 10-yearold Heidi McArthur and 8-year-old Kamden McArthur visited Illinois Caverns with their dad, David, and his aunt, Lynne Gonzalez.

The trip marked the kids’ first into a cave. “It was really cool. I loved how the rocks were shaped in different sizes,” Heidi said.

Located on a 120-acre preserve, the cave has about 6 miles of mapped passages. It boasts stalagmite­s, stalactite­s and other less wellknown cave formations such as flowstone — sheetlike calcite deposits formed by running water, and soda straws — essentiall­y hollow stalactite­s.

Gonzalez said she was disappoint­ed the family did not see any bats, though they did find a frog.

Neither Heidi nor Kamden had been born when, in the winter of 2006, scientists in New York state started to make unsettling discoverie­s as they conducted routine bat population counts in caves there: Piles of dead bats, sometimes hundreds of them.

“They had no idea what was going on,” said Joe Kath, the endangered species project manager for the Illinois natural resources department.

With some trans-Atlantic collaborat­ion, scientists figured out the bats were suffering from a fungal disease they came to call white nose syndrome, for the distinctiv­e bright white fungal spores that formed on the muzzles of infected bats. European scientists often saw bats with a similar white fungus, it turned out, but they were more resistant to the disease.

Scientists think European bat population­s may not be as susceptibl­e to white nose syndrome because they co-evolved with the fungus. But on this continent, bats were dying.

White nose syndrome attacks the skin, ear and wing membranes of hibernatin­g bats. In a full-blown infection, distinctiv­e bright white fungal spores form on their muzzles. The infection also compromise­s bats’ immune systems and metabolism. Infected bats can become active in winter — when they’re supposed to be hibernatin­g — desperatel­y searching for insects to eat. “Essentiall­y, they’ll starve to death,” Kath said.

The fungus that causes white nose syndrome thrives in caves, where the air is often humid and temperatur­es are cool. It spreads easily from bat to bat but cannot be transmitte­d to other wildlife or humans.

Researcher­s have not definitive­ly proved how white nose syndrome got to North America. But the leading theory, Kath said, is that a person or group of people traveling from Europe visited a cave in North America while unknowingl­y carrying fungal spores on their clothes or gear. When they went into the cave, the spores fell off their clothing or gear.

“And bam,” Kath said. That was the first step.”

Bats, said Mark Davis, a conservati­on biologist at the Illinois Natural History Survey, still carry a bit of a stigma but they’re critical to the ecosystem, providing essential services such as pest control and pollinatio­n. “Thanks to bats we have tequila,” he said; the mammals are the primary pollinator­s of agave.

Illinois’ corn and soy agricultur­e economy is dependent upon bats’ pest control services.

Throughout the mid- to late 2000s, Kath and other state biologists grew increasing­ly concerned about white nose syndrome’s westward trajectory. In 2010, the department made the difficult decision to close Illinois Caverns to the public to try to slow the spread of the disease.

Still, scientists couldn’t hold the fungus back forever. Kath was the first person to identify white nose syndrome in Illinois, in a bat in an abandoned mine in LaSalle County. A few weeks later, he confirmed the presence of the disease in Illinois Caverns too.

White nose syndrome is now found in at least 35 states and seven Canadian provinces. On average, species affected by the disease have a mortality rate that often exceeds 90%, Kath said, and about 6.7 million bats across North America have died from it since 2006. Some species are worse off; the tricolored bat and little brown bat, both species that hibernate in Illinois Caverns, are being evaluated for state and national endangered or threatened species status — in part because of the effects of white nose syndrome.

The disease never ravaged the bat population in the Illinois Caverns like it did population­s that lived in other caves in Illinois. This is largely because the population of hibernatin­g bats there has always been small; 15 to 20 bats, typically, as opposed to some caves that host hundreds each winter.

“White nose syndrome is ubiquitous throughout the caves here in Illinois,” Davis said. “This is a fact of life now that our bats have to live with, that us as researcher­s have to balance.”

Based on trends on the East Coast, Davis said, researcher­s hope Illinois may soon see the stabilizat­ion of death rates and slow increases in bat population­s.

Still, Kath cautioned that without a cure for the disease, population­s of many species of bats will likely continue to decline — potentiall­y to the point of requiring legal protection­s.

And Davis added that modern bat population­s are facing additional stressors, such as habitat loss and other fallout from climate change, that bats tens of thousands of years ago did not have to deal with.

“They’re really up against a wall,” he said.

‘Kill nothing but time’

Kara Pivarski, a biologist and the vice chair of the Windy City Grotto, a Chicagolan­d chapter of the National Speleologi­cal Society, started caving in college a couple of decades ago. But she’s never been to Illinois Caverns; the cave has been closed since she moved to the Midwest.

Pivarski enjoys looking for animals when she’s in caves. She loves bats, she said, but doesn’t see as many as before white nose syndrome.

The grotto often travels out of state for caving trips, Pivarksi said. Now, the group is planning a visit to Illinois Caverns. “I’m so thrilled,” she said.

Kath said the decision to reopen was based on the low incidence of white nose syndrome seen in Illinois Caverns recently, combined with the fact that the bat population there is small.

The caverns are open Wednesday through Sunday, 9 a.m. to 4 p.m., and entrance is free. For safety reasons, visitors must venture into the cave in groups of at least four, wearing sturdy boots and at least three sources of light per person. They must also wear a hard hat or bike helmet. Cave visitors are required to scrub their boots with bleach water before entering and exiting the cave.

Noah Walls, the conservati­on education representa­tive based at the cave, recommends visitors dress warmly and bring a change of clothes for after their trek. “Prepare to get wet and muddy,” he said.

Valent, the veteran caver, leaves potential visitors with a motto well known in the caving world.

“Take nothing but pictures, leave nothing but footprints, kill nothing but time.”

 ?? JOSE M. OSORIO/ CHICAGO TRIBUNE ?? Lynne Gonzalez, 56, of Prairie du Rocher, sits on the ground as she and her family hike in the reopened Illinois Caverns in Waterloo on July 15.
JOSE M. OSORIO/ CHICAGO TRIBUNE Lynne Gonzalez, 56, of Prairie du Rocher, sits on the ground as she and her family hike in the reopened Illinois Caverns in Waterloo on July 15.
 ??  ?? Kamden McArthur, 8, of Imperial, Missouri, and Lynne Gonzalez, 56, of Prairie du Rocher, Illinois, walk out of the Illinois Caverns in Waterloo on July 15. The caverns have been closed for a decade because of fears of spreading a fungus. They just reopened last week to tourists.
Kamden McArthur, 8, of Imperial, Missouri, and Lynne Gonzalez, 56, of Prairie du Rocher, Illinois, walk out of the Illinois Caverns in Waterloo on July 15. The caverns have been closed for a decade because of fears of spreading a fungus. They just reopened last week to tourists.
 ?? JOSE M. OSORIO/CHICAGO TRIBUNE PHOTOS ?? A light illuminate­s a cave wall inside the Illinois Caverns in Waterloo.
JOSE M. OSORIO/CHICAGO TRIBUNE PHOTOS A light illuminate­s a cave wall inside the Illinois Caverns in Waterloo.

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