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FILE - In this May 8, 2014, file photo, bats hang from the ceiling of a cave in Dorset, Vt. A newly revised report shows no improvement in the population of cave-dwelling bats in Connecticut. The Connecticut Council on Environmental Quality is warning that the continued absence of bats will be a “boon to nocturnal moths and beetles” that threaten to infest forests and crops. Cave-dwelling bats in Connecticut and a growing number of states have been decimated by a fungal disease known as white-nose syndrome. (AP Photo/Wilson Ring, File)

FILE - In this May 8, 2014, file photo, bats hang from the ceiling of a cave in Dorset, Vt. A newly revised report shows no improvement in the population of cave-dwelling bats in Connecticut. The Connecticut Council on Environmental Quality is warning that the continued absence of bats will be a “boon to nocturnal moths and beetles” that threaten to infest forests and crops. Cave-dwelling bats in Connecticut and a growing number of states have been decimated by a fungal disease known as white-nose syndrome. (AP Photo/Wilson Ring, File)

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