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In this image from video, visitors to Mammoth Cave National Park in Mammoth Cave, Ky., walk over bio-security mats at the conclusion of cave tours to help contain the spread of white-nose syndrome. The disease that has killed more than 6 million cave-dwelling bats in the United States is on the move and wildlife biologists are worried. It gets its name from a white fungus that's found on the muzzles, ears and wings of infected bats. In Tennessee, some caves are closed to the public. At Mammoth Cave National Park, visitors are required to scrub their shoes after cave tours. Wildlife biologists say the threat is real -- there is no known way to stop the spread. (AP Photo/Alex Sanz)

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c60f66df10f44710520f6a70670082e9.jpg

In this image from video, visitors to Mammoth Cave National Park in Mammoth Cave, Ky., walk over bio-security mats at the conclusion of cave tours to help contain the spread of white-nose syndrome. The disease that has killed more than 6 million cave-dwelling bats in the United States is on the move and wildlife biologists are worried. It gets its name from a white fungus that's found on the muzzles, ears and wings of infected bats. In Tennessee, some caves are closed to the public. At Mammoth Cave National Park, visitors are required to scrub their shoes after cave tours. Wildlife biologists say the threat is real -- there is no known way to stop the spread. (AP Photo/Alex Sanz)

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Morning runners make their way past the Lincoln Memorial, Washington, D.C., Thursday, April 24, 2014. (Andrew Harnik/The Washington Times)