Recent News

Protecting the island's rarest species
Friday, July 05, 2013

Mark Outerbridge has been charged with no minor task. As Conservation Service’s new Wildlife Ecologist he is responsible for ensuring that Bermuda’s rarest and most endangered species are not wiped out in the sands of time.


Baby dolphin photographed off North Shore
Wednesday, June 26, 2013

Boaters off the North Shore had a rare opportunity to witness passing Atlantic bottlenose dolphins.


Two Dolphins Spotted Inshore Off North Shore
Tuesday, June 25, 2013

A pair of Atlantic Bottlenose Dolphins were spotted inshore yesterday [June 24] off the North Shore, and the Department of Conservation said it is “highly unusual” for them to be close to shore and in such small numbers.


The Sea Dragon Trip
Friday, June 07, 2013

My name is Choy Aming and I am an aquarist at the Bermuda Aquarium, Museum and Zoo. I was recently sent out on a collecting assignment in the Sargasso Sea on the research vessel Sea Dragon.


Bermuda Skinks heading for a UK ‘lifeboat’
Friday, June 07, 2013

The fight to protect the critically endangered Bermuda Skink has found a new ally — the UK’s Chester Zoo



About

Governance
About Us
Board of Directors
Contact Us
Newsletter
Latest News
Gift & Bookstore

Contact

General Inquiries

(441) 293-2727

info@bzs.bm


Latest News

All the latest updates and news from the Bermuda Aquarium, Museum, and Zoo, one of Bermuda's leading visitor attractions!

Hopes of sea turtle breeding ground
Royal Gazette
Wednesday, August 19, 2015

By Sarah Lagan
Published Aug 19, 2015 at 8:00 am (Updated Aug 19, 2015 at 10:42 am)

RG_150819_1a.jpeg
Start of something big: Close to 90 green turtle eggs were found in St George’s.

A bounty of almost 90 hatched green sea turtle eggs has been discovered at the site of what is believed to be the first on-Island hatchlings for 100 years.

The news comes after some 11 baby turtles were found wandering on or around Buildings Bay, St George’s — believed to be the result of a translocation project conducted here between 1968 and 1978 when eggs from Costa Rica were buried in the area.

It was hoped that the emerging hatchlings would imprint on Bermuda and return in their maturity.

Aquarium principal curator Ian Walker said that the timing appears to be right for those turtles to have returned and laid their own eggs at the site and DNA testing on two hatchlings that died will provide conclusive evidence.

RG_150819_1b.jpeg
A hatchling born in Bermuda takes to the ocean

Mr Walker told The Royal Gazette: “Our guys have been on the beach every night and this morning [yesterday] I got a call saying no more turtles had emerged, so I gave permission to one of our aquarists and one of our other people who have been working with us to start a gentle excavation on the nest. They dug down and found two hatchlings that were almost at the surface so we put them into the water. Then, when they dug down further, they found 87 eggs. Four eggs were in pieces and three were infertile. Some went the wrong way but we haven’t found any more so we think most made it to the ocean.

“Hopefully this is the start of something big. If these are the result of the conservation work, we may see others coming back. We have been looking for a while and this is about the right amount of time for the original ones to get to maturity and return. It would be huge for Bermuda because it means the start of a standing population here whereas before they were all visitors from the Caribbean.

“From the standpoint of conservation biology it means we don’t just have a maturing ground in Bermuda but we have a breeding ground and that is a big deal.”

RG_150819_1c.jpeg
What a find: Two of the hatchlings

This all came about on Sunday when Frank Burchall found a baby turtle crossing the road near the beach. He took it to the aquarium where the hatchling was described as the Island’s “natural history event of the century”.

Aquarium staff went to Buildings Bay where eventually some 11 hatchlings were found. The beach was closed to the public but when very few emerged the nest excavation was authorised.

The Bermuda Zoological Society’s Bermuda Turtle Project is led locally by Jennifer Gray — former head aquarist at the aquarium. Drs Peter and Anne Meylan head up the scientific programme. They are being supported by Robert Hardy of the Florida Fish and Wildlife Commission who is in charge of the satellite telemetry programme and Emma Harrison, scientific director at the Sea Turtle Conservancy.

The aquarium has six international students this year from Aruba, Belgium, Panama, Britain, Costa Rica, and Spain as well as four Bermudian students.

This is the longest-running study of green sea turtles in the world and the restocking of sea turtles in the late ‘60s was sponsored by the Caribbean Conservation Corporation, now the Sea Turtle Conservancy.

Mr Walker added: “The work done By David Wingate, James Burnett-Herkes and Clay Frick back in the late ‘60s may be coming to fruition and this is a huge deal. This is a momentous occasion for Bermuda and conservation in general.”