Recent News

Series celebrating marine life completed
Tuesday, March 22, 2016

The Ocean Vet series that has been three-and-a-half-years in the making and will highlight Bermuda’s natural treasures to millions globally is finally complete.


Career fuelled by passion for wildlife
Monday, March 07, 2016

Nesta Wellman’s passion for conservation and wildlife runs deep in his veins.


Lemur visits dentist for tooth troubles
Tuesday, February 23, 2016

Saturday was not a typical day at the office for dentist Len Wedlich.


Daisy blossoming, thanks to surgery
Saturday, February 20, 2016

A loggerhead turtle that underwent life-saving surgery to remove a rusting hook that had became embedded in her throat has started to eat for herself.


BZS Lecture: “Ecology Of The Sargasso Sea”
Saturday, February 20, 2016

Dr. Robbie Smith, the Curator of the Bermuda Natural History Museum at BAMZ, will be presenting a lecture on the “Ecology of the Sargasso Sea” on Wednesday, February 24th at 7.00pm.



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Latest News

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

Colourful Madagascar reptiles hatch in Bermuda
Royal Gazette
Thursday, May 22, 2014

By Jonathan Bell
Published May 22, 2014 at 8:00 am

Two newly-born colourful lizards that are a threatened species due to the reptile trade are settling into their new home at the Bermuda Aquarium, Museum and Zoo (BAMZ).

“It’s very satisfying. I’d love to see one actually hatch, but I’ve never managed to catch it,” said senior zookeeper Cindy Patterson.

The tiny specimens of Madagascar giant day gecko (Phelsuma madagascariensis grandis) were born on Friday, but they aren’t out of the woods yet.

“In the zoo world, we usually wait 30 days after they hatch,” Ms Patterson said. “After that, you consider it a true success.”

The delicate reptiles, which hail originally from the northern tip of Madagascar, can easily fall prey to Bermuda’s ever-present ants. And so can their eggs.

Four viable eggs didn’t survive the ants in the past, but right now BAMZ has eight eggs incubating from its day geckos, plus four from its Malagasy leaf-tailed geckos.

The eye-catching lizards can grow up to 30cm long. True to their name, they stay active throughout the day.

Their neighbours in the BAMZ exhibit, the nocturnal leaf-tailed geckos, camouflage themselves to resemble bark, and are occasionally mistaken for dead by visitors.

RG_140522_1a.jpeg
New born: The Madagascar giant day gecko starts out tiny. This
hatchling, sex unknown, clings to the fingertip of senior zookeeper
Cindy Patterson at the Bermuda Aquarium, Museum and Zoo.

Bermuda’s zoo has proven a good home for the day geckos, which are on the decline back home as slash-and-burn agriculture intrudes on their native habitat.

“Currently I have two females and one male on exhibit — we acquired them in November 2011,” Ms Patterson said.

BAMZ acquires or trades animals with other facilities through the Association of Zoos and Aquariums. The geckos came from US reptile specialists Clyde Peelings.

Local zookeepers researched the geckos and decided they were a “right find”.

“The goal is to be able to maintain our in-house population — in the end they’ll pass on due to age.”

RG_140522_1b.jpeg
Before they hatched: The characteristic double-egg of the Madagascar giant day
gecko, collected at the Bermuda Aquarium, Museum and Zoo, hatched on Friday
into two tiny specimens of the distinctively bright-coloured reptile.
((Photo by Cindy Patterson))

The lizards, each of which has its own distinctive pattern of speckles, can survive up to 15 years in captivity, where they feed on crickets bred at the facility.

Ms Patterson keeps a regular lookout for new eggs, which are laid in pairs and stuck onto leaves.

“The eggs are very sensitive, and unlike bird’s eggs, which you can rotate, you have to keep it in the same position as it was found,” she said.

“If you shake it at all, you no longer have a viable egg.”

The new arrivals aren’t yet on display, but appear to be thriving in their carefully controlled environment.

So far the two, who are too young to be sexed, are living on tiny “pinhead” crickets.

Enhancing the range of residents at the zoo is a matter of “whatever we can get”, the senior zookeeper said.

“Hopefully, if all goes well, we’ll be acquiring a panther chameleon during the summer,” she added.