Recent News

Siblings share a passion for animals
Friday, July 26, 2013

A passion for animals led siblings Peter and Kate Cooper to become volunteers with the Bermuda Zoological Society.


Baby 'pygmy' sperm whale found dead
Wednesday, July 24, 2013

What is believed to be a baby pygmy sperm whale was found washed up dead in the shallows off Nonsuch Island.


Kids on the Reef returns for a third year
Thursday, July 18, 2013

Dr Sterrer to give a lecture on Island’s biodiversity
Thursday, July 11, 2013

A local natural history expert will explore some of the miraculous ways that Bermuda’s plants and animals found their way to the Island, tomorrow evening at the Bermuda Underwater Exploration Institute (BUEI).


Kids on the Reef returns for a third year
Monday, July 08, 2013

On the way out to North Rock the young people in the boat started to wonder why they had come. Despite having lived on an Island their whole lives, most of them had never been out of sight of land. They were nervous and spent the ride worrying about currents, sharks, the weather, and the depth of the ocean.



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

Fishing proposal is at odds with Blue Halo project, charges OBA
Royal Gazette
Monday, February 27, 2012

RG_120227_1a.jpeg
Photo by Chris Burville Commercial fishing: A swordfish is lifted from
the icebox aboard the longline fishing vessel Eagle Eye 2 in Bermuda
when it visited in 2007. Government has indicated it is looking at
the arena of commercial fishing as a possible revenue stream for the Island.

Proposed licencing for foreign fishing vessels stands in complete conflict with plans to preserve the ocean around Bermuda, according to Shadow Environment Minister Michael Fahy.

In a statement issued over the weekend, the OBA Senator said he was alarmed by a statement by Premier Paula Cox in her budget speech, in which she said Government has initiated discussions with relevant parties to assess the feasibility of establishing a licencing regime for international fishing in Bermuda’s exclusive economic zone.

Mr Fahy said the licencing regime potentially flies in the face of the proposed Bermuda Blue Halo project, intended to turn the Island’s unused marine territory into a marine reserve.

“The benefits [of the Blue Halo] will be enormous including the ability to market Bermuda as an environmental haven,” Sen Fahy said. “We support this initiative wholeheartedly.”

He further expressed concern that fishermen could turn to long lines to catch fish in Bermuda waters, potentially resulting in extensive damage to the ecosystem and the Island’s reputation.

“These are fishing lines that are sometimes as much as 50 miles long, with thousands of baited hooks attached,” he said. “They are left in the water for days at a time.

“This method of fishing has been attacked by conservation groups the world over for what is called the bycatch the fish, turtles and birds that are hooked and killed, but not wanted by the fishermen and thrown away.

“If there were just a few of them, that would be one thing, but very often, the bycatch involves the slaughter of thousands of unwanted creatures.”

The Senator also said that Bermuda has in the past licenced international fishermen, but those ventures “fizzled out” due to a lack of interest from fishermen and Bermuda not having a large enough fish population to attract fishermen in numbers.

“If the Government is intending to licence fishermen regardless of the methods they intend to use, we would be squandering a hard-won reputation for being at the forefront of enlightened maritime thinking,” he said.

“We were the first country in the world to pass legislation to preserve wildlife, petrels and cedars, back in the 17th Century, and we passed groundbreaking and now much-copied legislation to protect fish from fish pots in the 1990s.

“The OBA is looking for clarification of the Government’s proposals. It seems to us you either support the Bermuda Blue Halo project or you don’t. You can’t really have it both ways."