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!

Ocean Tech Aims To Inspire Young Women
Bernews
Wednesday, August 24, 2016

Global marine research project Ocean Tech is aiming to inspire more young women into science and engineering via a media campaign that focuses on the team’s leading female scientists and engineers.

A spokesperson said, “It isn’t news that fewer women than men are working in the scientific, engineering and technological sectors. In the UK, just 13 per cent of workers in these industries are women. Unequal pay and funding opportunities may be part of the reason for the lack of females in these fields.

“The American Economic Review has published findings in a new study that confirms female scientists are still losing out on pay if they choose to have a family: married women with children consistently earn less than men and often drop out of science altogether.

“The UK’s research councils show that men have a 3.8 per cent higher chance of success when applying for research grants in biological sciences. However, a lack of relatable female role models might also be the reason that young women don’t embark on a career in these sectors.”

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Ocean Tech’s communication director, Catherine Capon, said, “This ground breaking research project will bring together pioneering autonomous underwater vehicles and unique technologies with the world’s top scientists.

“Our mission is to track and record iconic marine species behaviour so we can reveal how and why they use a given marine environment; this is crucial if we are to ensure the protection of critical habitat. We are thrilled to announce that our chief scientist and chief engineer for mission 1 in Bermuda are both female.

“Public outreach, through our documentary, global exhibits, education programme and social media, is just as important to us as the scientific research. We’re aiming inspire the next generation about the importance of ocean conservation, whilst also introducing young people to charismatic and engaging female scientists that are working to justify marine protected areas around the planet.”

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Ocean Tech’s chief scientist, Dr. Gretchen Goodbody-Gringley, from the Bermuda Institute of Ocean Sciences, said, “Throughout my career I have approached adversity with fortitude and determination. Forging my way through an academic path dominated by my male counterparts, I was lucky to have several key female mentors and role models, as well as the unwavering support of my mother.

“These women taught me that hard work, dedication and strength are skills that are not solely attributable to the male gender and that through persistence I could become whatever I set my mind to. One of my accomplishments that I am proudest of is becoming a technical rebreather diver.

“I believe what makes this a stand out achievement is not only the fact that I am one of just a few women executing scientific research using technical diving, but the physical hardships that I overcame to reach this level of diving. In 2011, I was diagnosed with Stage IIB breast cancer and underwent a year of treatment including a double mastectomy and chemotherapy.

“When I returned to work in 2012, I could not even lift a single SCUBA cylinder. Yet, through persistence and commitment I gradually progressed and increased my skills as a diver and in 2013 was certified to dive with double tanks on my back and deco stages on my sides.

“To go from being unable to lift one tank to wearing four on a single dive was a major feat. Since then I have been trained to dive using TRIMIX and am now diving a closed-circuit rebreather to depths up to 200ft.

“I am proud to be among the outstanding group of women leading the Ocean Tech project and I hope each of our stories will resonate with young women and give them strength as they battle adversity.”

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Chief Engineer Amy L. Kukulya of the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution said, “Ocean Tech is a once in a lifetime opportunity unparalleled to any ocean conservation effort to date. It brings together a suite of cutting edge technology led by female experts.

“It’s not surprising that Ocean Engineering, especially the military applications which dominate my job, has so few women.

“But, despite having participated in over 80 expeditions, there was only one time in my career where I was part of a team led by women researchers and it took place in a remote fjord in Greenland where we were dropped in by a helicopter and camped out for ten days foraging for our own food while studying the meltwater of a calving glacier with underwater robots.

“Early on in that trip, I was struck with the realization that, for the first time, I was working in a very challenging, extreme environment with a team lead by only women. It was empowering. It still amazes me how few women are in the trenches. Ocean Tech is here to change that.

“The OTECH expedition will also enable researchers, policy makers and the general public to understand and experience our liquid planet in a way never before possible. The time is now, otherwise adverse human impacts will be infinitely more difficult to curb.”

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“The humpback whale research projects of Ocean Tech will be lead by Susan E. Parks who states that a lack of female senior scientists and mentors was her motivation for becoming a professor.”

Ms. Parks said, “I wanted to be a senior scientist in the field to provide young women an example of a female role model. My graduate students have predominantly been women, and all of my graduates have continued in the field, either to higher degree programmes or successful careers in the field of marine mammalogy.”

“Ocean Tech is working with the Sylvia Earle Alliance on outreach and Dr. Sylvia Earle has also overcome challenges being a woman in science.”

Dr. Earle said, “I fast discovered through starting [these] companies and through serving on the boards of Fortune 500 enterprises that it can be especially challenging for women who aspire to be leaders.

“But I now feel, all things considered, that never before has there been a time of greater opportunity, or need, for women in business, government, science, technology, engineering, art and math.

“Women are needed to help solve the biggest problem of all for the ocean and for the world – ignorance.”