Recent News

Historic deep sea dive off Bermuda to be celebrated in New York
Wednesday, August 13, 2014

A New York institution is this week preparing to celebrate the 80th anniversary of naturalist William Beebe’s historical Bathysphere dive off the coast of Bermuda.


Turtles fall victim to boats and fishing hooks
Wednesday, August 13, 2014

The public is again being asked to be careful on the Island’s waters to protect sea turtles after the bodies of several young turtles were found with injuries related to human activity.


Photos: Ocean Vet Team Tags Turtles
Monday, August 11, 2014

Dr. Neil Burnie, Choy Aming, and the rest of the Ocean Vet team recently spent a day tagging turtles for tracking, assisting Peter Meylan and Jennifer Gray from the Bermuda Turtle Project.


BAMZ Welcomes Three New Tammar Wallabies
Saturday, August 09, 2014

The Bermuda Aquarium, Museum, and Zoo [BAMZ] recently acquired three wild Tammar Wallabies, including two males and a female, all in an effort to help New Zealand to control the population of the species in that country.


Shark puts on an impressive show for film crew
Saturday, August 09, 2014

Spectacular footage of Bermuda’s tiger sharks has been captured by local photographer Choy Aming in a dive alongside ‘Ocean vet’ Neil Burnie, and is set to air on network TV.



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

Earth Day to be celebrated around the island today
RG - Jonathan Bell
Friday, April 22, 2022

People in Bermuda will join millions around the world today to celebrate the planet and its environment for the 52nd annual Earth Day.

Walter Roban, the home affairs minister, said Earth Day had grown since 1970 into “the most prominent secular event on the planet, with over a billion people in over 190 countries participating”.

Mr Roban noted that the COP26 global climate summit held last November in Glasgow, Scotland, heard that “Bermuda, along with other small island states and developing countries, will be disproportionately affected by climate change”.

He praised the island’s advances in renewable energy, and said Bermuda’s move to join the Blue Shield Programme had stepped up oversight of its marine surroundings.

Mr Roban added that dropping single-use plastics remained“ of critical importance”.

“If we all commit to working together and making every day an Earth Day, collectively, our small steps will leave a big footprint that will make a huge difference in addressing climate change.”

A string of events are scheduled to celebrate Earth Day.

Hundreds of volunteers will take part in cleanups around the island organised by Keep Bermuda Beautiful.

Earth Day also marks a continuing partnership between the US Consulate, the Bermuda Zoological Society and Paget Primary School for conservation volunteering on the protected Trunk Island in Harrington Sound.

Environmental restoration on the seven-acre island includes the creation of a coastal habitat, and the clearing of invasive vegetation and planting of cedar trees for the reintroduction of the Bermuda Skink – one of the rarest lizards in the world.

Trevor Rawson, coordinator for the Trunk Island project, said the Bermuda cedars offered skinks shelter from predators.

Invasive asparagus fern has been cleared and prickly pear cactus planted to provide food and protection for skinks.

Sonia Haley, principal of Paget Primary, said the school’s Eco Club helped pupils to become “citizen scientists” through Global Learning and Observation to Benefit the Environment Programme launched in 1994.

Karen Grissette, the US Consul General, highlighted this year’s Earth Day theme of Invest in our Planet.

She added: “As long as we stay united and focused on protecting the one planet we have, we can leave it in better shape for future generations.”

BZS education programmes are held on the “living classroom” of Trunk Island throughout the year.

Ian Walker, principal curator at the Bermuda Aquarium, Museum and Zoo, said the ongoing support of the Consulate team had given Trunk Island “upwards of 100 native and endemic plantings as well as this newly designed habitat”.

KBB cleanups, under way since Tuesday and running until next Wednesday, has brought out more than 600 volunteers at 22 locations island wide as part of the “Earth Day Challenge” celebrating the environment.

The challenge is being promoted by the charity Greenrock, with other environmental groups, offering 13 different green-friendly actions to make a difference.

Greenrock encourages participants to share their environmental action on social media with the #earthdaybda hashtag.

Participants can sign up for Greenrock’s challenge online here.