Recent News
4 Foot, 2 Inch Squid Washes Up On South ShoreFriday, March 27, 2015
[Updated] A four foot, two inch squid washed up on the South Shore today [Mar 27], with the specimen now on its way to the Aquarium for analysis.
HSBC fund to aid water conservation
Monday, March 23, 2015
The Global HSBC Water Programme has received funding to support two conservation projects in Bermuda.
Waging war on Island’s lionfish menace
Friday, March 20, 2015
A full-time, deep sea culling programme to help to control the number of invasive lionfish is being created by the Ocean Support Foundation.
Tracking the epic journey of sea turtles
Friday, March 13, 2015
New data about Bermuda’s sea turtles, including research tracing the journey of young animals from Bermuda to foreign shores, is to be presented at an upcoming talk.
Educational Opportunities Aboard Endurance
Friday, February 27, 2015
From exploring the surface, to diving beneath the ocean waves, a voyage aboard the Endurance brings with it a multitude of raw emotions that can embolden the most fearful, inspire the most discouraged, and impassion the most indifferent.
About
GovernanceAbout Us
Newsletter
Latest News
Gift & Bookstore
Contact
General Inquiries
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!
Published June 20, 2014 at 8:00 am
Former resident: A tagged green turtle seen in Central America.
Turtles that were tagged in Bermuda nearly two decades ago have been spotted in Central America.
Three turtles tagged in the 1990s by the Bermuda Turtle Project (BTP) were found nesting on the beaches of Costa Rica and Mexico, each having the same titanium labels attached in Bermuda.
“These results demonstrate the linkage between young green turtles that grow up in Bermuda waters and Caribbean nesting beaches that are thousands of kilometres away,” said Dr Anne Meylan who, along with husband Dr Peter Meylan, serve as the project’s scientific directors.
Ms Meylan said: “They also show the long period of time it takes for green turtles to reach sexual maturity, some 30 years or more.
“Few projects have recorded migrations between the habitats that green turtles inhabit when they are immature, and their nesting beaches.
“Recaptures of this kind present a rare opportunity to test whether theoretical estimates of age-to-maturity are correct.
“We have thought for many years that Bermuda serves as an important steward for Caribbean green turtles, providing a safe and healthy environment in which they can mature.
“These recent recaptures are direct evidence of the link between developmental habitat in Bermuda and nesting beaches in the Caribbean.
“These three recapture records confirm the relevance of Bermuda to sea turtle conservation in their native countries, including Mexico and Costa Rica, where the recaptures were made.”
The first research into Bermuda’s green turtles was from Dr HC Frick, a trustee of the Caribbean Conservation Corporation in 1968. The research continues today under the BTP, a joint effort between the Sea Turtle Conservatory, the Atlantic Conservation Partnership, the Bermuda Zoological Society and the Bermuda Aquarium, Museum and Zoo.
More than 3,500 have been captured, tagged and released to provide data for Bermuda’s juvenile green sea turtle population.
“It takes years of standardised research and an enormous effort by many people to acquire this kind of outstanding and exciting information,” said BTP coordinator, Jennifer Gray.
“Bermuda can and should be very proud of our renowned conservation of this endangered species and a research initiative that is known and applauded by sea turtle scientists around the globe.
“Our findings highlight the need for international cooperation to protect the species across the vast distances they travel and the many places where they develop, feed, mature and nest.
“Sea turtles know no international boundaries and, as long-lived species, are hard-wired to continue a life cycle that takes place in a number of geographical ranges throughout their lives.
“They have been on this earth for more than a million year and as a species have survived earth’s catastrophic events yet they struggle today to survive the threats posed by a species called man.
“The good news is that with more scientific data and a better understanding of their life history the world will be in a better position to conserve this wonderful species.”
Turtles tagged in Bermuda have also been seen in Nicaragua, Panama, Cuba, Dominican Republic, Grenada, St. Lucia and the USA.
The full report from the Marine Turtle Newsletter can be found at http://www.seaturtle.org/mtn/archives/mtn141/mtn141-6.shtml.