Recent News
New lemurs arrive at BAMZTuesday, May 29, 2012
TUESDAY, MAY 29: Three new Bermuda residents—a trio of ring-tailed lemurs—are getting used to their home inside the Madagascar Exhibit at Bermuda Aquarium, Museum & Zoo.
St John’s Students “Discover Bermuda”
Friday, May 25, 2012
A group of students from Bermuda College and New York’s St. John’s University has spent most of the past fortnight exploring the Island as part of a course to “Discover Bermuda.”
Company is thanked for helping to house Orana the fossa
Wednesday, May 16, 2012
Orana the fossa, a popular creature at the Bermuda Aquarium and Zoo (BAMZ), had her enclosure dedicated to a reinsurance company who helped fund her home.
Zoo’s Fossa Exhibit Dedicated To RenaissanceRe
Tuesday, May 15, 2012
Bermuda Zoological Society is rewarding a generous capital campaign gift by dedicating part of the Bermuda Aquarium, Museum & Zoo’s Madagascar Exhibit to donor RenaissanceRe.
XL employees give back
Monday, May 07, 2012
Close to 150 of XL’s Bermuda-based employees chose to spend last Friday working on community projects throughout the Island.
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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!
Sarah Lagan, Sub-editor/Writer
Wednesday, October 02, 2013 9:23 AM
Cherished as the first harbinger of spring, Bermuda’s longtail has always held a special place in the hearts of islanders.
And while we know that the white-tailed tropicbirds, as they are also known, make their return to the island in the sunnier months, there are many unanswered questions about the enigmatic bird.
One important question currently being asked in the conservation world is whether our longtail is unique to the island or whether, when they migrate, they interbreed with other sub-species.
For the first time genetic tests are being done on the birds to help determine this, while providing a wealth of other information to scientists studying them.
Risky work: Conservation officer Jeremy Madeiros teeters
on the edge of a cliff to retrieve a longtail chick from its
nest for blood sampling. *Photo by Chris Burville
The Bermuda Government is doing collaborative research with James Reynolds, a British professor at the University if Birmingham in the UK.
If it is determined that they are indeed unique, it could be grounds to offer the Bermuda longtail even more protection than they are currently granted.
Senior Conservation Officer for the Department of Conservation Services, Jeremy Madeiros, told the Bermuda Sun during a longtail blood sampling trip to Nonsuch Island: “Ours is the most northerly breeding population of that seabird so it is possible that they have been isolated long enough to become a distinct sub-species.
“If ours are different that gives us a lot more impetus to protect them as they are more unique.
Blood samples: Above, a blood sample is taken from
a Bermuda longtail. *Photo by Chris Burville
“But the Bahamian birds seem to come up around our area, geolocator studies have proven that, so it is quite possible that you might have Bermudian birds interbreeding.”
White-tailed tropicbirds exist in the Indian Ocean, in the Mozambique Channel between Madagascar and east Africa, on Ascension Island and in the Caribbean. They are also found in the western ?Pacific.
Curator at the Bermuda Aquarium and Zoo Patrick Talbot is working with Mr Madeiros, the Bermuda Zoological Society’s manager of animal care and quarantine, Roma Hayward and BZS intern Calum Morrison, to carry out the blood sampling on Nonsuch.
Internationally important
Mr Talbot, of BZS, told us: “Bermuda’s population has at least 3,000 pairs — but the population for the entire Caribbean basin, from The Bahamas to Trinidad, was estimated, only at about 2,000 pairs.
“Ours is internationally important. If they are interbreeding, then anything that happens to our population is going to affect the whole population so we need to get as much information as we can.”
If it turns out they are related to other colonies, Bermuda could provide the missing link in the story of the historic migration of the longtails. This is the area of the collaboration that professor James Reynolds, is particularly interested in. He is studying a colony of longtails on the Ascension Islands in the Southern Atlantic and is working with Bermuda to try to “piece together the missing pieces in the genetic jigsaw”.
Conservation Officer Jeremy Madeiros, left, and curator for the Bermuda
Aquarium and Zoo, BZS, Patrick Talbot are working in collaboration with
Professor James Reynolds to determine whether Bermuda’s longtails have
become a unique sub-species. *Photo by Chris Burville
He said: “They are definitely one of the most enigmatic species that we work with on Ascension and the Bermudan sub-species is biologically important as it is the most northerly breeding of all populations in the world. Our aim is to examine how closely related genetically it is to Ascension birds and to those in the Indian Ocean so we can start to understand how the species spread so much through tropical waters. We are in the process of trying to obtain more blood samples from Caribbean populations but your (Bermuda’s) birds could be the largest piece of the puzzle that requires our research focus…
“If Bermudan birds are closely related it provides us with finer details of the evolutionary path and mechanisms that resulted in the present day distribution of the species.
“It would be very exciting because it would suggest a relatively ‘recent’ movement of birds between Bermuda in the north Atlantic and Ascension in the south Atlantic.
“It may be that analysis of the samples from Bermuda really does reveal that your island is the ‘missing link’ in the story.
“I do hope so.”