Recent News
Photos: MSA Students Raise Money For BZSThursday, May 17, 2018
In March of this year, the students of the two Mount Saint Agnes’ grade 3 classes held their “Toad-ally Terrific tag sale”, which was a fundraising event to support the Amphibian Project that is supported by the Bermuda Zoological Society [BZS].
Cane toad decline results in pest boom
Thursday, May 10, 2018
Bermuda’s “safest form of pest control” is under threat from water pollution, a researcher who has tracked the island’s cane toad population for about 20 years warned yesterday.
Report: Some Fish At Critically Low Levels
Thursday, May 10, 2018
Historically abundant predatory fish such as groupers and snappers remain at critically low numbers on Bermuda’s reefs based on international standards, according to a recently released report that monitored their status and trends by Bermudian scientist Dr Thaddeus Murdoch and his local team of research associates through the Bermuda Reef Ecosystem Assessment and Mapping [BREAM] Programme.
Cane toad decline results in pest boom
Thursday, May 10, 2018
Bermuda’s “safest form of pest control” is under threat from water pollution, a researcher who has tracked the island’s cane toad population for about 20 years warned yesterday.
Videos: Stevenson starts work on Whale film
Tuesday, May 08, 2018
Whale researcher Andrew Stevenson has started work on a follow-up to his acclaimed documentary ‘Where the Whales Sing’ – which for the first time will include unique aerial footage.
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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!
By Choy Aming
Jun 7, 2013 at 8:00 am
My name is Choy Aming and I am an aquarist at the Bermuda Aquarium, Museum and Zoo.
I was recently sent out on a collecting assignment in the Sargasso Sea on the research vessel Sea Dragon.
We spent three days offshore and went nearly 100 miles to the south of Bermuda in search of the biggest Sargassum weed mats that we could find.
There were about half a dozen scientists on board the vessel working on different research projects and I was assigned to help each of them acquire samples for their specific project. They ranged from spectral analysis of Sargassum camouflage to microplastic comparisons of different areas of the Sargasso Sea. It was a varied and interesting group and I was very happy to work in a general collecting capacity as I got to interact with all the scientists, learn the specific details of their project, and support them in getting much needed data for their particular research.
Choy Aming, Aquarist at BAMZ sorts
through the day's finds
I was also tasked with video cataloguing the expedition and was very prepared to jump into the Sargassum mats to document what was there and possibly film new creatures that we may not have seen in the wild. However, the moderately rough state of the sea did not allow for any in-water collecting or filming.
After the samples were collected, cataloguing and analysis began. The moderate sea state definitely made the post collection phase more challenging. Trying to identify and photograph tiny planktonic creatures on a heeling sailboat with only a 1mm depth of field on the microscope proved to be a challenge I had previously never thought about. Why would you?
Often I would have to snap a photo as the organism slid into view on the Petri dish in the brief period between rolling waves. Luckily Stefan Siebert was as keen as me and it became somewhat of a game for us.
One creature I found looked like a small alien baby about to hatch and struck a childlike curiosity even in people with decades of field experience. It really brought the term inner space to mind.
Even as a trained marine biologist with several years of research under my belt, this is a tiny yet important world that I seldom think about. The most amazing aspect of this trip was how much the “experts” could learn from each other and hopefully that knowledge assists them in their work and gets passed on to the wider world because of endeavours like this.