Recent News
Aquarium celebrates World Oceans DayTuesday, June 03, 2014
World Oceans Day will be marked on Saturday with a free open house at the Bermuda Aquarium, Museum and Zoo.
World Oceans Day Open House Set For June 7
Monday, June 02, 2014
The Bermuda Aquarium, Museum and Zoo will play host to the World Oceans Day Open House on Saturday, June 7 from 10.00am through 3.00pm, with a series of family-friendly events set to take place throughout the day, all at no cost.
Clarien to establish new charitable trust
Wednesday, May 28, 2014
Bermuda’s newest banking group, Clarien Bank Ltd, is establishing a new charitable trust to benefit Bermuda charities.
Clarien Bank announces cash grants to four charities
Tuesday, May 27, 2014
Today, Clarien Bank Limited, “Clarien Bank” announced the first of its 2014 charitable donations
Clarien Bank Awards Cash Grants To Charities
Tuesday, May 27, 2014
Clarien Bank has revealed the first of its 2014 charitable donations, with several Bermuda charities benefiting, including The Menuhin Foundation, The Reading Clinic, The Bermuda Zoological Society, and The Family Centre.
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All the latest updates and news from the Bermuda Aquarium, Museum, and Zoo, one of Bermuda's leading visitor attractions!
The 17-foot whale had lacerations on its
body. *Photo supplied.
Members of staff from the Bermuda
Institute of Ocean Sciences try to save the
baby whale found in St. George's yesterday.
*Photo by Tiffany Wardman of BIOS
FRIDAY, JUNE 1 UPDATE: Volunteers fought desperately to save a stricken baby whale that beached itself in St George’s yesterday.
But their efforts to keep the animal afloat and push her out to sea proved in vain when the animal died.
Experts said there were no obvious reasons why the juvenile mammal beached itself and found its internal organs were in good condition.
JP Skinner, education officer at the Bermuda Institute of Ocean Sciences was one of the first rescuers on the scene.
He told the Bermuda Sun: “When I got there an Italian yacht crew were trying to pull the whale off the rocks.
“We got in the sea with the whale and tried to keep her afloat.
“But by that time her blow hole was closed and there were no real signs of life.
“The Italian crew told us they had seen her tail moving but soon after we got there her eyes opened and glassed over and there was nothing more we could do.
“It is very sad end for such a beautiful animal.
“And what caused her to drown seems a mystery at the moment.
“It appears the marks on her back were caused by the initial attempts to rescue her and not by her being hit by a boat.
“This was a newly weaned baby that was either sick or lost and that is what may have caused her to come into St George’s.”
The young mammal was spotted close to the Meyer Boat Slip in Johnson Bay at just after 11:30am by the Italian yacht crew.
The 17-foot whale is believed to be a juvenile fin or minke whale.
Aquarium curator Dr Ian Walker later conducted a necropsy examination on the animal to determine the cause of death.
He said there was nothing ‘grossly wrong with the organs’ and concluded the animal drowned by inhaling water.
Dr Walker told media at the scene: “The spleen had a few things that were interesting but those samples will be sent off to specialists to look at.
“On the inside the animal seemed relatively normal.
“There was really nothing here that suggests a reason why the animal would have beached.
“The animal drowned, but why exactly the animal drowned is another matter.
“There was obviously definitely something wrong with the animal.”
At around 3:30pm yesterday the dead whale was tied to a Fisheries Patrol boat and taken out to sea.