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Turtles show their faces on Church StreetSaturday, October 13, 2018
The Bermuda Post Office has marked the 50th anniversary of the Bermuda Turtle Project with a series of postal panels featuring special stamps.
Mandu can see clearly again after surgery
Tuesday, October 09, 2018
Last month ophthalmic surgeon, Dr. Leonard Teye-Botchway, operated on the Bermuda Aquarium, Museum and Zoo’s Parma Wallaby, Mandu, removing his luxated lens that was causing fluid build-up and dangerous pressure to form in his eye.
Reid, Dowling, Hill, Godfrey Awarded Scholarships
Wednesday, September 19, 2018
The Bermuda Zoological Society has selected the recipients of the Steinhoff/BZS scholarship and, for the first time, the Pye Scholarship, with Amber Reid, Ryan Dowling, Archer Hill and Jessica Godfrey all being awarded scholarships.
Oldest seal at BAMZ dies aged 35
Thursday, August 30, 2018
The oldest harbour seal at the Bermuda Aquarium, Museum and Zoo has died at the age of 35.
‘Bermuda Adventure’ continues
Tuesday, August 07, 2018
A pilot programme of community celebration, organised by the group Imagine Bermuda, marked a success at the Bermuda Aquarium, Museum and Zoo.
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All the latest updates and news from the Bermuda Aquarium, Museum, and Zoo, one of Bermuda's leading visitor attractions!
By Owain Johnston-Barnes
Published Sep 30, 2015 at 8:00 am (Updated Sep 30, 2015 at 12:34 am)
Ian Walker, principal curator of the Bermuda Aquarium, Museum and Zoo
(Photograph by Akil Simmons)?
Trunk Island could become the centrepiece of environmental education programmes, according to the Bermuda Zoological Society.
Ian Walker, principal curator of the Bermuda Aquarium Museum and Zoo, told Hamilton Rotary Club yesterday that as cahows returned to Nonsuch Island, Trunk Island could become increasingly important for educational purposes.
“Because Nonsuch has become such a critical habitat for them, we feel that the window is closing,” he said. “It may not be this year or the next, but that bird needs the island now.
“It only takes one invasive species, like the Argentinian ant, and if they get out to the island it would cause absolute havoc for them.”
The BZS inherited a one-third share of one of the island’s two plots several years ago, and recently purchased the second lot with the aim of turning it into a spectacular outdoor classroom.
“Buying an island in this climate is a challenge,” Dr Walker said. “But we believe this is an important aspect of our programmes.
“In fact, we think it’s the jewel in the crown of the BZS education programmes, and it is our living classroom.
“This was a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity and we thought that if we don’t do it now, in ten years we are going to be kicking ourselves.
“Our board was at first a little sceptical, but once you get out to that island, it is a special place. It is a magical place.”
‘Magical place’: An estimated 3,000 students could visit Trunk Island every year,
according to BZS’s Ian Walker (File photograph by Simon Jones)
As well as being close to the Aquarium, allowing the society to easily transport students to and from the island, Dr Walker said the island’s Harrington Sound location could provide a unique educational experience for the estimated 3,000 students who could visit it every year.
He explained that rather than being the mouth of a volcano, as often believed, the sound was a fresh water marsh thousands of years ago before it became flooded with salt water as sea levels rose about 3,000 years ago.
“As a result, it has relatively poor drainage,” he said.
“The main flow is through Flatts bridge and the rest is through caves around the sound itself. As a result there is rich life, specifically planktonic life, which leads to a vast food chain of creatures which take advantage of that.”
Dr Walker said the Society planned to remove non-native plants from the island, replacing them with endemic species, and that David Wingate had expressed excitement about the project, having already gone through the restoration of Nonsuch.
“We are not reinventing the wheel with this,” he said. “We have that level of brainpower and knowledge of Bermuda history that he can say, let’s make this happen, and he’s totally thrilled.”
Meanwhile, education officer Jamie Bacon said that despite the island’s small size, it had a number of different habitats, including an ancient endemic palmetto forest, a sandy beach, a rocky coast, a seagrass bed, and shallow sandy shoals.
“We can teach about habitats, and that’s something that’s consistent from lower primary school to senior school, but we can also teach how organisms adapt to their habitat, about food chains and food webs,” Dr Bacon said.
“We know there are a number of predators out on the island, but we don’t know what they eat, and these are investigations that the students can participate in.
“They can also assist with the implementation of the management plan, which gives them hands-on experience with restoration ecology.
“If they can work with David Wingate, it doesn’t get much better than that.”