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!
Simon Jones
Published Jul 19, 2016 at 8:00 am (Updated Jul 19, 2016 at 6:28 am)
Photographs by Sideya Dill
Full recovery: Daisy on the boat before her release
Exactly 200 days after two fishermen found her bobbing aimlessly off the North Shore and gasping for every breath, Daisy the loggerhead turtle has been returned to the open ocean.
The endangered creature was on the brink of death, suffering from pneumonia and serious lung complications when she was brought into the Bermuda Aquarium, Museum and Zoo last December.
Efforts rewarded: Kascia White, Aquarist,
holds green turtle before release
Her arrival prompted an unprecedented response from hospital doctors, vets and marine experts from the aquarium and numerous volunteers that culminated in yesterday’s successful release.
It was the end of a remarkable journey for the 74 kilogram turtle that began with a CT scan at King Edward VII Memorial Hospital followed by an operation lasting 3½ hours to remove a large rusting hook from her trachea, and then months of meticulous rehabilitation work to ensure she was ready to return to the wild.
Ocean-bound: Kascia White, Aquarist, holds green turtle before release
Yesterday as she was taken out to North Rock on board the aquarium boat Endurance, Daisy was joined by many of the people responsible for her survival, including anaesthetist Andrew Spence, radiologist Daniel Stovell and aquarium curator Ian Walker.
The loggerhead turtle was fitted with a satellite tag, which will be funded by the Neil Burnie Foundation, to track her movements over the next six months before she was lowered into the ocean at 2.26pm. Initially she stayed close to the boat, giving underwater photographers Chris Burville and Choy Aming a final close-up farewell, before taking in a large lungful of air and disappearing into the depths of the Atlantic.
Saying goodbye: Ian Walker, Principal Curator
of BAMZ, holds the small green turtle before release
Marine experts have high hopes that her return to the wild will be successful.
“We do not really know where she will go next,” Dr Walker said. “It will be very interesting to follow her progress with the satellite tag.
“She stands the best possible chance of survival that we could have given her.
“Her release is the result of a huge team effort from the radiologists at the hospital, to the doctors who conducted the surgery to the thousands of hours put in by our aquarists and volunteers over the last seven months.
Swimming free: Daisy in the water after being released
“We are extremely grateful to everyone who has been involved in this project, including the Ministry of Environment.”
Dr Spence told The Royal Gazette: “It has been wonderful to witness this event and to see how much progress she has made since the operation.
“This is something very different for me, but very special nonetheless.” Dr Stovell added: “We always try to help where we can and we were fortunate in this case that the turtle was just small enough to fit in the CT scan.
Daisy after her release
“It has been a great experience to see this case go full circle and see this turtle returned to the wild.”
Daisy was not the only turtle to be released yesterday. A small green turtle that was tangled up in fishing line and rescued in St George’s Harbour on July 9 was also set free.
The animal was monitored for a week at the aquarium to ensure she was healthy enough to be returned to the wild.