Do you keep 'species seen' lists?

I keep life lists of wild vertebrates, I do not list captive animals. I have done very little travel outside of the Midwestern US but within it I am well-traveled (especially in my home state of Wisconsin):

Mammals: 35 species
Birds: 260 species
Reptiles/Amphibians: 24 species
Fishes: 24 species
 
Here are my current numbers from my life list (captive and wild animals). I also take note of subspecies where possible (e.g. carpet pythons – M. s. spilota, M. s. mcdowelli, M. s. cheynei, M. s. variegata, M. s. imbricata). I still have a long way to go but I am not going too badly considering the poor diversity of certain groups like exotic mammals and birds in Australia. I also have a lot of native birds and reptiles to still tick off my list.

My life list is currently as followed:
  • 132 mammal species (including 3 species of monotreme and 41 species of marsupial)
  • 309 bird species
  • 125 reptile species
  • 14 amphibian species
  • 661 fish species
  • Invertebrates are still a work in progress
 
As for mammals ( without domestic species ) in captivity, I am on 886 taxa for now.
 
I don't, but due to this post I might start making a list! I really like the idea of keeping track of all the species that you have ever seen.
 
I don't, but due to this post I might start making a list! I really like the idea of keeping track of all the species that you have ever seen.
It's honestly really fun (albeit challenging at times) to create one. It you need any help creating one I can help you to the best of my ability.
 
It's honestly really fun (albeit challenging at times) to create one. It you need any help creating one I can help you to the best of my ability.

That would be nice! I have now made a google spreadsheet containing separate tabs for each animal class, with columns for the species names (Dutch, English and Latin) as well as the location/zoo where I have seen them and the date. Eventually I want to divide each class into sub-groups like nocturnal etc. Do you have any suggestions of what I should change/add?
 
In my opinion Google Slides is better than Google Spreadsheets because you can add images on slides so if you ever forget what an animal looks like, you have a picture for it.
 
That's a good point, but I could also look up the species name online.;)
But maybe I will do this as a future project idk.
 
That would be nice! I have now made a google spreadsheet containing separate tabs for each animal class, with columns for the species names (Dutch, English and Latin) as well as the location/zoo where I have seen them and the date. Eventually I want to divide each class into sub-groups like nocturnal etc. Do you have any suggestions of what I should change/add?
It's your species list so you can do it however you want but personally I recommend categorizing it by either taxonomy, alphabetically, or both. IMO it makes it easier when you're trying to look up if you've seen a species. Also, I personally use Google Docs but I admit a Google spreadsheet is probably better, I'd probably use one if I knew how it works.
 
I started to use Scythebill software with John Hall's mammal species list: Scythebill . My mammal list is around 540 species , 99 Families , no subspecies included.
 
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It's your species list so you can do it however you want but personally I recommend categorizing it by either taxonomy, alphabetically, or both. IMO it makes it easier when you're trying to look up if you've seen a species. Also, I personally use Google Docs but I admit a Google spreadsheet is probably better, I'd probably use one if I knew how it works.

I eventually want to order it by both taxonomy and alphabetically, but for now my list is almost empty and I need to start adding the species. Thanks again for the suggestions!
 
I used to (only for wild animals), but then I noticed that I pretty much suck at identifying animals.
 
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