You will believe a shark can roar: Zoological malpractice in Hollywood.

Back on topic now. I watched Land Of The Lost yesterday and Anna Friel claims to have studied the apes at Manchester Zoo... How long has it been since Belle Vue closed? :p
 
Oh yes, one more:

No matter where you are in the world, if you are in a jungle, you will always here aither a peacock or kookaburra calling. Sometimes both.

:p

Hix

and sometimes you can hear a Siamang also
 
Abu in Disney's Aladdin, who looks like a New-World monkey in Arabia. There was mention in the animated series that Abu was imported as part of a traveling circus before he was adopted by Aladdin, and his tiny vest and hat was an artifact of this past, though this may have been an Author's Saving Throw. And Iago the parrot seems to be a very small version of a Scarlet Macaw. We had to wait for the Television Series of the Film to get an explanation: during a jaunt to the Amazon, Iago mentions he left the area a while back.

Here, fresh from TVTropes.
 
In The Lion King, set in eastern Africa, has a meerkat and mandrill. Not only do they not live where TLK franchise is set in real life, but their ranges don't even overlap.

Disney's Tarzan has gorillas making noises like chimpanzees and a leopard sounding off like a cougar, among others.
 
BBC Earth Earth's Tropical Islands episode of Borneo from 2020 has two scenes of Great Hornbills, which don't occur on Borneo. Its Rhinoceros Hornbills there.

Plus, BBC here and elsewhere, and also National Geographic add fake sounds of all wildlife movements, even ones which are completely silent (e.g. a plant growing over days, filmed in high speed).
 
Plus, BBC here and elsewhere, and also National Geographic add fake sounds of all wildlife movements, even ones which are completely silent (e.g. a plant growing over days, filmed in high speed).

I remember reading an article somewhere years ago (I think it may even have been the BBC Wildlife magazine) which talked about how they made various animal sounds. Some that I remember include:

- The noise of a polar bear walking on snow was made by crunching custard powder that has been packed into a rubber glove.
- The sound of a millipede walking was made by running a comb along a pine cone.
- The noises of a lion eating meat are actually someone tearing a lettuce apart with their hands.
 
The zebras in The Lion Guard neigh like horses, which they don't make in real life.

Plains/common zebras sound like a mix of a dog, donkey, and hyena, as they do in the OG The Lion King film and in real life.
 
Does an episode of Crikey! It's the Irwins count if it’s filmed on Bindi’s Island?

Bindi’s Island features lemurs and tortoises from Madagascar; Boa constrictors and macaws from South America; and Freshwater crocodile, Rainbow fish and gudgeons from Australia.

Rumour has it the Alligator snapping turtle that represented North America have now left (possibly in geographical protest).
 
In Alvin and the Chipmunks Meet the Wolfman, it is stated that Theodore the chipmunk becomes a werewolf even when the moon is not full because his mind is “already closer to the primitive animal state”. This is weird considering how chipmunks are actually more closely related to humans than they are to wolves…
 
In Alvin and the Chipmunks Meet the Wolfman, it is stated that Theodore the chipmunk becomes a werewolf even when the moon is not full because his mind is “already closer to the primitive animal state”. This is weird considering how chipmunks are actually more closely related to humans than they are to wolves…

I am aware of the phylogenetic relationships as people and chipmunks are Euarchontoglires and wolves are Laurasiatheria; but chipmunks are closer to wolves though than say, sloths or aardvarks.
 
Euarchontoglires and Laurasiatheria have Boreoeutheria in common and the other examples I used; sloths are in the Xenarthra super order and the aardvark in Afrotheria.

Afaik, it's a debate whether Boreo is closer to Afrotheria (Epitheria/all extant placentals bar Xenarthra), to Xenarthra (Exafroplacentalia/all placentals bar Afrotheria), or Xenarthra and Afrotheria having their very own clade (Atlantogenata).
 
In the 2003 film “Looney Tunes: Back in Action”, there is a segment of the film seeming filmed in Africa where they ride on the back of an elephant. However this elephant is geographically misplaced as it is Asian and not African.
 
In the 2003 film “Looney Tunes: Back in Action”, there is a segment of the film seeming filmed in Africa where they ride on the back of an elephant. However this elephant is geographically misplaced as it is Asian and not African.
Bonus points for having kookaburra calls. Heathcliff and the Catillac Cats is another toon that in one episode, set in the African jungle, has a kookaburra call.
 
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