Animals not seen in United States Zoos?

Hello,

I'm a Christian author and I'm doing a bit of research for a novel I'm working on. I'm looking for animals that aren't yet seen in United States Zoos and are extremely rare. The animals in question would have to be able to survive in captivity and I would prefer mammals. Any help would be greatly appreciated!
 
What would the context of these animals within the greater story be?

I feel like if we have those answers, we can make better choices


It will be a fictional suspense novel. The animal(s) (whichever I choose) will be a key part of the story. The main character will be the head zookeeper and taking in the animal for their zoo. Yet, someone is wanting to get to the animal(s) first to get a huge payoff. In effort to protect the animal(s) the main character becomes a target. This will be a fictional book, but I want it to be believable. So, maybe a smaller mammal would be best ...

I'm also interested in any information about the process of transporting a new, rare animal to a zoo.

If this doesn't answer your question or you need more information, please let me know. Thanks again for the help!
 
Where would the animal be transported from to get to the zoo? If it's the wild, that could pose some problems. For the most part, you can't catch a mammal in the wild and transport it to a zoo-- most exceptions include animals that are rescued (like an orphaned baby bear or an animal injured in a wildfire) or an animal illegally smuggled into a country that's confiscated at customs and sent to a zoo.

More typically, animals are transferred from one institution to another. If that's the case, you'd have to figure out why this zoo qualified to be the one American zoo displaying this species. If the animals are on a breeding loan (like pandas), you'd typically acquire two of them in hopes of propagating the speccies.

Some animals that don't exist in US zoos but exist in other countries' zoos are proboscis monkeys, Javan rhinos, and golden snub-nosed monkeys.

Some animals that don't exist in zoos at all are also not in zoos because they're really hard to keep alive. For instance, mountain gorillas and great white sharks and and the single rarest animal on earth, the vaquita, have so far not survived in captivity. Proboscis monkeys in the US did fall into this category, so if it's an animal like that, your protagonist would have to have some compelling new method for caring for this creature that previous US zoos haven't used.

EDITED: Moved vaquita to the correct paragraph

Another possibility would be if the animal was something thought to be extinct, like a thylacine or a quagga, that was illegally imported into the country by a private breeder.
 
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Some animals that don't exist in US zoos but exist in other countries' zoos are proboscis monkeys, Javan rhinos, and golden snub-nosed monkeys.
What zoo has a Javan rhinoceros?

The last zoo Javan rhinoceros that I know of lived in Adelaide Zoo from 12th April 1886 until it died on 4th February 1907. Whilst at the zoo, it was labelled as an Indian rhino; it wasn't identified as a Javan rhino until long after its death when its remains were examined in the Adelaide Museum.
 
Honestly, I think a Pangolin of any species would fit this bill. Wanted by illegal traffickers and extremely rare can be in captivity.
 
If your okay with birds than here is a lot of valuable ones rarely sold (do to rarity) but highly sought after.
Javan green magpie( Their color fades when not cared for properly or when fed less of the food they would eat in the wild)
Oriental bay owl
Straw headed bulbul

As for rare mammals
Oncilla
Any Pangolin species(as said earlier though they are already present in the US)
Large Indian civet
Philippine Spotted deer
Kowari
 
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What zoo has a Javan rhinoceros?

The last zoo Javan rhinoceros that I know of lived in Adelaide Zoo from 12th April 1886 until it died on 4th February 1907. Whilst at the zoo, it was labelled as an Indian rhino; it wasn't identified as a Javan rhino until long after its death when its remains were examined in the Adelaide Museum.

Oh lordy, again, that was a result of me accidentally combining two paragraphs from my original draft and I didn't notice. The vaquita and Javan rhino are not in zoos anywhere.
 
Where would the animal be transported from to get to the zoo? If it's the wild, that could pose some problems. For the most part, you can't catch a mammal in the wild and transport it to a zoo-- most exceptions include animals that are rescued (like an orphaned baby bear or an animal injured in a wildfire) or an animal illegally smuggled into a country that's confiscated at customs and sent to a zoo.

More typically, animals are transferred from one institution to another. If that's the case, you'd have to figure out why this zoo qualified to be the one American zoo displaying this species. If the animals are on a breeding loan (like pandas), you'd typically acquire two of them in hopes of propagating the speccies.

Some animals that don't exist in US zoos but exist in other countries' zoos are proboscis monkeys, Javan rhinos, and golden snub-nosed monkeys.

Some animals that don't exist in zoos at all are also not in zoos because they're really hard to keep alive. For instance, mountain gorillas and great white sharks and and the single rarest animal on earth, the vaquita, have so far not survived in captivity. Proboscis monkeys in the US did fall into this category, so if it's an animal like that, your protagonist would have to have some compelling new method for caring for this creature that previous US zoos haven't used.

EDITED: Moved vaquita to the correct paragraph

Another possibility would be if the animal was something thought to be extinct, like a thylacine or a quagga, that was illegally imported into the country by a private breeder.


This is very helpful! Like I said, I'm just in the research phase, so that's why I'm gathering information. I sort of visioned an orphaned scenario, but I'm not set on that. So open to other ideas. Like maybe transporting from an overseas zoo... I don't know yet. Still researching. But I really loved the "thought to be extinct" idea!

As for figuring out the compelling method the protagonist has to care for this animal, I want to figure out the animal first so I can figure that out in the next step. Of course, I would love any help with that as well! You all have been great so far!

Again, this is going to be fictional. I just want it to be believable for a good read. Any help is appreciated and I would love to add the names in the dedication page of those who help come up with the ideas used in the story.
 
If your okay with birds than here is a lot of valuable ones rarely sold (do to rarity) but highly sought after.
Javan green magpie( Their color fades when not cared for properly or when fed less of the food they would eat in the wild)
Oriental bay owl
Straw headed bulbul

As for rare mammals
Oncilla
Any Pangolin species(as said earlier though they are already present in the US)
Large Indian civet
Philippine Spotted deer
Kowari

I'm not definitely set on a mammal. Birds could definitely work. Are any of these "not" in American Zoos? Thanks again for helping!
 
They all are (except the pangolin) are not present in American zoos
Also another bird to consider the Walden's hornbill

Which would consider to be the best fit? One that illegal traffickers would seem the most rare and valuable and also the most likely for an American Zoo to be able to house?
 
And the only pangolin species kept in US zoos is the white-bellied tree pangolin. Other species (e.g., the Chinese pangolin) aren't kept in US zoos.

Would it be possible for an American Zoo to house the other species? If so, which species would you believe to be the best fit for the story?
 
Which would consider to be the best fit? One that illegal traffickers would seem the most rare and valuable and also the most likely for an American Zoo to be able to house?
The Javan green magpie are occassionally sold live and illegally for hundreds(maybe even thousands) of dollars. Javan green magpie's are the perfect prize for a illegal trafficker. Their population in the wild is 80-50 so it fits the bill quite well. They have a small captive population in Europe.

Oriental bay owls are sold more often and are abundant in the illeagal trade of live animals in Asia. Though this like the pangolin is because of how highly sought after they are and not because they are abundant. Pangolins and Oncilla are also illegally sold dead(but sometimes alive) too.
 
The Javan green magpie are occassionally sold live and illegally for hundreds(maybe even thousands) of dollars. Javan green magpie's are the perfect prize for a illegal trafficker. Their population in the wild is 80-50 so it fits the bill quite well. They have a small captive population in Europe.

Oriental bay owls are sold more often and are abundant in the illeagal trade of live animals in Asia. Though this like the pangolin is because of how highly sought after they are and not because they are abundant. Pangolins and Oncilla are also illegally sold dead(but sometimes alive) too.

What more can you tell me about the Javan Green Magpie? If an American Zoo were to take in, say a breeding pair or something, what would they need to have to be qualified to house these rare birds?
 
Firstly they would probably need to be accredited by the AZA. There would be no way the zoo would be trusted to take them in without it. The zoo would also need to have legal permits to transport the bird overseas. The birds would also probably be brought to the zoo for breeding purposes as they are extremly rare. They may even need a whole exhibt to themselves as guidelines say it is not safe to house them with other species due to the rarity of the birds.
The zoo would also need knowledge of the birds behavior and diet as no other American(the New World for that matter) zoos houses them. There would also need to be a reason the would provide to aquire the birds. Most likely the zoo would bring them for educational purposes but more likely breeding for the highly endangered birds(this may also make them twice as valueble). For realism while in the smugglers grasp the birds could fade in color becoming duller.

here's link to the guidlines
https://www.eaza.net/assets/Uploads...ie-EAZA-Best-Practice-Guidelines-approved.pdf

I hope this is sufficient.
 
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