Animals You've Seen That Few Zoochatters Have Seen

This exact line of thinking is how come I didn't realize Bronx had the only North American Gelada troop* for the longest time.

*Obviously they don't anymore but they did for a long time.

~Thylo

Geladas are meh, I see two troops quite regularly! :p
 
As has been discussed a few times, this is a species which makes me ever-so-slightly sore :p

For those who don't know the story, a TL;DR - missed the species at Chester by a month, didn't realise the last Chester bird had been sent to a falconry collection only 20 minutes from me until the death of the last Mauritus Kestrel in Europe was the subject of a short article in the local newspaper about a year later.... :rolleyes::mad:

Worst regret, miss or gut punch in the history of Zoochat!
 
Geladas are meh, I see two troops quite regularly! :p

But it wasn't so long ago there were none in the UK at all. and hadn't been for about forty years. Now present at Edinburgh, Colchester, Howletts, Dudley and Wild Place(Bristol).
 
So I spent some time and went through my Mammal lifelist and came up with the following 252 species that few zoochatters have likely seen. I appologize for the formatting ahead of time. Most of these I've only seen once before and usually somewhere outside North America or Europe (where most zoochatters call home.) If you'd like me to specify where I saw any of these just let me know!

I'm guessing there's a chance I'm the only zoochatter to have seen Zeledon's mouse opossum, Honduran white Bat, Palawan stink badger, Peale's dolphin, Merida Brocket Deer

I issue a challenge to see if anyone has seen over 100 of these (I can think of a few who may have a good shot!)



1. (Zaglossus bruijni) western long-beaked echidna

2. (Caluromys philander) bare-tailed woolly opossum

3. (Chironectes minimus) Yapok

4. (Didelphis aurita) big-eared opossum

5. (Marmosa zeledoni) Zeledon’s mouse opossum (wild)

6. (Antechinus agilis) Agile Antechinus

7. (Sminthopsis douglasi) Julia Creek Dunnart

8. (Parantechinus apicalis) Dibbler

9. (Dasyurus geoffroii) Chuditch or Western Quoll

10. (Myrmecobius fasciatus) Numbat

11. (Isoodon auratus) Golden Bandicoot

12. (Isoodon macrourus) Northern Brown Bandicoot

13. (Isoodon fusciventer) western brown bandicoot

14. (Parameles gunnii) Eastern Barred Bandicoot

15. (Trichosurus arnhemensis) Northern brushtail possum

16. (Trichosurus caninus) short-eared Possum

17. (Trichosurus cunninghami) Mountain Brushtail possum

18. (Phalanger ornatus) ornate cuscus

19. (Strigocuscus celebensis) Sulawesi dwarf cuscus

20. (Spilocuscus maculates) Common Spotted cuscus

21. (Hypsiprymnodon moschatus) Musky Rat-kangaroo (wild)

22. (Bettongia gaimardi) Tasmanian Bettong

23. (Bettongia lesueur) burrowing bettong

24. (Bettongia tropica) Northern Bettong

25. (Dendrolagus inustus) grizzled tree-kangaroo

26. (Dendrolagus lumholtzi) Lumholtz’s Tree-kangaroo

27. (Lagorchestes conspicillatus) Spectacled Hare-wallaby

28. (Petrogale lateralis) Black-footed Rock-wallaby

29. (Petrogale concinna) Nabarlek

30. (Petrogale persephone) Proserpine Rock-wallaby

31. (Petrogale wilkinsi) Wilkin's Rock-wallaby

32. (Onychogalea fraenata) Brindled nail-tailed Wallaby

33. (Onychogalea unguifera) northern nail-tail wallaby

34. (Macropus antilopinus) Antilopine Wallaroo

35. (Macropus bernardus) Black Wallaroo

36. (Macropus dorsalis) Black-striped Wallaby

37. (Macropus Irma) Western Brush Wallaby

38. (Macropus parryi) Pretty-faced, Whiptail Wallaby

39. (Burramys parvus) Mountain Pygmy-possum

40. (Cercartetus nanus) Eastern Pygmy-possum

41. (Pseudocheirus occidentalis) Western Ringtail

42. (Petaurus australis) Yellow-bellied Glider

43. (Petaurus gracilis) Mahogany Glider

44. (Diplomesodon pulchellum) Piebald shrew

45. (Sorex araneus) Common shrew

46. (Sorex minutissimus) Eurasian least shrew

47. Sorex unguiculatus) Long-clawed shrew

48. (Mogera wogura) Japanese Mole

49. (Mogera imaizumii) Small Japanese Mole

50. (Atelerix frontalis) Southern African Hedgehog

51. (Hemiechinus auritus) long-eared Hedgehog

52. (Anoura geoffroyi) Geoffroy’s tailless bat

53. (Artibeus lituratus) Great fruit-eating bat

54. (Carollia castanea) Chestnut short-tailed bat

55. (Carollia sowelli) Sowell’s short-tailed bat

56. (Dermanura toltecus) Toltec fruit-eating bat

57. (Dermanura watsoni) Thomas’s fruit-eating bat (wild)

58. (Diaemus youngi) White-winged vampire bat

59. (Ectophylla alba) Honduran white bat (wild)

60. (Erophylla sezekorni) buffy flower bat (wild)

61. (Glossophaga commissarisi) Commissaris’s long-tongued bat

62. (Lasionycteris noctivagans) silver-haired bat

63. (Lonchophylla robusta) Orange nectar bat (wild)

64. (Macroderma gigas) Ghost bat

65. (Mesophylla macconnelli) MacConnell’s bat (wild)

66. (Myotis albescens) Silver-tipped myotis (wild)

67. (Myotis nigricans) Black myotis (wild)

68. (Nycticeius humeralis) evening bat

69. (Peropteryx kappleri) Greater dog-like bat (wild)

70. (Pipistrellus abramus) Japanese pipistrelle

71. (Platyrrhinus vittatus) Greater broad-nosed bat

72. (Plecotus auritus) Brown long-eared bat

73. (Pteropus alecto) Black Flying Fox

74. (Pteropus dasymallus) Ryukyu fruit bat

75. (Rhinolophus luctus) woolly horseshoe bat (wild)

76. (Rhynchonycteris naso) proboscis bat (wild)

77. (Rousettus leschenaultia) Leschenault’s Rousette

78. (Saccopteryx leptura) Lesser sac-winged bat (wild)

79. (Uroderma bilobatum) Tent-making bat (wild)

80. (Vespertilio murinus) Parti-colored bat

81. (Tupaia minor) pygmy tree shrew

82. (Tupaia tana) large tree shrew

83. (Tupaia palawanensis) Palawan tree shrew

84. (Galeopterus variegatus) Malayan colugo (wild in the zoo)

85. (Cephalopachus bancanus) Western Tarsier

86. (Tarsius spectrum) spectral tarsier

87. (Microcebus lehilahytsara) Goodman's mouse lemur

88. (Mirza zaza) Northern giant mouse lemur

89. (Eulemur sanfordi) Sanford’s brown lemur

90. (Cebus kaapori) Kaapori capuchin

91. (Sapajus flavius) blonde capuchin

92. (Chiropotes albinasus) white-nosed saki

93. (Pithecia inusta) Burnished saki

94. (Pithecia irrorata) Rio Tapajos saki

95. (Pithecia mittermeieri) Mittermeier’s Tapajos saki

96. (Aotus miconax) Peruvian night monkey

97. (Ateles marginatus) White-cheeked spider monkey

98. (Brachyteles arachnoids) Southern muriqui

99. (Mico humeralifer) tassel-eared marmoset

100. (Callicebus bernhardi) Prince Bernhard's titi

101. (Callicebus brunneus) brown titi monkey

102. (Callicebus nigrifons) black-fronted titi monkey

103. (Callicebus oenanthe) San Martin titi monkey

104. (Callicebus vieirai) Vieira’s titi monkey

105. (Macaca assamensis) Assam macaque

106. (Macaca cyclopis) Formosan rock macaque

107. (Macaca leonine) northern pig-tailed macaque

108. (Macaca ochreata) booted macaque

109. (Macaca pagensis) Pagai Island macaque

110. (Macaca siberu) Siberut macaque

111. (Pygathrix cinerea) grey-shanked douc langur

112. (Pygathrix nigripes) black-shanked douc langur

113. (Rhinopithecus bieti) black snub-nosed monkey

114. (Rhinopithecus brelichi) gray snub-nosed monkey

115. (Rhinopithecus roxellana) golden monkey

116. (Trachypithecus barbei) Tenasserim lutung

117. (Trachypithecus crepusculus) Gray Langur

118. (Trachypithecus delacouri) Delacour's langur

119. (Trachypithecus germaini) Indochinese lutung

120. (Trachypithecus hatinhensis) Hatinh langur

121. (Trachypithecus laotum) Laotian Langur

122. (Trachypithecus margarita) Annamese silvered langur

123. (Trachypithecus poliocephalus) white-headed or cat ba langur

124. (Hylobates klossii) Kloss's gibbon

125. (Hoolock hoolock) western hoolock gibbon

126. (Cyclopes didactylus) silky anteater

127. (Cabassous unicinctus) Southern naked-tailed armadillo

128. (Chaetophractus nationi) Bolivian hairy armadillo

129. (Priodontes maximus) Giant Armadillo

130. (Ochotona princeps) American pika (wild)

131. (Lepus brachyurus) Japanese hare

132. (Lepus capensis arabicus) Arabian hare

133. (Romerolagus diazi) volcano rabbit

134. (Allactaga major) Great jerboa

135. (Apodemus argenteus) small Japanese field mouse

136. (Apodemus speciosus) large Japanese field mouse

137. (Brachytarsomys albicauda) white-tailed antsangy

138. (Cuniculus taczanowskii) Mountain Paca

139. (Dasyprocta mexicana) Mexican agouti

140. (Eliurus grandidieri) Grandidier’s Tufted-tailed Rat

141. (Euchoreutes naso) Long-eared jerboa

142. (Funisciurus pyrropus talboti) Cameroon fire-footed rope squirrel

143. (Glirulus japonicas) Japanese dormouse

144. (Heliophobius argenteocinereus) Silvery mole rat

145. (Hylopetes alboniger) Particoloured flying squirrel

146. (Hystrix javanica) Sunda porcupine

147. (Hystrix sumatrae) Sumatran porcupine

148. (Melomys burtoni) Grassland Melomys

149. (Meriones vinogradovi) Vinogradov's jird

150. (Microsciuris alfari) Alfaro’s Pygmy Squirrel (wild)

151. (Microtus montebelli) Japanese grass vole

152. (Petaurista elegans) spotted giant flying squirrel

153. (Petaurista leucogenys) Japanese Giant Flying Squirrel

154. (Poliocitellus franklinii) Franklin’s ground squirrel

155. (Pseudomys australis) Plains, Eastern mouse

156. (Pteromys momonga) Japanese flying squirrel

157. (Rattus tanezumi) Tanezumi rat (wild, but in zoo)

158. (Salpingotus crassicauda) thick-tailed pygmy jerboa

159. (Salpingotus kozlovi) Kozlov's pygmy jerboa

160. (Sicista betulina) Northern birch mouse

161. (Tachyoryctes daemon) Demon mole rat

162. (Typhlomys cinereus) Chinese pygmy dormouse

163. (Uromys caudimaculatus) giant white-tailed rat (wild, no photo)

164. (Vulpes cana) Blanford’s fox

165. (Vulpes rueppellii) Rueppell’s fox

166. (Cerdocyon thous) Crab-eating Fox

167. (Lycalopex culpaeus) Colpeo Fox

168. (Lycalopex griseus) Argentine grey fox

169. (Lycalopex gymnocercus) pampas fox

170. (Lycalopex sechurae) Sechura Fox

171. (Lycalopex vetulus) hoary fox

172. (Bassaricyon gabbii) Bushy-tailed Olingo

173. (Mustela eversmanii) Steppe polecat

174. (Mustela itatsi) Japanese weasel

175. (Ictonyx libycus) Saharan striped polecat

176. (Meles anakuma) Japanese Badger

177. (Martes melampus) Japanese Marten

178. (Martes zibellina) Sable

179. (Melogale orientalis) Javan ferret-badger

180. (Melogale personata) Burmese ferret-badger

181. (Lontra feline) Marine Otter

182. (Mydaus marchei) Palawan stink badger

183. (Conepatus chinga) Molina’s hog-nosed skunk

184. (Conepatus humboldtii) Humboldt’s hog-nosed skunk

185. (Conepatus semistriatus) striped hog-nosed skunk

186. (Spilogale angustifrons) Southern spotted skunk (wild, no photos)

187. (Fossa fossana) Malagasy civet or fanaloka

188. (Galidictis grandidieri) Grandidier’s mongoose

189. (Prionodon linsang) Banded Linsang

190. (Paradoxurus aureus) golden wet-zone palm civet (possibly mislabeled)

191. (Viverra zibetha) large Indian civet

192. (Herpestes brachyurus palawanus) Palawan short-tailed mongoose

193. (Herpestes urva) crab-eating mongoose

194. (Leopardus braccatus) Pantanal Cat

195. (Leopardus colocolo) Colocolo

196. (Pardofelis marmorata) marbled cat

197. Prionailurus planiceps) flat-headed cat

198. (Lynx pardinus) Iberian lynx

199. (Zalophus wollebaeki) Galapagos sea lion (wild)

200. (Arctocephalus galapagoensis) Galapagos Fur Seal (wild)

201. (Arctocephalus forsteri) New Zealand fur seal (wild)

202. (Arctocephalus townsendi) Guadalupe fur seal

203. (Arctocephalus tropicalis) subantarctic fur seal

204. (Hydrurga leptonyx) leopard seal

205. (Monachus schauinslandi) Hawaiian monk seal

206. (Mirounga leonine) Southern elephant seal

207. (Balaenoptera acutorostrata) northern
minke whale (wild)

208. (Balaenoptera musculus) blue whale (wild)

209. (Balaenoptera physalus) fin whale (wild)

210. (Eschrichtius robustus) gray whale (in captivity!)

211. (Physeter macrocephalus) sperm whale (wild)

212. (Neophocaena phocaenoides) finless porpoise

213. (Orcaella brevirostris) Irrawaddy dolphin

214. (Grampus griseus) Risso’s Dolphin

215. (Cephalorhynchus hectori) Hector's dolphin (wild)

216. (Lagenorhynchus australis) Peale’s dolphin (wild)

217. (Lagenorhynchus obscurus) dusky dolphin (wild)

218. (Stenella frontalis) Atlantic Spotted Dolphin

219. (Steno bredanensis) Rough-toothed Dolphin

220. (Trichechus inunguis) Amazonian manatee

221. (Trichechus senegalensis) African manatee

222. (Ceratotherium simum cottoni) Northern White Rhinoceros

223. (Dicerorhinus sumatrensis) Sumatran Rhinoceros

224. (Potamochoerus larvatus) bushpig

225. (Sus philippinensis) Philippine Warty Pig

226. (Moschiola kathygre) yellow-striped chevrotain

227. (Muntiacus crinifrons) black muntjac

228. (Muntiacus feae) Fea's muntjac

229. (Cervus macneilli) MacNeill’s Deer

230. (Rusa marianna) Philippine brown deer

231. (Capreolus pygargus) Siberian roe deer

232. (Mazama bricenii) Merida Brocket Deer

233. (Mazama pandora) Yucatan brown brocket deer

234. (Blastocerus dichotomus) Marsh deer

235. (Ozotoceros bezoarticus) Pampas deer

236. (Tetracerus quadricornis) Four-horned Antelope

237. (Cephalophus jentinki) Jentink's Duiker

238. (Cephalophus zebra) Zebra Duiker

239. (Kobus leche smithemani) Black lechwe

240. (Pelea capreolus) Grey Rhebok

241. (Alcelaphus buselaphus) Jackson's hartebeest

242. (Madoqua saltiana) Salt’s dik-dik

243. (Ourebia ourebi) Oribi

244. Gazella bennettii) Chinkara

245. (Gazella marica) Arabian sand gazelle

246. (Saiga tatarica) saiga

247. (Capricornis swinhoei) Formosan serow

248. (Capricornis maritimus) Indochinese serow

249. (Arabitragus jayakari) Arabian tahr

250. (Nilgiritragus hylocrius) Nilgiri tahr (no photos)

251. (Naemorhedus goral) Himalayan Goral

252. (Ovis nivicola) snow sheep
That's a very enticing list, a quick skim for fun gave me only five species that I've seen.

I'm guessing my best bet regarding mammals is probably White-thighed Colobus (Colobus vellerosus).
 
From a (European) zoo perspective it is probably the Baikal seal in Leipzig, Commerson's dolphin in Duisburg, Saiga in Cologne and the Kit fox (not Swift fox) in Burgers'... Most other zoo rarities will have been seen by many others as well.

In the wild I have seen two mammals that have been seen by very few people at all: Kipunji and Brown-tailed vontsira.

Just realized how few people have actually seen the Tuxuci (Sotalia dolphin) in Munster and the Nilgiri langurs in Erfurt. The rarest taxon Erfurt kept at that time was the last Adolf Friedrich's colobus, a subspecies of Angolan black-and-white colobus, a species seen by many zoochatters.

I have seen about 20 of @Giant Eland 's list, but most of those were seen in the wild and in a few months I should have seen a few more of his list...
 
Just realized how few people have actually seen the Tuxuci (Sotalia dolphin) in Munster....

I saw the Sotalia dolphins several times in Munster and, prior to that, saw the same individuals several times when they were at Nuremberg Zoo.
 
This is an interesting topic as "few zoochatters" is such a specific but cleverly chosen term; many of you have seen dozens of species I likely never will, for example, because of the differences between the American and European collections. There's also the point about 'destination zoos' such as San Diego and how any zoochater that travels has seen those species likely; so the topic somewhat favors obscure species from odd collections. This is clever!

I guess Brookfield's pangolion is the only one I have worth mentioning for sure, and I've barely seen that.
 
The rarest taxon Erfurt kept at that time was the last Adolf Friedrich's colobus, a subspecies of Angolan black-and-white colobus, a species seen by many zoochatters.
The most spectacular of all the black-and-white colobus races, in my opinion. I must scan my photo from Basle in 1973 ;)
I reckon I have seen 19 species from Giant Eland's list and have photos of about a dozen (most of which are in the Gallery). I think I have an image of a wild oribi somewhere, which would be worth adding if it's as good as I remember.
 
Just realized how few people have actually seen the Tuxuci (Sotalia dolphin) in Munster and the Nilgiri langurs in Erfurt. The rarest taxon Erfurt kept at that time was the last Adolf Friedrich's colobus, a subspecies of Angolan black-and-white colobus, a species seen by many zoochatters.

Theoretically I could have seen the last langur in 2014 when I first visited Berlin, as i did consider visiting Erfurt - but ultimately Magdeburg won out. All things considered I reckon I made the right choice though.
 
Just realized how few people have actually seen the Tuxuci (Sotalia dolphin) in Munster and the Nilgiri langurs in Erfurt. The rarest taxon Erfurt kept at that time was the last Adolf Friedrich's colobus, a subspecies of Angolan black-and-white colobus, a species seen by many zoochatters.

I have seen about 20 of @Giant Eland 's list, but most of those were seen in the wild and in a few months I should have seen a few more of his list...

Ooo where are you planning to go in a few months??
 
For those of us that have visited Hamerton - The Southern Aardwolf (Proteles cristata cristatus)

Putting a slight twist on it all - Wild Coqurrels Sifaka (Propithecus coquereli), Mongoose Lemur (Eulemur mongoz), Brown lemur (Eulemur fulvus) and various Mouse lemur species.

Oh and a single wild Malagasy Nile Crocodile (Crocodylus niloticus madagascariensis) - There aren't many left where I was based.
 
3 taxa of bee-eaters seen by only very few ZooChatters ( at least I think so ) :
-Red-breasted bee-eater - saw it at Vogelpark Metelener Heide ( don't know how common this species is in the wild, otherwhile some more ZooChatters could have seen it in its South East Asian home-range )
- Black bee-eater - found in the much less visited West Africa and I took care for it at Walsrode in the 1980s.
- Cinnamon-chested bee-eater - quite small home-range in Africa and I took care for it ( and had the world-first-breeding with it in 1986 :) ) at Walsrode.
 
3 taxa of bee-eaters seen by only very few ZooChatters ( at least I think so ) :
-Red-breasted bee-eater - saw it at Vogelpark Metelener Heide ( don't know how common this species is in the wild, otherwhile some more ZooChatters could have seen it in its South East Asian home-range )
- Black bee-eater - found in the much less visited West Africa and I took care for it at Walsrode in the 1980s.
- Cinnamon-chested bee-eater - quite small home-range in Africa and I took care for it ( and had the world-first-breeding with it in 1986 :) ) at Walsrode.
So did you work at a zoo or something along those lines?
 
So did you work at a zoo or something along those lines?

Vogelcommando is famous in Zoochat community for have been worked at Walsrode Weltvögelpark when this park have even much more zillion times of the rarest and most dreamed amazing birds of the planet, many of them now completely absent from captivity in the world. What makes much of us jealous :D
 
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