Animals You've Seen That Few Zoochatters Have Seen

I was almost one of the very first to see the Togo Slippery Frog, yet I unfortunately did not see the species (Probably the most disappointing miss of my life so far).
 
Probably frilled sharks 90 percent haven’t seen. I haven’t seen them too but at some aquarium in japan which i could just copy and paste but it’s 4:30 am so not but once the “Into the deep” exhibit opens at monterey next year april people will be able to see some rare creatures.
 
What about the Ethiopian kilpspringer in Bioparc Valencia? Apparently it’s the only one in Europe, however some of the American zoochaters have seen it too. Also I probably have seen the Angular Roughshark at Oceanografic Valencia without noticing it.
 
What about the Ethiopian kilpspringer in Bioparc Valencia? Apparently it’s the only one in Europe, however some of the American zoochaters have seen it too. Also I probably have seen the Angular Roughshark at Oceanografic Valencia without noticing it.
Klipspringer? I think I saw one at the San diego zoo during my trip. Is there multiple Klipspringer species?

What about Sea apples? May be hard to notice. I barley saw these majestic sea cucumbers at Sea life california. Does me going to the tide pools and seeing a reddish colored black spotted sea slug count?Pretty big. Probably a sea hare though since sea slugs are small.
 
What about the Ethiopian kilpspringer in Bioparc Valencia? Apparently it’s the only one in Europe, however some of the American zoochaters have seen it too.

Although it is the only Klipspringer in Europe, it is the last survivor of a population which used to be somewhat more widely-dispersed and therefore I reckon a reasonable number of European zoochatters *will* have seen the species.
 
Definitely not. This species is kept at many zoos across the world, and many ZooChatters have seen the species.
I did have the chance to see one at San diego zoo’s “Animals in action” paid experience, but I never purchased it. On the guidebook for the zoo which I bought at the zoo it did have a picture of a Asian cloud-pard (which is what I call the main species) as an ambassador. It even mentioned it.
 
I did have the chance to see one at San diego zoo’s “Animals in action” paid experience, but I never purchased it. On the guidebook for the zoo which I bought at the zoo it did have a picture of a Asian cloud-pard (which is what I call the main species) as an ambassador. It even mentioned it.
I’m assuming you live near or around San Diego. If you want rare wild species your going to have to get very specific or try species you could have seen on vacation. As for captive animals your disadvantage is many people have been to San Diego Zoo. Maybe you can try some of the rarer species at the San Diego Zoo Safari Park that are gone now?
 
i have seen mantled howler monkeys, saltwater crocodiles, Florida manatees and once when i was deep sea fishing i caught a warsaw grouper all in the wild.
 
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I’m assuming you live near or around San Diego. If you want rare wild species your going to have to get very specific or try species you could have seen on vacation. As for captive animals your disadvantage is many people have been to San Diego Zoo. Maybe you can try some of the rarer species at the San Diego Zoo Safari Park that are gone now?

I don’t live near there. I was just on vacation.
 
I have seen platypus, barbary deer, and giant eland at SDZSP. I’m not sure how common giant eland are in Europe though.
 
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