Animals You've Seen That Few Zoochatters Have Seen

Of course, I went down to Uluru for about 2 weeks back in 2015 with some biologist friends, and after about a week of finding some random species, we managed to find the Marsupial Mole.
Any advice on how to go about finding one?
 
Off the top of my head I've seen...
  • Asian golden cat (Catopuma temminckii)
  • Indian giant squirrel (Ratufa indica)
  • Mountain tapir (Tapirus pinchaque)
  • Northern spotted owl (Strix occidentalis caurina)
  • Vancouver Island marmot (Marmota vancouverensis)
All of which were seen in the now closed Mountain View Conservation and Breeding Centre.

(Though in all honesty I'm not sure just how rare these animals are in captivity, given my limited experience visiting zoos, so apologies if I sound silly here lol).
 
How many of you have seen Amphiglossus astrolabi?
I have only seen A. reticulatus myself. Both species are scarce in captivity, but they are around.

Not sure how uncommon they are, but I've seen javan magpies before.
They are rare, but because they are kept in bred in Prague and several parks in the UK, I'd say that a lot of Zoochatters have seen them.


  • Indian giant squirrel (Ratufa indica)
Very cool!
 
I'd probably list a bunch of animals I've seen at Alipore Zoo (and hope to see on my next visit) as follows:
Hoolock Gibbon
Jungle Cat
Bengal Slow Loris (?)
Indian Pangolin
Mugger Crocodile (hopefully)
Chousingha/Four-Horned Antelope (hopefully)
 
I've seen a couple of purebred Bengal tigers,some of them white. I don't how common they are but I've also seen a few indian grey wolves, hollock gibbons and striped hyenas.
 
1. Tasmanian Devils are common in zoos where I am but not sure about the US
2. Platypus (both in the wild and in zoos)
3. Quokka
4. Pandas
5. Echidnas
None of these species qualify, as all have been seen by many ZooChatters (just because a species isn't common in zoos doesn't mean it has been seen by few ZooChatters).
 
Hybrid Land Iguana(Conolophus subcristatus x Amblyrhynchus cristatus) is still probably the rarest animal I've seen, though I imagine most if not all Galapagos species outside the giant tortoises would count here.
 
I used to be downhill neighbors with aplodontia rufa ("boomer" or - mistakenly - "mountain beaver") and saw them when they were about on cloudy days or crepuscular foraging. Perhaps they are nearsighted, for they were not very shy: Bremerton, Washington State, USA (at the time, c. 2007).

Oh, yeah, also hutia, on Warderick Wells, Bahamas, in 1994. That was a cepuscular sighting, although they really get going nocturnally!
 
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