In World of Reptiles I saw laced monitor (in the exhibit that in 2014 housed immature Galapagos tortoises), giant musk turtle, Burmese python, reticulated python, green anaconda (and also cane toad and smooth-sided toad in the same exhibit, but I haven't seen them), boa constrictors (one large and several small ones), annulated tree boa mixed with eyelash vipers, Kinhasi spray toads, alligator newts mixed with emperor newts and mossy frogs (I only saw the frogs), Panamanian golden frog, a tank with a few species of dart frogs (I recall dyeing and yellow-banded, but there was at least one other species), Fly River turtle, rainbow boa mixed with ornate horned frog, green tree python, prehensile-tailed skink mixed with Solomon Islands leaf frog, African pancake tortoises mixed with Gorongosa girdled lizard, Egyptian tortoises, emerald tree monitor, Burton's legless lizard, Taylor's shield-tailed agama, Chinese crocodile lizard, small Grand Cayman iguana (in a former lace monitor exhibit), black chuckwallas mixed with gila monsters, puff adder, western diamondback rattlesnake, bushmaster, cottonmouth, Indian cobra, King cobra, Egyptian cobra, eastern diamondback rattlesnake mixed with copperhead and black rat snake, timber rattlesnake, "Gabino" viper (according to the label, a hybrid between Gabon and rhinoceros), a tank with giant snakeneck turtle and red-bellied short-neck turtles, a tank for red-headed Amazon turtles mixed with cayman lizard and matamata (I only saw the former 2 species), a Chinese alligator, 2 False gavials, a Cuban crocodile, and exhibit with small American alligators, One of the recently renovated exhibits at the end housed Amazon giant turtles, green basilisk (did not see), caiman lizards, and 2 emerald toucanets. The other exhibit housed Weber's crested lizard, Bornean painted batagur turtles, Malayan giant pond turtle, and a chestnut-backed thrush. I recall that nursery station had a tank for African dwarf crocodiles and speckled rattlesnake. Since I did not take real notes my list may not be 100% complete, but I definitely swathe species I listed above (or at least the signs)