Chester Zoo Game

Black-crowned fruit dove as they are slender as the word fruit is in their name.

I'm presuming you mean black-naped? since black crowned doesn't exist.

Slender isn't the first word that comes to mind for any of the fruit doves, really. :p

so no, not a fruit dove of any sort.
 
they are slender as the word fruit is in their name.

Your logical chain is missing a few links, methinks :p

I'm thinking that by "fruit", the intended meaning is "offspring" - as such maybe we should be thinking of taxa with strangely shaped young. I'm a bit stuck for *what* so I will go for the strangest-shaped taxon which can be described as slender - the Big-bellied Seahorse (Hippocampus abdominalis)
 
Your logical chain is missing a few links, methinks :p

I'm thinking that by "fruit", the intended meaning is "offspring" - as such maybe we should be thinking of taxa with strangely shaped young. I'm a bit stuck for *what* so I will go for the strangest-shaped taxon which can be described as slender - the Big-bellied Seahorse (Hippocampus abdominalis)

You're thinking along the right lines TLD, but not correct.
 
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I don't think this is right, but it fills the bill.
Much slenderer than H. abdominalis, which really is pot-bellied, is its relation the giant freshwater pipefish, Doryichthys boaja.
Having bred a related species (afaik, pipefish taxonomy was not well developed when I last looked), I can say that the young fish was much the same shape as its parents, except for being rather nobblier, and it swam at a funny angle, rather like an animated backslash which can only be called strange. Has anyone seen a baby boaja?

Alan
 
I don't think this is right, but it fills the bill.
Much slenderer than H. abdominalis, which really is pot-bellied, is its relation the giant freshwater pipefish, Doryichthys boaja.
Having bred a related species (afaik, pipefish taxonomy was not well developed when I last looked), I can say that the young fish was much the same shape as its parents, except for being rather nobblier, and it swam at a funny angle, rather like an animated backslash which can only be called strange. Has anyone seen a baby boaja?

Alan

Can't help you on the baby pipefish, but your answer is incorrect, sorry.
Here's an additional clue:
The 'fruit' is white in colour and found only on land.
 
Nope, neither of those guesses is correct.
this species is green in colour and has a crest.
 
I come from an ancient family, and my generic name and my species name are very different words with the same meaning.
 
Tim May it's your turn. Take time to think of a riddle.

OK then; adhering to the theme of scientific names:-

The specific name of this Chester Zoo animal was bestowed in honour of the Duke of Edinburgh (i.e. the Duke of Edinburgh at the time the species was scientifically described).
 
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