Agreed. Great exhibit, nice choice of animals and I like the addition of fish. Realized I've been handing out way too many North American biomes so your next one, if you want one, is the rainforests of Australia, your choice of nocturnal or diurnal.
An Australian rainforest dome? I can certainly make this work:
Daintree Trail
This large rainforest dome is meant to simulate the Daintree Rainforest of northern Australia. Like it’s real life counterpart, guests follow a waterway from start to finish, which mimics the Daintree River that flows through the jungle. The path that patrons take also sometimes crosses over the wide stream, but it mostly runs along its side. This indoor jungle is also filled with plants native to the Daintree region, providing another layer of immersion and attention to accuracy. Like most indoor rainforest exhibit complexes, this one features plenty of free-ranging animals including
Little-Red Flying Foxes (
Pteropus scapulatus),
Agile Wallabies (
Macropus agilis),
Victoria Crowned Pigeons (
Goura victoria),
Magpie Geese (
Anseranas semipalmata),
Black Swans (
Cygnus atratus),
Australian Brushturkeys (
Alectura lathami),
Superb Fruit Doves (
Ptilinopus superbus),
Australian Swamphens (
Porphyrio melanotus),
Australian White Ibises (
Threskiornis molucca),
Royal Spoonbills (
Platalea regia),
Sulphur-Crested Cockatoos (
Cacatua galerita),
Eclectus Parrots (
Eclectus roratus),
Superb Lyrebirds (
Menura novaehollandiae),
Satin Bowerbirds (
Ptilonorhynchus violaceus), and
Rainbow Lorikeets (
Trichoglossus moluccanus). Similarly, the "river" that the guests follow contains separated exhibits for
Australian Water Dragons (
Intellagama lesueurii),
Crimson-Spotted Rainbowfish (
Melanotaenia duboulayi),
Pig-Nosed Turtles (
Carettochelys insculpta),
Australian Lungfish (
Neoceratodus forsteri), and
Eastern Long-Necked Turtles (
Chelodina longicollis). The first exhibit guests see that lacks free-range animals is a large flight cage made to resemble an Australian billabong, the residents of this exhibit include
Brolgas (
Antigone rubicunda),
Black-Necked Storks (
Ephippiorhynchus asiaticus), and
Laughing Kookaburras (
Dacelo novaeguineae), which also have a smaller aviary that’s connected to the main enclosure so that the "bushman's alarm clocks" can have some time away from the larger birds. Next is a wide, muddy beach with underwater viewing in the front for
Freshwater Crocodiles (
Crocodylus johnstoni). The next enclosure is a large and tall forested habitat for
Palm Cockatoos (
Probosciger aterrimus),
Lumholtz's Tree Kangaroos (
Dendrolagus lumholtzi),
Boyd's Forest Dragons (
Lophosaurus boydii), and
Spectacled Flying Foxes (
Pteropus conspicillatus). After taking in the bulk of the main space, you come across a cavern that houses nocturnal residents of the jungle (some of the more approachable ones share the same habitat) such as
Short-Beaked Echidnas (
Tachyglossus aculeatus),
Tiger Quolls (
Dasyurus maculata),
Northern Brown Bandicoots (
Isoodon macrourus),
Striped Possums (
Dactylopsila trivirgata),
Tawny Frogmouths (
Podargus strigoides),
Carpet Pythons (
Morelia spilota),
Common Death Adders (
Acanthopis antarcticus), and the ever-popular
Platypus (
Ornithorhynchus anatinus) that waits at the end. After you leave the cave and head back on the main path, there’s two more enclosures left to see. The first one is the second largest in the building, containing an icon of the Daintree; the
Southern Cassowary (
Casuarius casuarius), which lives in a large paddock that (while inaccessible to guests) is open-topped so that free-flying birds can access the home of their distant flightless relative. Finally, the last exhibit in the Daintree is a massive cove with plenty of water (including a waterfall that flows into the pool from a cliff), sand, mud, grass, and even indoor accommodations to escape from the sun (the cassowaries also have indoor viewing areas in the same room). What lives in this large exhibit is another common (yet deadly) sight in northeastern Australia; the infamous
Saltwater Crocodile (
Crocodylus porosus). Daily keeper chats are held for the cassowaries, crocodiles (both species), platypodes, and brolgas in this building.