Design a Zoo

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Okay here's a zoo I would build if I had the money to build it.

Here's a List of exhibits at the zoo and their themes:
Wild America: Animals of the United States.
Asian Forest: Animals native to areas of Asia; such as China, Japan, Russia and Mongolia.
Kids Zoo: Petting Zoo and Farm for kids of all ages.
Asian Elephant Center and House: Asian Elephants and their role in nature and culture.
African Plains: Animals of the African Savannah.
South American Pampas: Animals native to the Grasslands of South America.
Orangutan Jungle: Orangutans, Komodo Dragons and other animals native to Indonesia and New Guinea.
Cold Arctic: Polar Bears and other animals of the Arctic Circle.

Wild America:
The first exhibit you visit when you enter the zoo; you will see the first two habitats before you even enter the zoo: a Rocky mountain habitat for BigHorn Sheep and Mountain Goats; and a large flight cage for the Endangered Californian Condor. The only way to see the rest of the zoo is, of course, to give your ticket to the ticket booth before seeing a lot more animals. You will then see the habitats for Cougars and Bobcats who are only separated from you by a glass-viewing window. Next you will see the flight cage for two famous American birds mixed in the same cage: the Bald Eagle and the Common Raven. The flight cage also comes with a pond filled with live trout for the Bald eagles to feed on. There are also habitats for Peregrine Falcon, Red-Tailed Hawk, Turkey and Black Vultures, Barn Owl and Great Horned Owl. You will later see the mixed grasslands exhibit with American Bison, Pronghorn, Elk, Whitetail Deer, Whooping Cranes, Sandhill Cranes and Wild Turkey. Nearby is the habitat for Black-Tailed Prairie Dogs and the habitat for Coyotes and, separated from the ungulates and birds by a deep moat, is a pack of Mexican Gray Wolves. You will then see and enter the American Cabin which offers a closer view of the wolves as well as indoor habitats for the other following endangered species of the United States: Black Footed Ferret, American Pika, Idaho Ground Squirrel and Attwater's Prairie Chicken. After leaving the American Cabin, you will see the final habitat of the exhibit: a mixed habitat of Moose, Trumpeter Swan and various species of Wetland Birds of the United States. You will then leave Wild America and enter Asian Forest

Asian Forest:
Next is the Asian Forest, which is dedicated to animals from various areas of Asia, many of which are endangered. The first animals you will see are the first non-American mammals you will see during your visit at the zoo: Japanese Serow and Tufted Deer. Nearby is the flight cage for the Golden Eagles, which is similar to the Bald Eagle exhibit in Wild America as well as the following species of Asian cranes: Red Crowned, White-Naped, Demoiselle and Siberian. You will later run into some more Asian mammals, which include the Mixed Exhibit for Przewalski Horses and Pe're David's Deer, the Habitat for the rare yet adorable Red Pandas and the large exhibit for one of if not the most endangered big cat in the world- the Amur Leopard. Glass-viewing windows give guests the chance to see Amur Leopards and Red Pandas up close. Next are the habitat for the Dhole or Red Dog and the habitat for Japanese Macaques or Snow Monkeys which comes with a swimming pool and hot tub for the monkeys. The final exhibit here is the habitat for Tibetan Yaks and Himalayan Tahr before heading to the Kid's Zoo.

Kid's Zoo:
If you bring children who want to get closer to farm animals, this is the area for your kids. The Red Barn with various animals in and near it is very hard to miss. Before entering the barn, you will walk through a bridge with a large Koi and Carp Pond under it. You will then start to heard the sounds of various farm animals who make their home in the Red Barn. These include Clydesdale and Andalusian Horses, Shetland and Exmoor Ponies, Domesticated Donkeys, Nigerian, Boer and African Pygmy Goats, Hampshire and Jacob Sheep, Pot-Bellied Pigs, Belted Galloway, Holstein and Jersey Cows, Texas LongHorn, Asian Water Buffalo, Llamas, Alpacas, Fallow Deer, Rabbits, Guinea Pigs, Norway Rats, Chinchillas, Various Breeds of Domestic Dogs and Cats (Which would probably be put down if the zoo didn't take them in), Ferrets, American Mink, Red Fox, Domestic Turkeys, Domestic Chickens, Pheasants, Quails, Peafowl, Various species of Owls, Domestic Ducks and Geese, Rock Pigeons, Crows, Various non-venomous Snakes from Europe and North America, Various Geckos and Chameleons, Bearded Dragons, Various species Tortoises and Various species of Frogs and Toads. As you leave the Red Barn towards the Asian Elephant Center and House, you will walk on another bridge above a pond of various species of Turtles, Sliders and Terrapins. This exhibit will also allow volunteers to get their first job working with animals by getting them to work with the animals here.

Asian Elephant Center and House:
This exhibit is home to a herd of the largest species at the Zoo- Asian Elephants. This exhibit will be very similar to the Upcoming Elephant Lands exhibit at the Oregon Zoo. It will promise lots of land and water for the elephants. You will first see the large swimming pool for the elephants to swim and clean themselves. There is also a large indoor Elephant House for elephants to stay in during the cold winter times, similar to the large elephant house at the Columbus Zoo. During the entire time you are inside and outside the Asian Elephant Center and House, you will see useful signs and posters telling various stories about elephants and their role in nature and in human culture and how you could keep elephants away from becoming extinct. The elephants also get lots of enrichment, including big larges and monster truck tires.

African Plains:
After the Asian Elephant Center and House, this is probably the second largest area in the zoo- African Plains. As it's name suggests, African Plains is themed on animals that live in or near the African Savannah. The first animals you will see as you leave the Asian Elephant Center and House and enter the African Plains are three of the most popular predators of Africa- Cheetahs, Spotted Hyenas and African Wild Dogs. This area comes with glass-viewing walls to see these beautiful predators up close. You will then see the exhibit for one of the most dangerous of all African Herbivores- the Cape Buffalo, who are peaceful in this habitat with Grant's Gazelle, Gerenuk, Bontebok and Red Hartebeest (which will probably be the only herd of the Hartebeest in the US). Then there is one of the largest habitats in all of the zoo- the African Savannah habitat; Which features Masai and Rothschild Giraffes, Grevy's Zebra, Greater Kudu, Blue Wildebeest, Impala, Ostrich and Kori Bustard all in the same, large habitat. Visitors might sometimes even get the chance to feed the giraffes. You will also see various habitats near this large habitat; which include a habitat with Honey Badgers, another habitat with Vervet and Black and White Colobus Monkeys living together, and a mixed habitat for two endangered ungulates from Africa: the Arabian Oryx and the Somali Wild Ass. Next is the walkthrough African Aviary, which has the following birds in the same habitat: Lesser Flamingos, White Storks, Gray Crowned Cranes, Wattled Cranes, Cattle Egrets, Great White Pelicans, Goliath Heron, Hammerhop, Sacred and Hadada Ibis, African Spoonbill, Egyptian and African Pygmy Geese, Various species of Whistling Ducks, Spur-Winged Goose, Vulturine and Helmeted Guineafowl, African Jacana, African Plovers, African Green Pigeons and Various species of Turacos. There is also one non-bird species in the aviary-the Red Flanked Duiker. Next is the Hippopotamus Pool and Yard, which could be big enough to keep up to at least five or six Nile Hippopotamus in both the yards and the large swimming pool. Next door is the large Hippopotamus Barn. Like the Elephant Barn, this Hippo Barn is for holding Hippos during the cold winter months. There are also various indoor habitats for various African animals- one for various species of Weaver Birds, some for various species of African Reptiles, such as tortoises and lizards, one for African Rock Python, one for Bat-Eared Foxes and Cape Pangolins, one for Dwarf Mongooses, African Gray Parrots and Red-Billed and Yellow Billed Hornbills, one for Yellow Mongooses, Rock Hyrax and Klipspringer, one for Black and Roufus Elephant Shrews, one for Black-Footed Cats, one for Naked Mole Rats, one for a large colony of Meerkats, one for Hissing Cockroaches, one for Nile Monitor and even a large habitat for large Nile Crocodiles with an underwater view. As you leave the African Plains to enter South American Pampas, you will see a habitat for Warthogs and Aardvarks, a habitat for African Vultures and Marabou Storks and a habitat for Okapis and Yellow-Backed Duikers. There is also an island with Ring Tailed andMongoose Lemurs.

South American Pampas:
This exhibit is based around animals native to the Pantanal wetlands of Brazil, Bolivia and Paraguay. As with African Plains, South American Pampas also comes with an Aviary with birds native to their respected continent. These birds include Chilean and Andean Flamingos, Cattle Egrets, Jabiru Storks, Roselate Spoonbills, Scarlet Ibis, White-Faced Ibis, Southern Screamers, Orinoco Goose, Black Necked Swan, Various Species of Whistling Ducks, Curassows, Sunbittern, Red Legged Serimena, Various species of Macaws and Amazon Parrots, Various species of Toucans, Wattled Jacana, and Hoatzin. There are also Red-Footed and Yellow Footed Tortoises in the Aviary. The next habitat will be for Capybara and Nutria, the signs tell about the damage of the latter species when it was introduced worldwide. There are also two other mixed exhibits: one for Maned Wolves and Giant Anteaters and one for Guanaco, Marsh Deer and Greater Rhea. You will also find Tufted Capuchin Monkeys, Cotton-Top and Golden Lion Tamarins, Pygmy Marmosets, Collared Peccaries, Bush Dogs, White-Nosed Coati, Ocelot, Two Toed and Three Toed Sloths, Various species of Armadillos, Collared Anteaters, Pacas and Agoutis and three types of Crocodilian-Orinoco Crocodile, Spectacled Caiman and Dwarf Caiman, as well as Various species of lizards, snakes and turtles native to South America. The last habitats you will see before you enter Orangutan Jungle are those for Harpy Eagles and King Vultures.

Orangutan Jungle:
This exhibit is focused on Animals native to the Indonesian Archipelago, from Orangutans in Borneo and Sumatra to Cassowaries in New Guinea. The first habitat you will see is that for the small flight cage for the beautiful yet Endangered Bali Mynah, as well as cages for other Asian birds such as Various species of Asian Hornbills, Red Junglefowl, Brush-Turkey, Nicobar Pigeon, Emerald Dove, Orange-Footed Scrubfowl, Great Argus, Green Peafowl, Various species of Cockatoos and Cockatiels, Magpie Goose, Kookaburra, Milky and Black-Necked Storks, Serpent Eagles, Birds of Paradise and a large walkthrough Lorikeet Aviary where guests can feed these colorful birds. Next is a large habitat for Cassowary and then a mixed habitat of Sulawesi Palm Civet, Babirusa and Lowland Anoa. Next is a habitat for Muntjac Deer and Asian Small Clawed Otters. Finally you will see the large habitat for the main attractions of this exhibit- the Orangutans and Siamangs who live in the same habitat. This exhibit comes with both Indoor and Outdoor views of the Zoo's orangutan family as well as their Siamang neighbors. After leaving the Indoor area of the Orangutan exhibit you will enter the Asian Reptile House; which includes various species of Reptiles native to Asia and Australia; this includes one of if not the largest indoor Komodo Dragon and False Gharial Habitats in the World. There are also habitats for Olive Python, Reticulated Python, Green Tree Python, Burmese Python, Spotted Python, Blood Python, Asian Water Monitor, Green Tree Monitor, Goannas, Peretines, Frilled Lizards, Sailfin Lizards, Tokay Geckos, Blue Tongued Skink, Pig-Nosed Turtle, Asian Leaf Turtles, Malayan Box Turtles, Painted and River Terrapins and various species of Snake-Necked Turtles. Other non-reptilian animals in this exhibit include Slender Lorises, Chevrotain, Flying Foxes (aka Fruit Bats) and Tree-Shrews. As you leave Orangutan Jungle to enter Cold Arctic, you will see habitats for Proboscis Monkeys, Douc Langurs, Fishing Cats and Binturongs.

Cold Arctic:
The final exhibit at the zoo to visit, this area is focused on animals from the Arctic in such areas as Greenland, Norway and Hudson Bay. The first animals you will see is a habitat for the large herd of Caribou or Reindeer. Next you will see the habitats for Ermine, Wolverine, Arctic Fox, Arctic Hare, Norway Lemmings, Rock Ptarmigan, Eider Ducks, Common Loon, Stellar's Sea Eagle, Tundra Swan, Emperor Goose, Red-Breasted Goose and the Mixed habitat with Snowy Owls and Ravens together. The final exhibit you will see, of course, is one of if not the largest exhibit for Polar Bears in the World. Based on their home in Churhill, Canada, the habitat will feature lots of space for the Polar Bears to roam around as well as a very large pool for Polar Bears to swim around in that also comes with live Trout for them to feed on. This is be a very cool, world-classed Polar Bear exhibit.

What do you guys think about my zoo?
Love It!
I would rate Wild America a 9 out of 10, Asian Forest a 10, Kids Zoo a 10, Elephants an 8, African Savanna a 9, SA Pampas 9, Orang Jungle 9, and Cold Arctic 7, with the highest rating being a 10 for all 8 or 80, so your zoo is a 71 out of a possible 80 in my zoo rating system.
My zoos are worse than the Cleveland Browns :(
 
Love It!
I would rate Wild America a 9 out of 10, Asian Forest a 10, Kids Zoo a 10, Elephants an 8, African Savanna a 9, SA Pampas 9, Orang Jungle 9, and Cold Arctic 7, with the highest rating being a 10 for all 8 or 80, so your zoo is a 71 out of a possible 80 in my zoo rating system.
My zoos are worse than the Cleveland Browns :(

I'm sorry your zoos are bad. Did you thought about taking time to make your zoo idea? It took me two hours to finish that zoo idea.
 
Okay here's an Aquarium Idea. This aquarium will even feature two species unusual to aquariums- African Lions and Meerkats.

Exhibits:

Oregon Coast:
The first exhibit you enter when you visit; the first habitat you will see in this exhibit is an Artificial Tide Pool with creatures that are usually found in Oregon Coast Tide Pools. You will also find a large tank for a Giant Pacific Octopus; as well as tanks for Rockfish, Garibaldi, Flatfishes, California Sheephead, Wolf Eels, Kelp Bass, Swell Shark, Leopard Shark, White Sturgeon, Rainbow Trout, Cuttlefish, Chambered Nautilus, Moon Jellies and Pacific Sea Neetles.

Sea Otter Habitat:
This large exhibit features above-water and underwater viewing to a habitat featuring rescued Sea Otters. The exhibit will also feature lots of enrichment and toys for the Sea Otters to play with.

Tropical Reef:
This exhibit is just a large tank with a tunnel straight through it. In the tank is a large coral reef habitat based on Tropical Reef Ecosystems around the world (Caribbean, Great Barrier, Hawaii, etc). In this habitat are various species of Parrotfish and Triggerfish, various species of Tangs, Butterflyfish, Sweetlips, Garden Eels and other tropical marine animals from around the world.

Amazon Rainforest:
This exhibit is based around animals that live both under the surface of the Amazon River and up in the Trees of the Amazon Rainforest. Among the habitats in this greenhouse exhibit is a habitat for the Spectacled Caiman and a habitat for it's main predator- the Green Anaconda. There are also a large tank with a large school of razor-sharp toothed Red Bellied Piranhas and a tank featuring the shocking Electric Eel. Also here are a flight cage for Macaws and Amazon Parrots, a habitat for Wattled Jacanas, and random habitats for the following reptiles, frogs and small fish-Emerald Tree Boas, Boa Constrictor, Rainbow Boa, Green Basilisk, Caiman Lizards, Green Iguanas, Matamata Turtles, Various species of Poison Dart Frogs, Amazon Milk Frogs, Cane Toads, Four Eyed Fish, Discus, and Neon Tetra. There is also a pool for Baby Freshwater Stingrays. Of course, the largest habitat is a tank showing how big fish in the Amazon can get. The fish in this habitat include Arapaima, Black and Silver Arowana, Peacock Bass, Black Pacu, Freshwater Stingray, Red-Tailed Catfish, Tiger-Shovelnose Catfish, Midas Cichlid, Silverdollar, Oscar fish and filter-feeding Suckermouth Catfish. Also in the Tank are Amazon River Turtles.

SeaHorses and SeaDragons:
This exhibit features a large collection of SeaHorses, SeaDragons and their close relatives. The SeaHorse and SeaDragon collection includes the following: Leafy SeaDragon, Weedy SeaDragon and almost if not all species of SeaHorses that can and have survived in captivity. There are also some species of Pipefish.

Adventure Fun Zone:
This is a good place at the Aquarium to take kids to with lots of habitats from marine and freshwater ecosystems around the world. The freshwater habitats include a tank for Archerfish and a Koi and Carp Pond. There are also a habitat for Coconut Crabs, a Clownfish tank, a Hermit Crab exhibit, a Large Green Moray Eel, and various species of venomous marine animals such as Blue-Ringed Octopus, Lionfish and Stonefish.

Touch Pool:
A part of the Adventure Fun Zone Exhibit, the Stingray Touch Pool is a very interactive habitat and allows visitors to touch crabs, stingrays and even small sharks. Species in the Touch Pool include Bonnethead Sharks, Bamboo Sharks, Port Jackson Sharks, Southern Stingrays, Cownose Rays, Blue Spotted Stingrays, Bat Rays and Horseshoe Crabs.

Lousiana Bayou:
This exhibit is based on animals from the swamps of the Southeastern United States. In this exhibit includes a large tank for various species of turtles native to Louisana as well as a large exhibit for the Alligator Snapping Turtle. As with the Amazon Rainforest exhibit, there is a large tank with fish from Lousiana; these include giant Alligator Gar; as well as Longnose Gar, American Paddlefish, Bowfin, Bluegill, Blue Catfish, Spotted Bass, Largemouth Bass and SmallMouth Buffalo. Also, an exhibit based on the Louisana Bayou would never be complete without an exhibit featuring the American Alligator and yes there is one here. There is also a habitat for rescued Brown Pelicans.

Sea Turtle Sanctuary:
Like the Sea Otter habitat, this exhibit also features a group of rescued animals- Sea Turtles. It a large shallow pool for Sea Turtles to swim around in.

Shark Shipwreck:
Based on various sunken ships in about every ocean, this is the Shark habitat. It is a large tank with a model of a sunken ship with various marine animals in and around the ship. The sharks in this exhibit include Sandtiger Shark, Sandbar Shark, Nurse Shark, Zebra Shark, Black-Tip Reef Shark, White-Tip Reef Shark, Lemon Shark and Wobbegongs. This habitat is also home to the endangered Bowmouth Guitarfish; The exhibit is also home to Cownose Rays, Southern Stingray, Leopard Whipray, Spotted Eagle Rays, Largetooth Sawfish, Great Barracuda, Giant Grouper, Goliath Grouper, Potato Grouper, Golden Trevally, Humphead Wrasse, Tarpon, Crevalle Jack and Remora.

Lions of Africa:
Lions and Meerkats in an Aquarium?! I know it sounds funny. But there have been aquariums in the United States that have kept big cats or meerkats. The Mystic Aquarium has kept meerkats, the Dallas World Aquarium has kept Jaguars and the Houston Downtown Aquarium has kept White Tigers. Okay, onto the final exhibit at the Aquarium. The "mane" attraction of this exhibit is, of course, the large indoor habitat for African Lions, maybe even the largest indoor lion habitat in the world. While the now defunct Lion Habitat that was at MGM Grand Las Vegas was able to keep six lions in it at once, this one can probably keep as much as twelve adult lions. The other mammal habitat in this exhibit is the large exhibit for a colony of Meerkats. People of all ages will enjoy two very favorite mammals from Africa. Also in the exhibit are African Gray Parrots, Red-Billed and Yellow-Billed Hornbills, African Rock Python, Nile Monitor, Various species of African Chameleons, African Bullfrogs, Elephantnosed Fish and African Cichlids.

What do you guys think about my Aquarium?
 
My zoo would start with the North America area and the exhibit Swamps of the South.
Swamps of the South would start with a 1-acre netted bird aviary, looking out into the main swamp with the alligators. In the muddy environment, wood storks, little blue herons, snowy egrets, white ibis and roseate spoonbills would wade among the mud and the grass of a southern swamp.
Visitors would then see a shady exhibit with trees, mud, water, and swampy hummocks. This would be for a pair of endangered Florida panthers. A series of small tanks would hold minnows, snails and crayfish. The main swamp would be 5 acres with chicken turtles, yellow-bellied sliders, cooters, alligator snapping turtles, and various species of waterfowl (ducks and geese). An arcing boardwalk (outdoor) would curve around the exhibit. The American alligators would have 2 acres with islands, more hummocks, a large pool, and fallen logs. Yellow rat snakes, pygmy rattlesnakes, salamanders, and green tree frogs would have tanks before the exhibit came to an end.
An Ohio marsh would appear to be the same as the Swamps of the South at first glance but they are very different. The waterfowl area would have sedges, cattails, pond lilies, and more marshy plants. The species would be Canada goose, wood duck, mallard, and bufflehead. The marsh would continue into a building with a large pond for beavers and muskrat, followed by terrariums for green frogs, American bullfrogs, pickerel frogs, painted turtles, water snakes, and common snapping turtles. The exhibit would finish with a marsh fish area with minnows and darters.
 
Big Sky Prairie and the Eastern Forests would continue North America.
Big Sky Prairie would start with a mixed sage grouse/Attwater's prairie chicken aviary. 44201 :D. Another aviary would follow (netted) of western meadowlark, Baird's sparrow, longspur, and bobolink (1 acre). A covered wagon trail would connect the aviaries with the other exhibits- a building for herps (3-toed box turtle, common snapping turtle, milksnake, hognose snake, 5-lined skink, diamondback rattlesnake, green frog, bullfrog, and American toad), and mammal exhibits- a 2-acre Kansas whitetail deer exhibit with grass, trees, enrichment, and a small pool. Mule deer would have another 2 acres. The whitetail deer and mule deer could choose to go into the 15-acre exhibit for bison, elk and pronghorn. A black-tailed prairie dog town would have tunnels and a bubble for kids to pop up in. Swift foxes would have an acre of prairie, with a viewing cave. The last exhibit would be a prairie farm with Holstein cows and plow horses.
Eastern Forests would be the last part of North America. It would start with a forest hollow with leaf litter, acorns, trees, and a small pool for raccoons. A striped skunk would have a similar exhibit but with more hollow logs. River otters would live in a pond habitat, with a large land area, some islands and a large pond with underwater viewing. A boardwalk would lead to a 4-acre forest aviary with blue jays, cardinals, goldfinch, emberizidae, wild turkey, ruffed grouse, etc. Forest herps would live in a 2-acre outdoor exhibit (mixed) with box turtles (eastern), redback and two-lined salamanders, red efts, American toad, etc. Bobcats would have a 1-acre exhibit with a den, pool and a large forest, thus finishing off the North America part.
Next- Africa!
 
Owen Park Zoo

This hypothetical zoo would have six major zones each with their own theme.

Zone I: A Lewis & Clark Experience (North America)
Featuring: Wild Turkey, American Bison, Grizzly Bear, Bald Eagle, Red Fox, Beaver, Pronghorn, River Otter, Mountain Lion, Mule Deer, Common Raven, Coyote, Black-Tailed Prairie Dog American Porcupine


Zone II: Rudyard Kipling's The Jungle Book (India, particularly species mentioned in The Jungle Book and its adaptations)
Featuring: Indian Wolf, Sloth Bear, Asian Elephant, Common Peafowl, Royal Bengal Tiger Indian Rhinoceros Red Panda Orangutan Indian Cobra

Zone III: Sacred Egypt (Animals featured in Egyptian Mythology)
Featuring: Hamadryas Baboon, Hippopotamus, Nile Crocodile, Lion, Greater Flamingo Ostrich Northern Bald Ibis Aardvark

Zone IV: The Frigid North (Self-Explanatory, mostly Arctic species)
Featuring: European Reindeer, Polar Bear, Snowy Owl, Pacific Walrus, Musk Ox Dall's Sheep Amur Leopard, Norwegian Lemming, Wolverine, Atlantic Puffin Arctic Fox

Zone V: Owen Farm (Domesticated animals, for the children)
Featuring: Pygmy Goat, Jacob's Sheep, Guinea Pig, Chicken, Vietnamese Potbelly Pig, Exmoor Pony Chillingham Cattle Leopard Gecko Llama West European Hedgehog Russian Tortoise Red-Tailed Boa Constrictor Domestic Donkey

Zone VI: Great Down Under (Australia etc)
Featuring: Dromedary Camel, Emu, Short-beaked Echidna, Platypus, Red Kangaroo, Little Spotted Kiwi, Frill-necked Lizard, Blue-Winged Kookaburra, Superb Lyrebird Northern Cassowary Komodo Dragon Chinese Alligator Koala Common Wombat Kakapo Numbat Chamois


Added a few more animals 12/22/14.
 
Last edited:
Okay here's an Aquarium Idea. This aquarium will even feature two species unusual to aquariums- African Lions and Meerkats.

Exhibits:

Oregon Coast:
The first exhibit you enter when you visit; the first habitat you will see in this exhibit is an Artificial Tide Pool with creatures that are usually found in Oregon Coast Tide Pools. You will also find a large tank for a Giant Pacific Octopus; as well as tanks for Rockfish, Garibaldi, Flatfishes, California Sheephead, Wolf Eels, Kelp Bass, Swell Shark, Leopard Shark, White Sturgeon, Rainbow Trout, Cuttlefish, Chambered Nautilus, Moon Jellies and Pacific Sea Neetles.

Sea Otter Habitat:
This large exhibit features above-water and underwater viewing to a habitat featuring rescued Sea Otters. The exhibit will also feature lots of enrichment and toys for the Sea Otters to play with.

Tropical Reef:
This exhibit is just a large tank with a tunnel straight through it. In the tank is a large coral reef habitat based on Tropical Reef Ecosystems around the world (Caribbean, Great Barrier, Hawaii, etc). In this habitat are various species of Parrotfish and Triggerfish, various species of Tangs, Butterflyfish, Sweetlips, Garden Eels and other tropical marine animals from around the world.

Amazon Rainforest:
This exhibit is based around animals that live both under the surface of the Amazon River and up in the Trees of the Amazon Rainforest. Among the habitats in this greenhouse exhibit is a habitat for the Spectacled Caiman and a habitat for it's main predator- the Green Anaconda. There are also a large tank with a large school of razor-sharp toothed Red Bellied Piranhas and a tank featuring the shocking Electric Eel. Also here are a flight cage for Macaws and Amazon Parrots, a habitat for Wattled Jacanas, and random habitats for the following reptiles, frogs and small fish-Emerald Tree Boas, Boa Constrictor, Rainbow Boa, Green Basilisk, Caiman Lizards, Green Iguanas, Matamata Turtles, Various species of Poison Dart Frogs, Amazon Milk Frogs, Cane Toads, Four Eyed Fish, Discus, and Neon Tetra. There is also a pool for Baby Freshwater Stingrays. Of course, the largest habitat is a tank showing how big fish in the Amazon can get. The fish in this habitat include Arapaima, Black and Silver Arowana, Peacock Bass, Black Pacu, Freshwater Stingray, Red-Tailed Catfish, Tiger-Shovelnose Catfish, Midas Cichlid, Silverdollar, Oscar fish and filter-feeding Suckermouth Catfish. Also in the Tank are Amazon River Turtles.

SeaHorses and SeaDragons:
This exhibit features a large collection of SeaHorses, SeaDragons and their close relatives. The SeaHorse and SeaDragon collection includes the following: Leafy SeaDragon, Weedy SeaDragon and almost if not all species of SeaHorses that can and have survived in captivity. There are also some species of Pipefish.

Adventure Fun Zone:
This is a good place at the Aquarium to take kids to with lots of habitats from marine and freshwater ecosystems around the world. The freshwater habitats include a tank for Archerfish and a Koi and Carp Pond. There are also a habitat for Coconut Crabs, a Clownfish tank, a Hermit Crab exhibit, a Large Green Moray Eel, and various species of venomous marine animals such as Blue-Ringed Octopus, Lionfish and Stonefish.

Touch Pool:
A part of the Adventure Fun Zone Exhibit, the Stingray Touch Pool is a very interactive habitat and allows visitors to touch crabs, stingrays and even small sharks. Species in the Touch Pool include Bonnethead Sharks, Bamboo Sharks, Port Jackson Sharks, Southern Stingrays, Cownose Rays, Blue Spotted Stingrays, Bat Rays and Horseshoe Crabs.

Lousiana Bayou:
This exhibit is based on animals from the swamps of the Southeastern United States. In this exhibit includes a large tank for various species of turtles native to Louisana as well as a large exhibit for the Alligator Snapping Turtle. As with the Amazon Rainforest exhibit, there is a large tank with fish from Lousiana; these include giant Alligator Gar; as well as Longnose Gar, American Paddlefish, Bowfin, Bluegill, Blue Catfish, Spotted Bass, Largemouth Bass and SmallMouth Buffalo. Also, an exhibit based on the Louisana Bayou would never be complete without an exhibit featuring the American Alligator and yes there is one here. There is also a habitat for rescued Brown Pelicans.

Sea Turtle Sanctuary:
Like the Sea Otter habitat, this exhibit also features a group of rescued animals- Sea Turtles. It a large shallow pool for Sea Turtles to swim around in.

Shark Shipwreck:
Based on various sunken ships in about every ocean, this is the Shark habitat. It is a large tank with a model of a sunken ship with various marine animals in and around the ship. The sharks in this exhibit include Sandtiger Shark, Sandbar Shark, Nurse Shark, Zebra Shark, Black-Tip Reef Shark, White-Tip Reef Shark, Lemon Shark and Wobbegongs. This habitat is also home to the endangered Bowmouth Guitarfish; The exhibit is also home to Cownose Rays, Southern Stingray, Leopard Whipray, Spotted Eagle Rays, Largetooth Sawfish, Great Barracuda, Giant Grouper, Goliath Grouper, Potato Grouper, Golden Trevally, Humphead Wrasse, Tarpon, Crevalle Jack and Remora.

Lions of Africa:
Lions and Meerkats in an Aquarium?! I know it sounds funny. But there have been aquariums in the United States that have kept big cats or meerkats. The Mystic Aquarium has kept meerkats, the Dallas World Aquarium has kept Jaguars and the Houston Downtown Aquarium has kept White Tigers. Okay, onto the final exhibit at the Aquarium. The "mane" attraction of this exhibit is, of course, the large indoor habitat for African Lions, maybe even the largest indoor lion habitat in the world. While the now defunct Lion Habitat that was at MGM Grand Las Vegas was able to keep six lions in it at once, this one can probably keep as much as twelve adult lions. The other mammal habitat in this exhibit is the large exhibit for a colony of Meerkats. People of all ages will enjoy two very favorite mammals from Africa. Also in the exhibit are African Gray Parrots, Red-Billed and Yellow-Billed Hornbills, African Rock Python, Nile Monitor, Various species of African Chameleons, African Bullfrogs, Elephantnosed Fish and African Cichlids.

What do you guys think about my Aquarium?
I rate Oregon Coast a 7 out of 10, Sea Otter Habitat a 4, Tropical Reef a 6, Sea Horses and Sea Dragons a 5, Adventure Fun Zone a 7, Touch Pool 4, Louisiana Bayou 8, Sea Turtle Sanctuary 3, Shark Shipwreck 6, and Lions of Africa 7. My rating of your aquarium is 56 out of a 100, but I would definitely visit! Where would it be?
 
This hypothetical zoo would have six major zones each with their own theme.

Zone I: A Lewis & Clark Experience (Western North America)
Featuring: Wild Turkey, American Bison, Grizzly Bear, Bald Eagle, Red Fox, Beaver, Pronghorn, River Otter, Mountain Lion, Mule Deer, Common Raven, CoyoteBlack-Tailed Prairie Dog


Zone II: Rudyard Kipling's The Jungle Book (India, particularly species mentioned in The Jungle Book)
Featuring: Indian Wolf, Sloth Bear, Asian Elephant, Common Peafowl, Royal Bengal Tiger

Zone III: Sacred Egypt (Animals featured in Egyptian Mythology)
Featuring: Hamadryas Baboon, Hippopotamus, Nile Crocodile, Lion, Greater Flamingo Ostrich Northern Bald Ibis

Zone IV: The Frigid North (Self-Explanatory, mostly Arctic species)
Featuring: European Reindeer, Polar Bear, Snowy Owl, Pacific Walrus, Musk Ox Dall's Sheep Amur Leopard, Norwegian Lemming, Wolverine, Atlantic Puffin

Zone V: Owen Farm (Domesticated animals, for the children)
Featuring: Pygmy Goat, Jacob's Sheep, Guinea Pig, Chicken, Vietnamese Potbelly Pig, Exmoor Pony Chillingham Cattle Leopard Gecko Llama West European Hedgehog Russian Tortoise Red-Tailed Boa Constrictor

Zone VI: Great Down Under (Australia etc)
Featuring: Dromedary Camel, Emu, Short-beaked Echidna, Platypus, Red Kangaroo, Little Spotted Kiwi, Frill-necked Lizard, Blue-Winged Kookaburra, Superb Lyrebird Northern Cassowary
You made a good zoo!
I would give descriptions of the exhibits rather than just lists of animals. Maybe you can do that?
Zone I has a creative name and some animals like fox and beaver I would not put in a Western US exhibit. I rate it a 6 out of 10.
The Jungle Book looks relatively small, but the theme is creative. I rate it a 2.
Sacred Egypt has a creative idea. I rate it a 5.
The Frigid North is a 6 because of lemmings!
Owen Farm has some non-farm animals like boa and hedgehogs- so creative! I rate it a 6.
Great Down Under I rate a 5.
You just need more descriptions and more herps. Look at my exhibits for help, or Javan Rhino, redpanda, siamang27 etc.
Your zoo is good, but needs some improvements. I rate it a 30 out of 60.
 
Africa would start with Simba Bush. The first exhibit in Simba Bush would be a 2-acre habitat for a pride of African lions with rocks, dens, a grassy area, a waterfall and small pool, and a naturalistic savanna planted with native grasses. Visitors would then see bushpigs in a large habitat with a densely forested area and a bushy, grassy area. The exhibit would have hiding places and enrichment. An African thicket exhibit would be the home to red river hogs in a large, naturalistic exhibit with mud (they're pigs after all!), grass, trees, and water.
Gombe Forest would be next for a troop of chimps. Two yards would be 5 acres each, with climbing equipment and playground equipment, enrichment, grass, trees and water. Visitors could see the chimps from a viewing cave and even feed the chimps through a special "chimp feeding box" where visitors put a quarter in, bought food, and put it in a box for the chimps to get it.
Congo Edge would be similar to Gombe Forest, but would be for 2 troops of Western Lowland gorillas, with interpretive signage, displays about our closest relatives (great apes), grass, trees, water, and lots of enrichment. Each yard would be 4.5 acres. One yard would also have black duikers, the other bongo.
Madagascan Wonders would start for three outdoor islands- for B&W ruffed, red ruffed and ring-tailed lemur. Visitors would board a Malagasy boat, the S.S. Fanaloka, to go past the lemurs on large, naturalistic islands. The islands would be in a middle of a lake. Visitors would see Nile crocodiles in a fenced, partitioned section of the lake when the boat got to the other side. A large aviary for sickle-billed vanga, red fody and more would be outdoors, mimicking the dry Madagascan spiny desert. Oustalet's chameleons and panther chameleons would be free-roaming. In the main indoor exhibit hall, visitors would see Dumeril's ground boas, radiated tortoises, mantella, tomato frogs, cockroaches and other small animals. A hollow leg would be the hiding place for a hedgehog tenrec, while aye-ayes climbed branches in a large exhibit with branches and trees for a "Madagascan night forest" Anosy, gray and pygmy mouse lemurs would have large nocturnal exhibits, with red lighting. Visitors would be able to see the unique nocturnal prosimians close up. For comparison, there would be an exhibit for a potto, and two Asian prosimians (Nycticebus coucang and Bornean tarsier), showcasing the prosimians. All exhibits would replicate their native homes and have other native species on the ground of the exhibits- black and rufous elephant shrew for the potto, Sunda porcupine for the coucang and chevrotains for the tarsier. Visitors would see outdoor exhibits with a large "hamster" wheel, grass, native Malagasy plants, and wide branches for fossa and fanaloka. A gift shop and restaurant would be nearby as visitors boarded the S.S. Fanaloka again past a pond for Madagascan waterfowl. After visitors returned to the other shore of the lake (Lake Fanaloka) visitors would see...
Kifaru River Camp!
Kifaru River Camp would start with two netted savannah aviaries for birds of prey- bateleur and martial eagles. Visitors would usually see the eagles perched on "acacia trees". A troop of vervet monkeys would be in an enclosure modeled to look like a faux safari camp along the "Kifaru River" The vervet exhibit would be large and grassy with plenty of enrichment, including a monkey tunnel, where the vervets could crawl under a tunnel and pop up in a bubble. The main attraction would live in a two-acre exhibit with a pool, trees, and mud wallows. The main attraction would be a herd of black rhinos, with special rhino feedings and a viewing cave, Rhino Kopje. A kopje for klipspringer, meerkats and rock hyrax would be near Rhino Kopje Viewing Cave.
Tembo Grasslands-
Tembo Grasslands would be a 40-acre crescent-shaped grassland. Visitors would first see the south end of the grassland, with African elephants with savannas, mud, grass, trees, waterfalls, pools, hay feeders and plants. The elephants and all the other species could roam freely together. White rhinos would also be exhibited here, as well as springbok, gemsbok, gerenuk, Defassa waterbuck, bontebok, sitatunga, lesser kudu, slender-horned gazelle, greater kudu, white-tailed wildebeest and Nile lechwe. A boardwalk would go around the crescent (an elevated boardwalk, elevating at the middle of the grassland, near the herds of bontebok and sitatunga).
North Africa would be a 2-acre exhibit for Barbary apes (in a netted exhibit mimicking the Rock of Gibraltar) inside a 20-acre paddock for dromedary camels, scimitar oryx, and addax, viewable from several vantage points along a desert trail.
Savanna's Edge would be 15 acres for plains zebras, reticulated giraffes, ostriches, forest buffalo and warthogs, with a large (1.5) acre waterhole.
 
You made a good zoo!
I would give descriptions of the exhibits rather than just lists of animals. Maybe you can do that?
Zone I has a creative name and some animals like fox and beaver I would not put in a Western US exhibit. I rate it a 6 out of 10.
The Jungle Book looks relatively small, but the theme is creative. I rate it a 2.
Sacred Egypt has a creative idea. I rate it a 5.
The Frigid North is a 6 because of lemmings!
Owen Farm has some non-farm animals like boa and hedgehogs- so creative! I rate it a 6.
Great Down Under I rate a 5.
You just need more descriptions and more herps. Look at my exhibits for help, or Javan Rhino, redpanda, siamang27 etc.
Your zoo is good, but needs some improvements. I rate it a 30 out of 60.

Edited my post just now, added a few more species, and I used Wikipedia for a list of species discovered and/or described during Lewis and Clarks' expeditions.
 
Here's the first zoo idea. It's a zoo I would like in maybe Texas or Florida.

Here's the Exhibits:

Flamingo Pool:
The first exhibit you will see before you start your journey into the zoo, a large pool with Caribbean Flamingos.

American Conservation Area:
After you pass by the Flamingo Pool; get ready to see some animals from North America. The first habitats of this exhibit is the flight cage for the Californian Condor, as well as off-public areas for the Condors to breed. Next to the condors is the mixed habitat for Bald Eagles and Common Ravens. You will then see the grassland habitat for Pronghorn Antelope and Wild Turkey. Next is the Endangered Birds Area; these birds include Whooping Cranes, Trumpeter Swans and Attwater's Prairie Chickens. The last habitat you will see is a large breeding area for the endangered Black-Footed Ferret.

Petting Zoo:
This area is perfect for people of all ages to interact with both domestic animals and some wild animals. The main building in the exhibit is the Large Red Barn. Various farm animals have free access to be either outside or inside the barn. Domestic animals include Shetland and Exmoor Ponies, Andalusian Horses, Domestic Donkeys, Hampshire and Jacob Sheep, Nigerian, Boer and African Pygmy Goats, Belted Galloway, Holstein and Jersey Cows, Texas Longhorn, Zebu, Pot-Bellied Pigs, Rabbits, Guinea Pigs, Domestic Ducks, Domestic Geese, Domestic Chickens and Domestic Turkeys. In addition to all these Domesticated animals, there are also some exotic species, which include Red Foxes, American Minks, Chinchillas, Norway Rats, Peafowl, Pheasants, Quails, Barn Owls, Rock Pigeons, Kingsnakes, Corn Snakes, Gopher Snakes, Leopard Geckos, Breaded Dragons, Turtles and Tortoises. This area will also be a good area for volunteers to work at while they get more experience in careers related to animals. They will start with goats and chickens and eventually end up working with cows and foxes.

Wild Equid Yards:
Two large yards for two species of wild Asian equids- the Przewalski Horse and the Persian Onager.

Asian Elephant Yard and Barn:
This yard will be the home for about three Asian Elephants- a bull and two cows. This area promises to give the elephants the best amenities for any elephant in a zoo. These include a large pool for them to swim in and clean themselves, lots of land to walk around, freedom to go in or out of the barn and as much enrichment as they can have. There is also their indoor home in the Asian Elephant Barn.

Asian Jungle:
Next to the Asian Elephant Yard and Barn, this area exhibits exotic animals from Southeast Asia and New Guinea. The first habitat you will see is the Gibbon Island, which is home to White Cheeked Gibbons and Siamangs. Other animals exhibited here are Sun Bears, Asian Small Clawed Otters, Fishing Cats, Babirusa, Lowland Anoa, Greater Mouse Deer, Sunda Pangolins, Crested Porcupines, Sulawesi Crested Macaques, Cassowary, Bali Mynah, Nicobar Pigeon, Orange-Footed Scrubfowl, Milky Storks, Indian Gharial, Komodo Dragon, Asian Water Monitors, Green Tree Monitors, Sailfin Lizards, Tokay Geckos, Blue Tongued Skinks, various species of Asian turtles, Reticulated and Burmese Pythons, Green Tree Pythons and Blood Pythons. There are also the Bat Cave, with lots of Flying Foxes, and the Lorikeet Aviary, where people can feed the birds, that includes Rainbow and Green-Naped Lorikeets.

African Savannah:
This exhibit features animals from the African Serengeti. The first animals you will see is the mixed habitat for both Vervet and Black-and-White Colobus Monkeys. As you make your way up you will find the Giraffe Exhibit. The Giraffes in this exhibit are Reticulated and Rothschild Giraffe. People can even get the chance to feed them. Also living with the Giraffes are two types of antelopes, the Arabian Oryx and the Grant's Gazelle, and three types of birds- the Marabou Stork, the Gray Crowned Crane and the Kori Bustard. Next to the large grassland exhibit is the Giraffe Barn; this is where the Giraffes can go in whenever they feel like it. There are also habitats for Dwarf Mongoose, Rock Hyrax, Red-Billed and Yellow-Billed Hornbills, African Gray Parrots, Weaver Birds, African Tortoises, African Rock Python, African Chameleons and Nile Monitor. After you leave the Giraffe Barn, you will come face to face with the zoo's pride of African Lions. The only thing that separates you from these amazing animals is the glass wall. The last exhibit is that for a pack of African Wild Dogs.

Penguins of the African Coast:
Part of the African Savannah exhibit, This indoor building is home to a large colony of African Black-Footed Penguins. It comes with both above water and underwater viewing for the Penguins and is a must see at the zoo.

Orangutan Jungle:
This exhibit is home to a family of Sumatran Orangutans. The exhibit has everything that an Orangutan needs and/or wants-rope and tire swings, trees, grass and lots of fruit to eat.

South American Pampas:
The final exhibit at the zoo. You will first see the Nutria habitat. You will then see the mixed habitat for Maned Wolves and Giant Anteaters as well as the other mixed habitat for Marsh Deer, Baird's Tapir and Capybara. You will also see the flight cage for Macaws and other Parrots. There is also the mixed habitat for Two-Toed Sloths, Agoutis, Cotton-Top and Golden Lion Tamarins and Brazillian Porcupines. The final exhibit is the habitat for Tufted Capuchins.

What do you think?
 
A very nice list but how about telling us how the enclosures will look,because then people will have a feel for what the collection might look like,instead of just being a list of animals that you would like to have!!!
 
African Bush Lands:
Savanna Tunnel would be a high tunnel with rockwork. Above the tunnel would be a kopje for klipspringer, meerkats and rock hyrax. The tunnel would give way to a 5-acre savanna, Forest Savanna, a lightly forested yard for Masai giraffes, Grant's zebras, and ostriches. A giraffe feeding deck would be located around a curving boardwalk out of the tunnel. The boardwalk would elevate and visitors would see rockwork as it elevated, and then the 1-acre kopje surrounded by a moat. The elevated boardwalk would go past a 10-acre savanna, the Bush. An invisible moat would separate a pride of lions (in a 1-acre exhibit with rocks, a den, waterfall, grass, trees and lots of enrichment) from lesser kudu, impala, black duiker, bushpigs, red river hog and warthog in 10 acres, with a waterhole and bushes. The boardwalk would continue past the Kori, a savanna with Kori bustards, crowned cranes, Thomson's gazelle, more impala, Slender-horned gazelle, Cape buffalo, white rhino and blesbok. The boardwalk would go past outdoor exhibits for spurred tortoise mixed with guineafowl, a turaco aviary, and descend after the turacos. A row of terraria (in an outdoor rock circle) would exhibit various spiders, small snakes and lizards (including agamids). African pancake tortoise would live in an open-topped exhibit. The boardwalk would end at a 20-acre savanna with grass, mud, enrichment, trees, and more for a herd of African bush elephants. An African marsh would have hippos on one side (2 acres) and sitatunga, herons, pelicans, waterbuck on the other. A rope bridge would be the only thing separating visitors from Nile crocodiles.
 
Okay, while I take a Hiatus on WPMZ, I decided to do something somewhat productive and make a zoo design!

Well, Here it is

The Ponds

The first exhibit would be "The Ponds", and it would consist of, well, ponds. There would be 5 ponds in total, East, West, North, South, and Center. The first pond you would see would be the South Pond, and it would have species of waterbird from the Americas. Species in the south pond would be Wood Duck, Mallard Duck, Cinnamon Teal, Green Winged Teal, Ruddy Duck, Great Blue Heron, Snowy Egret, Green Heron, and American Purple Gallinule. Going up the path, you would come to the East Pond, which is for Eurasian Species, in this pond there would be Mute Swan, Mandarin Duck, Baer's Pochard, Greater Adjuant, Indian Skimmer, Wood Snipe, Purple Heron, Bean Goose, Baikal Teal, Harlequin Duck, and Tufted Duck. Next to the East Pond would be the Center Pond, which would house Caribbean Flamingo, American Avocet, Brown Pelican, and Double Crested Cormorant. On the other side of the Center Pond would be the West Pond, for African Species. In the pond there would be Egyptian Geese, Cattle Egrets, Cape Shovelers, South African Shelducks, Pink Backed Pelicans, Sacred Ibis, African Spoonbill, Shoebill, and Maccoa Ducks. The final pond, the North Pond, would house Red Eared Sliders, Eastern Painted Turtles, and Koi. After this, the path would split into two, with one going to the exhibit we are going to cover next, Owl Outpost...
 
Chinese Passage
This exhibit is the first part of my zoo
You come across a sign saying "CHINESE PASSAGE" Now its time to enter the exhibit, a 1 acre enclosure will be the the first to view, it currently houses 4 female
giant pandas. A male is in a separate enclosure next to the females. Now, opposite the pandas is the red panda, they will be resting on the trees or fooling around. A
watered exhibit will have a island in middle of it. Its the fishing cat home. Now the next animal is next to the red pandas. A lake with a stream connecting it to the
70-foot Carnegie waterfall. it have exotic plants from China for the Asian small-clawed otter to hide in. Now you'll hear laughing from next to the fishing cats. Its
hidden somewhere in the lush plants in its enclosure. But look up at the trees, a bird will stand on a branch staring at the visitor, its called the blue-crowned
laughingthrush. The next animal, is really a mysterious cat which live in a half acre enclosure withe rock steppes and trees its the mighty binturong or the bear-cat.
The next enclosure is rocky-themed with plants inserted in the concrete with a soft texture. It houses a herd of Chinese goral. The next animal is a tiger native
to China, the indochinese tiger, in its well-designed 1-acre enclosure with hundred of plant everywhere. There will be a rocky mountain at the back to resemble Chinese
forsets. The next animal is really loud with a trunk, its the Asian elephant eating hay to keep full. Now the next enclosure is a mixed one, with Reeves muntjac and
tufted deer in their sub-tropical enclosure. The next animal will draw attention from their swinging, its the white-cheeked gibbon with their babies clinging on to mum
while shes grooming it. The next bird is endangered and lives in wetland-themed enclosure cleverly designed. its the red-crowned crane. The next animal is a fericous
raptor, living in mountains-themed enclosure. its the mountain hawk eagle. the next colourful animal is, again a bird in fact, Himalayan monal. This species of monal
also lives in China. Now the Chinese aviary houses two species: azure-winged magpie and smew. The enclosure will be heated for the magpie. They also have a out-door
enclosure featuring trees and a large pond. The next animal lives almost everywhere in the world, its usually found near the pond in its enclosure. its the cattle egret
The water monitor will enjoy a special light and a big pond in its bedroom-sized enclosure. The pond will be deep for the monitor to practise its diving skills.
The next reptile is sure a strangler found in rainforset, it will slither in the floor and even in its heated pond. The burmese python will enjoy eating meat. the
next fish is a big predator found in rivers. The Chinese emperor will swim around the tree roots in its enclosure. The next insect dwells the deep sea floor looking
for food in its big enclosure. its the deep sea isopod. The next animal is like a wild ass. But its different, the onager. The next animal shares its enclosure which
is 80-foot tall enclosure with Chinese alligator, its the great hornbill. The enclosure is extremely tall so the hornbills can avoid get snatched by the alligator.
It have tall
trees and lush plants so the bird can get on the ground safely without being seen by the alliagtor. The next mammal is striking red, but its also a snatcher, in its
wooded enclosure, the red fox. The Bactrian camel lives in a soil-floored enclosure munching on the hays and sitting on the tall rocks. Two species ampihibans share
a enclosure which is 50% water: Chinese fire-bellied newt and the fire-bellied toad. A barn enclosure with hays and pen will house barn owls. Eurasian eagle owls will
scare visitor with their acrobat flying. Wolverines will walk to the glass and sometimes, scaring visitors in their tundra exhibit. Snow leopards will rest on the rocks
staring at the visitors. Francois langurs will cluch on their ginger babies, insecting the visitor who are its intruder. Now a variety of enclosures in a building will
house the following species:
Termites
Dermestid beetles
Dung beetles
Giant water bug
Honey bees
Now a glassed enclosure will displays mandarin ducks swimming or sitting on a island. Lar gibbons will swing at the tops looking for predators. There will be also a pond
in the middle of the enclosure for drinks. Yellow-throated martens lives near the alligator and hornbills. They will be fed meats triple time a week. Bengalese finchs are next to the gibbons.
their enclosure is neatly done to resemble rainforset. Black-crowned night heron will live next to the insect building. They will scurry in their ponds looking for
fishes in their wooded enclosure. The Chinese Aviary will houses the following species:
Common pochard
Little egret
Grey peacock-pheasant
White stork
Falcated duck
Koi fish
White-naped crane
Golden pheasant
Baer's pochard
Now its time to tell the carnivore section:
Clouded leopard
Asian golden cat
Pallas cat
Marbled cat
Eurasian lynx
Raccoon dog
Dhole
Sun bear
Siberian weasel
Smooth-coated otter
And the two last animals will share a enclosure they are the golden snub-nosed monkey and Przewalski's horse in a 1 acre exhibit
When you exit you will eat in a Chinese cafe
I will come back tomorrow with the second section: Serengeti
 
While I take a break/hiatus from Wild Planet Mega Zoo, Im going to make a zoo on this thread, so can people help me with exhibit Ideas? Here are some of the Ideas I Have.

Australian Mangroves

Various Islands from around the world (Galapagos, Hawaiian Islands, Ryuku Islands, Sri Lanka, Madagascar, Aluetian Islands, Ect.)

Walk Through Aviary for "Common Backyard" Birds of North America

Rodents of the World

Middle East

Sierra Madre Occidental Mountains

South Africa

Gobi Desert

Mediterranean
 
My last zoo design of 2014! :)
African Pass-
African Pass would start with a gelada baboon/lammergeyer exhibit, on one acre of land. The lammergeyers would live in a highland above the baboons, confined to the lowland hills with an active troop. The trail would continue past a large colony of meerkats in a savannah rock exhibit, and a lightly forested exhibit for royal antelope, black duiker, zebra duiker and Kirk's dik dik (1.5 acres). The light forest would give way to a forest stream. Visitors would see a savannah with grazing animals in the distance as they crossed the African bridge past 10 acres for gorillas with climbing equipment, swings, ropes, tires and other enrichment, a grassy meadow, trees, pool, and varied terrain for these intelligent animals. One troop would be western lowland and the other mountain. Bongos would share 1.35 acres with gray parrots, blue-bellied rollers and hamerkops. The forest would be light again as visitors saw pygmy hippos in an exhibit (1.5 acres with a pool, large land area and enrichment with glass viewing windows). and then see a boardwalk, where visitors could feed giraffes lettuce ($1 for 3 leaves of lettuce). Roan antelope, suni, ostriches, crowned cranes, zebras, impalas, gemsbok, hirola, gerenuk, sable and more would be seen as visitors saw the huge (50-acre) grassy savannah. Other species would include springbok, wildebeest, spurred tortoises (in a .5-acre pen in the middle of the savannah), massive white and black rhinos, and a herd of African elephants, free to roam 50 acres. Another bridge would be a rope bridge. Visitors would be only feet from massive Nile crocodiles. The crocodile exhibit would have a pool and a large land area with logs, trees and other natural functions (1 acre). 5 acres would be for hippos mixed with cape buffalo, with mud, sand, enrichment, rocks and more for a naturalistic exhibit. Another 5 acres would be for sitatunga, waterbuck, reedbuck, egrets, flamingos, pelicans, etc. all in an African marsh (3.75 acres water, 1.25 land with reeds, mud and more). A small reptile house with various snakes and invertebrates would be in a village hut, followed by a naked mole rat tunnel, and a restaurant, gift shop, restrooms and ATM for visitors, at the Kgotla.
Happy New Year! (Zoo Year!) :)
Sent at 11:59 pm, 12/31/2014!
 
This is the first habitat in my zoo based around African and Australian fauna. I do all my designs so that they can be built in Australia using species which could actually be acquired. This is the nocturnal house called hot summers night.

Hot summers night is a journey through the forests and deserts of Australia at night. Visitors are transported through a rocky gorge in which they encounter the species up close and personal. It is different from a lot of nocturnal houses in that visitor areas are quite roomy.

As a visitor approaches the house they notice a large bill poking out from the side of the building. A duck they think…no upon closer inspection they find it is a platypus. They walk through the mouth and into a dimly lit hallway.

The first exhibit encountered is for western swamp tortoises. Underwater viewing is provided starting at the floor and moving up to eye level where a small land area is also viewable. The large tank encourages breeding of this endangered species. Visitors turn a corner and are at the edge of a river. Along the wall is two tanks. Both feature rockwork along the back. The first is filled halfway and has a waterfall. It houses golden bell frogs. Next door a full tank is for Yarra pygmy perch. Following the semi-circular hallway is a tank for Saratoga and some other fish. Next is the last tank in this aquarium type area is an adult chest height tank for archer fish.

By this point people’s eyes have acclimatised and they are ready to enter the fully nocturnal area. The first habitat features a pair of bilbies and 3.7 ghost bats. They share a central area featuring a central dead tree and read sand dotted with spinifex grasses and rocks. On one side is a den for the bilby and on the other side the bats have a cave, both have visitor viewing opportunities. Backing onto this is a quoll habitat. Visitors follow this enclosure around two sides and it has floor to ceiling windows along its length interspersed with mock rock. Inside is a pair of fake trees and a leaf litter floor. A den provides viewing of them sleeping if that is where they choose to sleep. A number of logs are also provided.

Across the hallway is a set of three exhibits. One large floor to ceiling habitat is home to 1.1 dibbler. Their tree filled home is regularly restocked with gum leaves to give it a forest feel. The floor is leaf litter. The next two habitats are smaller and sit a waist height on an adult. One features kultarr while the other is home to spinifex hopping mice. Both feature red sand, rocks and spinifex grass.

At the end of this hallway is a large room. Here people can feel the preserved skins of a number of the species on show at the touch wall. Most exciting for visitors though is when they find a keeper with a wombat or possum ready for a pat. Also provided is a couch where visitors can sit, take a break and watch the antics of the animals. Also set into one wall is a number of nocturnal invertebrate habitats for species such as lord howe island stick insects and flinders ranges scorpions among others.

Next is a series of three dens are home to the zoos southern hairy nosed wombat pair and their joey. These link to 2 large outside pens which have corrugated metal fencing and sandy floors. A number of large gum trees dot the space. These wrap around the outside of the buildings south and east edges.

Next visitors round a corner and are in a room surrounded by four enclosures. In the centre is a lounge where people can sit and watch the animals. Floor to ceiling glass provides viewing into habitats for bush rats, black footed tree rats and black rats. Interpretation talks about how the black rats have decimated populations of the native rat species. The bush rat enclosure is two habitats linked by tunnels. Inside the enclosure is a mouse wheel which counts the number of km the colony run in a day so visitors can see how active these guys are.

Next visitors enter a hallway with enclosures on one side and the back of the dibbler enclosure on the other. The first habitat is a large enclosure with red sands, spinifex grass and rocks providing a home to numbats. Floor to ceiling viewing is provided through glass. Next is a waist height enclosure for greater stick nest rats. The feature of the habitat is the large nest that they have built themselves.

At the end of this hallway is a large room surrounded by four enclosures. The first is on the opposite side of the hallway and has floor to waist height water for the front half of the enclosure and then land at the back. This is the home of the water rats. Next is a platypus enclosure covering the back wall of the room. It is similar in design to the water rat habitat but much larger. In the middle of the room are couches and a column with a video feed of the platypus den. Following around the room is a desert themed habitat for a large colony of fat tailed dunnarts. Between the last hallway and the next one is a red tailed phascogale enclosure. A large tree sits in the middle and leaf litter is one the floor.
Down the next hallway is two enclosures. One side is home to mountain pygmy possums. It is a forest themed habitat. On the other side a similar habitat is the home of the leadbeaters possum.

The last habitat in the building is a walk through habitat. Double doors provide an entrance to a habitat for tawny frogmouth, yellow bellied glider, mala, feather tailed glider and squirrel gliders. The visitor path hugs the wall which is the back of the numbat habitat. The large room has a number of trees on which the animals climb. A number are placed near the pathway to encourage the animals to come close to the animals. Visitors exit the building through a triple door system they are padded to reduce noise and have magnetic locks so one can’t be open if another is.

Exiting the building visitors emerge on the pathway and can go to visit the outside homes for the wombats.
 
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