Dream Zoo

Your sentence structure is giving me a headache.
Physalia utriculus isn't a jellyfish, but a hydrozoan. And I do not support this "throwaway" kind of animal husbandry.
Not every African rainforest is "the Congo". Could you please name all these "many zoos" successfully mixing mandrills & pygmy hippos?
One the one hand, you state that your species selection is limited to what you have in Australia. On the other, you eagerly list non-native species that to my knowledge are not kept in Australian zoos.
So what is your USP, other than throwing a frenetic quantity of species at us? Just the size is a bit uninspired, isn't it?

Sorry about my sentence structure.
I called them jellyfish as that is what they're closely related to. Lots of zoos keep animals with short lifespans such as mice, stick insects & some fish species all of which sometimes live around a yr.
I know that every rainforest in Africa isn't "the Congo" but it was better part of the zoo to exhibit the Pygmy Hippos.
Off the top of my head I can name Melbourne Zoo (Australia) & South Lakes Safari Zoo (England) but there are more, the EAZA remarked in their Pygmy Hippo Best Practice Guidelines that both species can be kept together but it did state that there may be aggression from the male Mandrills.
The species is limited to what we have in Australia & what zoos can be legally import into Australia with a few exceptions.
Other than the large size, I stated about the unique species & how they're exhibited being USP's.
 
So, if you want royal grammas so badly, why not make a Caribbean tank? The species are well-known and easy to come by for zoos and aquariums.

Within the zoo there isn't much room for this tank to be put, one Caribbean species in an Indo-Pacific tank is different than having a Caribbean tank in an area meant to be based off an Indo-Pacific region. I don't see where else this tank could be put in the zoo.
 
Are you sure they're African Penguins and not Humboldts or Magellanics? I've not seen Inca Tern mixed with African but I have with the South American species.

zoos/aquariums that keep/have kept African penguins & Inca Terns together include Newport Aquarium & Louisville Zoo (USA), Dierenpark Zie-ZOO (Netherlands) & Bristol Zoo (England).
 
Within the zoo there isn't much room for this tank to be put, one Caribbean species in an Indo-Pacific tank is different than having a Caribbean tank in an area meant to be based off an Indo-Pacific region. I don't see where else this tank could be put in the zoo.

If it's the color scheme you like, you could swap the Royal Gramma for the Bicolor Dottyback and keep the Indo-Pacific theme.
 
The species is limited to what we have in Australia & what zoos can be legally import into Australia with a few exceptions.
Birds cannot be imported into Australia, with extremely few exceptions, so the majority of your listed birds are impossible (i.e. anything other than what is already kept in Australia). Even if birds could be imported there are various species you list (e.g. Takahe) which would still be impossible. Not all of your other non-bird animals "can legally be imported into Australia" either (too many to list), and some would never be approved for import (e.g. Leaf-cutter and Army Ants) because of the biosecurity risk they would pose.

Off the top of my head I can name Melbourne Zoo (Australia) & South Lakes Safari Zoo (England) but there are more
Melbourne do not keep Mandrills and Pigmy Hippos together. What zoos are included in your "there are more" statement?

Lots of zoos keep animals with short lifespans such as mice, stick insects & some fish species all of which sometimes live around a yr.
Which are captive-bred. Not the same situation at all.
 
Sorry about my sentence structure.
I called them jellyfish as that is what they're closely related to. Lots of zoos keep animals with short lifespans such as mice, stick insects & some fish species all of which sometimes live around a yr.
I know that every rainforest in Africa isn't "the Congo" but it was better part of the zoo to exhibit the Pygmy Hippos.
Off the top of my head I can name Melbourne Zoo (Australia) & South Lakes Safari Zoo (England) but there are more, the EAZA remarked in their Pygmy Hippo Best Practice Guidelines that both species can be kept together but it did state that there may be aggression from the male Mandrills.
The species is limited to what we have in Australia & what zoos can be legally import into Australia with a few exceptions.
Other than the large size, I stated about the unique species & how they're exhibited being USP's.
Bonobos and chimps are even closer related to us; yet you wouldn't call them humans, would you?
Keeping (and breeding) short-lived species is one thing; deliberately cutting down a lifespan due to inadequate husbandry is another, and unethical in my books.
There are just tad bit more than a "few exceptions" to your dream list, aren't there? ;)
Melbourne does not keep both species together any longer, and neither does Halle, due to the aforementioned interspecific aggressive behavior. But please, feel free to mention the many other, still working examples.
"Uniqueness" isn't really a great selling point in modern zoos. So far, you've given little to no explaination or details to your style of exhibition.
 
Birds cannot be imported into Australia, with extremely few exceptions, so the majority of your listed birds are impossible (i.e. anything other than what is already kept in Australia). Even if birds could be imported there are various species you list (e.g. Takahe) which would still be impossible. Not all of your other non-bird animals "can legally be imported into Australia" either (too many to list), and some would never be approved for import (e.g. Leaf-cutter and Army Ants) because of the biosecurity risk they would pose.


Melbourne do not keep Mandrills and Pigmy Hippos together. What zoos are included in your "there are more" statement?


Which are captive-bred. Not the same situation at all.

most almost all of the birds within the aviaries are already in Australian zoos or aviculture. The exceptions for some of the outdoor exhibit birds such as those in the Africa (other than in the aviary), non free-flight birds in Rainforests of the World, some waterfowl in Wetlands & Waterways, the NZ birds & seabirds in the Atlas Aquarium (apart from the penguins & cormorants), the swans in South America & all exotic birds-of-prey.
I know that African Penguins aren't in Australia but according to the live-import list they can be imported.

currently they do not but they used to. By saying "there are more" I meant that there would be more without knowing exactly what zoos do.

I get this & that it wouldn't be the same with these short-lived species as it would with wild-caught specimens meaning that it's a species which probably shouldn't be included in the zoo.
 
Bonobos and chimps are even closer related to us; yet you wouldn't call them humans, would you?
Keeping (and breeding) short-lived species is one thing; deliberately cutting down a lifespan due to inadequate husbandry is another, and unethical in my books.
There are just tad bit more than a "few exceptions" to your dream list, aren't there? ;)
Melbourne does not keep both species together any longer, and neither does Halle, due to the aforementioned interspecific aggressive behavior. But please, feel free to mention the many other, still working examples.
"Uniqueness" isn't really a great selling point in modern zoos. So far, you've given little to no explaination or details to your style of exhibition.

I wouldn't called Bonobos or Chimps humans but I would call us & them primates.
Yes I get that it would be unethical for this species to be kept & will include its exclusion from the zoo in an edits post after I finish posting the rest of the zoo.
Yes of course there are more than a few but there isn't a whole lot that isn't in Australian zoos or able to be imported for them.
I knew that Melbourne previously & didn't anymore but didn't know about South Lakes not keeping them anymore.
By saying there are more I meant that there would be more not knowing exactly what zoos do.
I get this but by unique I was just saying that it'd be very different for an Aussie zoos & in an area that doesn't have a proper zoo close by.
 
most almost all of the birds within the aviaries are already in Australian zoos or aviculture. The exceptions for some of the outdoor exhibit birds such as those in the Africa (other than in the aviary), non free-flight birds in Rainforests of the World, some waterfowl in Wetlands & Waterways, the NZ birds & seabirds in the Atlas Aquarium (apart from the penguins & cormorants), the swans in South America & all exotic birds-of-prey.
I know that African Penguins aren't in Australia but according to the live-import list they can be imported.
With a quick rough count, there are at least forty bird species you have listed which are not kept in Australia. And, no, African Penguins cannot be imported. Simply being included on the import list does not mean they can actually be imported - because birds cannot be imported. A lot of the other non-bird species you list are also not in Australia and cannot be imported.

currently they do not but they used to. By saying "there are more" I meant that there would be more without knowing exactly what zoos do.
So, in other words, you don't know of any and saying "but there are more" had no basis in anything.

I get this & that it wouldn't be the same with these short-lived species as it would with wild-caught specimens meaning that it's a species which probably shouldn't be included in the zoo.
I'm not sure I understand this sentence - are you agreeing with what I said or are you saying that mice, fish etc shouldn't be kept?
 
Melbourne do not keep Mandrills and Pigmy Hippos together. What zoos are included in your "there are more" statement?

Yes they aren't. Although the enclosures are joined via a waterway that runs into one of the Pygmy Hippo enclosures.

Apparently @Batto made a comment on a media from South Lake that Melbourne in the past had attempted to group the two species together.

South Lakes experiment has since ended afaik; the Pygmy Hippos got a little bit too aggressive towards the mandrills.
 
Yes they aren't. Although the enclosures are joined via a waterway that runs into one of the Pygmy Hippo enclosures.

Apparently @Batto made a comment on a media from South Lake that Melbourne in the past had attempted to group the two species together.
As far as I'm aware there was never an attempt at a mixed enclosure at Melbourne. The design has, from the start, been one enclosure for the Mandrills and two for the Pigmy Hippos. That is the only way I have ever seen it as well.
 
As far as I'm aware there was never an attempt at a mixed enclosure at Melbourne. The design has, from the start, been one enclosure for the Mandrills and two for the Pigmy Hippos. That is the only way I have ever seen it as well.

I was a little confused wondering how it was possible. It's possible initial designs planned for the Pygmy Hippos to have access to the waterway that runs into the Mandrill enclosure.
 
Yes they aren't. Although the enclosures are joined via a waterway that runs into one of the Pygmy Hippo enclosures.

Apparently @Batto made a comment on a media from South Lake that Melbourne in the past had attempted to group the two species together.

South Lakes experiment has since ended afaik; the Pygmy Hippos got a little bit too aggressive towards the mandrills.
From what I remember reading years ago, Melbourne probably ran into the same issue of interspecific aggression as SL and Halle (where the male mandrill was the main aggressor) and thus designed the final version accordingly separated.
ZooLex Exhibit - Pygmy Hippopotamus/Mandrill Exhibit
 
I'm going to post an updated zoo which I have changed & condensed a ton with only a small area for exotics & the bulk of the zoo for natives. & this is the start

Tasmania

Nocturnal House
1. Eastern Barred-Bandicoot, Common Brushtail-Possum, Long-Nosed Potoroo, Short-Beaked Echidna
2. Eastern Quoll
3. Tiger Snake
Other
1. Forty-Spotted Pardalote, Musk Lorikeet, Yellow Wattlebird, Parrots (Orange-Bellied, Swift), Brush Bronzewing
2. Tasmanian Devil
3. Grey Goshawk

Savanna Country
Arnhem Highway
1. Finches (Star, Gouldian, Long-Tailed), Grey-Crowned Babbler, Hooded Parrot, Northern Rosella, Red-Tailed Black-Cockatoo, Dollarbird, King Quail, Pigeons (Partridge, White-Quilled Rock-), Rainbow Bee-Eater, Blue-Winged Kookaburra, Galah, Australian Pratincole, Australian Bustard
2. Black-Breasted Buzzard
Farmland
1. Banded Lapwing, Brown Quail, Red-Browed Finch, Red-Rumped Parrot, Eurasian Skylark
2. Eastern Grass-Owl
3. Barn Owl
Nocturnal House
1. Kimberley Rock-Monitor, Gilbert's Dragon
2. Chameleon Dragon, Frilled Lizard, Northern Blue-Tongue Skink
3. Kings' Monitor
4. Children's Python
5. Leichhardt's Grasshopper
6. Black-Headed Python
7. Northern Carpet-Python
8. Rufous Bettong, Ghost Bat, Spectacled Hare-Wallaby
9. Coastal Taipan
10. Northern Spiny-Tailed Gecko
11. Banded Knob-Tailed Gecko
12. Fat-Tailed Dunnart
13. Yellow-Spotted Monitor
14. Giant Cave-Gecko

East Coast
Scrub to Sea Aviary
1. Rails (Buff-Banded, Chestnut), Pied Imperial-Pigeon, Australasian Figbird, Metallic Starling, Lorikeets (Varied, Red-Collared), Bar-Shouldered Dove, Honeyeaters (White-Cheeked, Brown), Shining Flycatcher, Grey Shrike-Thrush, White-Breasted Woodswallow, Chestnut Teal, Sacred Kingfisher
Other
1. Australian Pelican, Little Pied Cormorant, Gulls (Pacific, Silver)
2. Cape Barren Goose, Quokka
3. Penguins (Little, Fiordland), Eastern Shovel-Nosed Ray, Port Jackson Shark, Terns (Bridled, Crested), Hooded Plover, Black-Faced Cormorant
4. Black-Winged Stilt, Australian Pied-Oystercatcher, Bar-Tailed Godwit, Masked Lapwing, Ruddy Turnstone, Beach Stone-Curlew
5. Australian Sea-Lion
6. Eastern Osprey, Brahminy Kite
Nocturnal House
1. Coconut Crab
2. Australian Land Hermit-Crab
3. Orange-Eyed Tree-Frog
4. Harlequin Hibiscus-Beetle
5. Lord Howe Island Stick-Insect

Western Australia
Karri Forest
1. Cinnamon Quail-Thrush, Western Bowerbird, Purple-Crowned Lorikeet, Western Rosella, Baudin's Black-Cockatoo, Red-Capped Parrot, White-Winged Fairywren, Australian Ringneck, White-Naped Honeyeater
2. Western Brush-Wallaby, Numbat
Nocturnal House
1. Woylie, Greater Stick-Nest Rat
2. Western Shingleback, Superb Two-Lined Dragon, Skinks (Western Blue-Tongue, King's)
3. Pilbara Death-Adder
4. Pygmy Python
5. Dibbler, Red-Tailed Phascogale

Australian Rainforest
Rainforest Aviary
1. Bowerbirds (Regent, Satin, Golden), Pigeons (Topknot, White-Headed, Wonga), Fruit-Doves (Rose-Crowned, Superb, Wompoo), Green Catbird, Eastern Yellow-Robin, Parrots (Australian King-, Double-Eyed Fig-, Eclectus), Golden Whistler, Black-Breasted Button-Quail, Red-Necked Pademelon, Noisy Pitta, Blue-Faced Parrot-Finch, Palm Cockatoo, Pacific Emerald-Dove, Paradise Riflebird, White-Browed Scrubwren
Other
1. Southern Cassowary
2. Lumholtz's Tree-Kangaroo
3. Spectacled Flying-Fox
4. Lesser Sooty Owl
Nocturnal House
1. Long-Nosed Bandicoot, Striped Possum
2. Spot-Tailed Quoll
3. Land Mullet, Pink-Tongued Skink
4. Jungle Carpet-Python
5. Common Tree-Snake
6. Great Barred-Frog
7. Geckos (Northern Leaf-Tailed, Chameleon)
8. Green Python, White-Lipped Tree-Frog
9. Boyd's Forest-Dragon, Scrub Python
10. Diamond Python
11. Insects (Australian Leaf-, Peppermint Stick-)
12. Dainty Green Tree-Frog
13. Giant Burrowing-Cockroach, Giant Panda-Snail, Giant Scrub-Millipede
14. Jumping-Jack Ant
15. Lamington Spiny-Crayfish
16. Rainbowfish (Threadfin, Crimson-Spotted, Banded), Giant Freshwater-Prawn
17. Red-Bellied Turtle, Spangled Perch, Sleepy Cod
18. Eastern Bandy-Bandy
19. Rainforest Scorpion
20. Queensland Whistling-Tarantula
21. Australian Amblypygid
22. Emerald Tree-Monitor
23. Stephen's Banded-Snake
 
Aussie Alps
Nocturnal House
1. Possums (Leadbeater's, Mountain Pygmy-)
2. Skinks (Blotched Blue-Tongue, Cunningham's)
3. Southern Corroboree-Frog
Other
1. Cockatoos (Gang-Gang, Yellow-Tailed Black-), Crimson Rosella, Superb Parrot, White-Winged Chough
2. Common Wombat
3. Pied Currawong
4. Peregrine Falcon
5. Short-Beaked Echidna

Outback
Uluru
1. Princess Parrot, Major Mitchell's Cockatoo, Budgerigar, Finches (Zebra, Painted), Crimson Chat, Blue Bonnet, Southern Whiteface, Pied Honeyeater, Hooded Robin, Inland Dotterel, Flock Bronzewing, Quails (Little Button-, Stubble), Spinifex Pigeon, Cockatiel
Mallee Aviary
1. Honeyeaters (Spiny-Cheeked, White-Fronted), Parrots (Scarlet-Chested, Bourke's), Splendid Fairywren, Chiming Wedgebill, Australian Ringneck, Red-Backed Kingfisher, Red-Capped Robin, Crested Bellbird, Diamond Dove, Malleefowl, Dusky Grasswren, Orange Chat, Black-Eared Miner
Other
1. Rock-Wallabies (Yellow-Footed, Black-Flanked), Red Kangaroo, Emu
2. Wedge-Tailed Eagle
3. Perentie
Nocturnal House
1. Speckled Brown-Snake
2. Smooth Knob-Tailed Gecko
3. Greater Bilby, Spinifex Hopping-Mouse, Australian Owlet-Nightjar
4. Kultarr
5. Crucifix Toad
6. Spiny-Tailed Monitor
7. Centralian Knob-Tailed Gecko
8. Stimson's Python
9. Woma Python
10. Broad-Banded Sand-Swimmer, Thorny Devil
11. Honey-Pot Ant
12. Collett's Snake
13. Inland Taipan
14. Skinks (Night, Eastern Pilbara Spiny-Tailed), Central Netted-Dragon
15. Bredl's Carpet-Python
16. Dragons (Long-Nosed Water-, Inland Bearded-), Eastern Shingleback, Centralian Blue-Tongue Skink, Pygmy Mulga-Monitor
17. Short-Tailed Monitor
18. Ant-Lion
19. Desert Scorpion


Kakadu
Floodplain
1. Radjah Shelduck, Geese (Green Pygmy-, Magpie), Comb-Crested Jacana, Plumed Whistling-Duck, Black Bittern, Brolga, Black-Necked Stork, White-Browed Crake, Herons (Pied, Nankeen Night-), Royal Spoonbill, Australasian Darter
2. Saltwater Crocodile
3. Turtles (Eastern Long-Necked, Saw-Shelled), Freshwater Crocodile
4. Arafura File-Snake
5. Keelback
6. Merten's Water-Monitor, Northern Water-Dragon
7. Water Python
8. Pig-Nosed Turtle
9. Freshwater Sawfish, Barramundi, Speckled Longfin-Eel
Monsoon Forest
1. Red-Winged Parrot, Rainbow Pitta, Pheasant Coucal, Rufous Whistler, Finches (Crimson, Masked), Yellow-Rumped Mannikin, Shining Flycatcher, Glossy Ibis, Red-Necked Avocet, Purple-Crowned Fairywren, Eastern Koel, Orange-Footed Scrubfowl
2. Rufous Owl
3. Magnificent Tree-Frog
4. Giant Water-Spider
5. Green Tree-Ant

Bush
Bushwalk
1. Parrots (Regent, Blue-Winged), Eastern Spinebill, Lorikeets (Rainbow, Scaly-Breasted, Little), Apostlebird, Cockatoos (Glossy Black-, Sulphur-Crested), Rosellas (Eastern, Pale-Headed), Long-Billed Corella, Silverye, Forest Kingfisher, Honeyeaters (Yellow-Tufted, White-Eared, Regent, Blue-Faced, Scarlet), White-Browed Woodswallow, Diamond Firetail, Bush Stone-Curlew, Superb Lyrebird, Common Bronzewing, Little Friarbird, Superb Fairywren, Australian Brush-Turkey, Doves (Peaceful, Brown Cuckoo-), Welcome Swallow, Painted Button-Quail, Spangled Drongo, Olive-Backed Oriole, Channel-Billed Cuckoo, Black-Faced Cuckoo-Shrike
QLD Gulf Country
1. Black-Throated Finch, Squatter Pigeon, Golden-Shouldered Parrot, Pictorella Mannikin, Great Bowerbird, Black-Chinned Honeyeater
2. Rough-Scaled Python
3. Northern Knob-Tailed Gecko
Other
1. Powerful Owl
2. Pacific Baza, Australian Hobby
3. Laughing Kookaburra, Australian Magpie
4. Dingo
5. Eastern Grey-Kangaroo, Wallabies (Brush-Tailed Rock-, Swamp)
6. Koala
7. Black Kite
8. Barking Owl
Nocturnal House
1. Common Death-Adder
2. Northern Brown-Bandicoot, Common Ringtail-Possum
3. Gliders (Yellow-Bellied, Feathertail)
4. Sugar Glider, Tawny Frogmouth
5. Gliders (Greater, Squirrel)
6. Stick-Insects (Spiny, Goliath)
7. Green Tree-Frog
8. Giant Burrowing-Frog
9. Snakes (Yellow-Faced Whip-, Brown Tree-)
10. Red-Headed Mouse-Spider
11. Sydney Funnelweb-Spider
12. Redback Spider
13. Meat Ant
14. Burton's Legless-Lizard
15. Lace Monitor
16. Broad-Headed Snake
17. Golden Huntsman
18. Rhinoceros Beetle
19. Thick-Tailed Gecko
20. Red Triangle-Slug
21. Giant Centipede

The Murray-Darling
Creekline
1. Striped Honeyeater, Finches (Plum-Headed, Double-Barred), Chestnut-Breasted Mannikin, Cotton Pygmy-Goose, Australasian Grebe, Azure Kingfisher, Australian Reed-Warbler, Variegated Fairywren, Black-Fronted Dotterel, Striated Pardalote
2. Plains-Wanderer, Eastern Ground-Parrot
3. Eastern Bristlebird
4. Red-Bellied Black-Snake
5. Dragons (Red-Barred, Tawny)
6. Australian Water-Rat
7. Eastern Water-Skink
Billabong
1. Ducks (Musk, Blue-Billed, Pink-Eared, Freckled, Australian Wood-), Australian Shelduck, Black-Tailed Native-Hen, Yellow-Billed Spoonbill, Black Swan, Chestnut Teal, White-Faced Heron, Little Black Cormorant
2. Eastern Water-Dragon, Turtles (Broad-Shelled, Irwin's Snapping-, Murray River-)
3. Green-and-Golden Bell-Frog, Pacific Blue-Eye
4. Queensland Lungfish, Australian Bass
5. Short-Finned Eel, Murray Cod, Eel-Tailed Catfish
6. Platypus
7. Bullrout
8. Water Scorpion
 
This is the exotic section...

Atlas Aquarium
Wetlands & Waterways
1. Peter’s Elephant-Nose Fish, Reedfish, Congo Tetra, Freshwater Butterflyfish, Rainbow Kribs
2. Blue Lyretail, Blue Notho
3. Gouramis (Chocolate, Licorice), Loaches (Kuhli, Clown), Siamese Algae-Eater, Glass Catfish, Harlequin Rasbora
4. Siamese Fighting-Fish, Zebra Danio, Cherry Shrimp
5. Barbs (Cherry, Gold), Celestial Pearl-Danio, Honey Gourami
6. Paradise Fish, Giant Danio, Tiger Barb
7. Flowerhorn Cichlid
8. Fire Eel, Bumblebee Catfish, Senegal Bichir
9. Rainbowfish (Neon, Boeseman's, Lake Kutubu, Red)
10. Firemouth Cichlid, Jack Dempsey
11. Catfish (Red-Tailed, Suckermouth), Silver Arowana, Arapaima, Pacu, Peacock Bass, Xingu River-Ray
12. Red-Bellied Piranha
13. Black Ghost Knife-Fish, Mystery Snail, Freshwater Angelfish, Peppermint Pleco, Tetras (Emperor, Rummy-Nose)
14. Marbled Hatchetfish, Mystery Snail, Tetras (Neon, Glowlight), Bronze Corydoras, Silver Dollar
15. Amazon Leaf-Fish, Bristlenose Pleco, Royal Whiptail
16. Oscar, Green Terror
17. Discus, Cardinal Tetra, German Blue-Ram
18. Blind Cave-Tetra, Corydoras (Sterba's, Panda), Otocinclus
Coastal Waters
1. Penguins (King, Gentoo)
2. Smooth Stingray, Cownose Ray, Sharks (Leopard, Eastern Banjo-, Epaulette), Green Sea-Turtle, Luderick, Sea Mullet, Flounder, Purple Sea-Urchin, Southern Rock-Lobster, Biscuit Star, Striped Eel-Catfish
3. Dugong
4. Big-Belly Seahorse
5. Giant Cuttlefish
6. Leafy Sea-Dragon, Old Wife
7. Spotted Garden-Eel
8. Southern Blue-Ringed Octopus
9. Estuarine Stonefish
10. Blue Periwinkle, Mulberry Whelk, Swift-Footed Crab, Red Waratah-Anemone, Purple Sea-Urchin, Tasmanian Blenny, Stripey, Carpet Sea-Star, Australian Clownfish
11. Gloomy Octopus
Mangrove Estuaries
1. Bull Shark
2. Mangrove Jack, Spotted Scat, Banded Archerfish, Long-Spine Porcupinefish, Schooling Bannerfish, Dusky Flathead, Silver Moony, Yellowfin Bream
3. Upside-Down Jellyfish
4. Mangrove Monitor
5. Golden Orbweaver-Spider
6. Black-Footed Tree-Rat
7. Rusty Monitor
8. Bearded Mudskipper, Fiddler Crab
9. Halfbeak
10. Giant Mud-Crab
11. Soldier Crab
Great Barrier Reef
1. Darwin Jawfish, Reindeer Wrasse, Christmas Tree Worm, Shrimp (Banded Coral-, Harlequin), Yellowtail Coris, Banggai Cardinalfish, Pyjama Nudibranch
2. Tangs (Yellow, Blue), Orange Clownfish, Foxface Rabbitfish, Copperband Butterflyfish, Moorish Idol, Blue-Green Chromis, Domino Damselfish, Clown Coris, Blue-Streak Cleaner-Wrasse, Royal Dottyback
3. Dwarf Lionfish, Black-Saddled Toby
4. Pineapple-Fish
5. Moray-Eels (Dragon, Snowflake)
6. Yellow-Lipped Sea-Krait
7. Peacock Mantis-Shrimp
8. Sea-Stars (Chocolate Chip, Blue), Schayer's Brittle-Star
9. Mandarinfish, Fire Goby, Longhorn Cowfish
10. Ribbon Eel
11. Wrasses (Blue-Streak Cleaner-, Humphead), Sharks (Whitetip Reef-, Zebra), Spotted Wobbegong, Hawksbill Sea-Turtle, Groupers (Coral, Queensland), Parrotfish (Bicolour, Green Humphead-), Triggerfish (Clown, Lagoon), Needlefish, Rays (Blue-Spotted Ribbontail-, Spotted Eagle-), Green Moray-Eel, Anglefish (Emperor, Regal, French), Threadfin Butterflyfish, Maroon Clownfish, Achilles Tang, Harlequin Tuskfish, Great Barracuda, Guineafowl Puffer

African Savanna
1. Plains Zebra, White Rhinoceros, Giraffe, Nyala, Common Ostrich, Helmeted Guineafowl
2. Pygmy Hippopotamus, Egyptian Goose, Cichlids (Electric Yellow-, Peacock), Catfish (Upside-Down, Cuckoo)
3. Hamadryas Baboon
4. Cheetah
5. Caracal
6. Fennec Fox
7. Meerkat, Cape Porcupine
8. Spotted Hyena
9. Black-and-White Ruffed-Lemur, Radiated Tortoise

South-East Asia
1. Malayan Tapir, Ruddy Shelduck, Giant Gourami, Clown Knife-Fish
2. Northern White-Cheeked Gibbon
3. Sumatran Tiger
4. Sun Bear
5. Asian Small-Clawed Otter
6. Binturong
7. Red Panda, Koi
8. Goodfellow's Tree-Kangaroo

Amazon Rainforest
1. Golden Lion-Tamarin, Pygmy Marmoset
2. Cotton-Top Tamarin, Red-Rumped Agouti
3. Emperor Tamarin
4. Geoffroy's Spider-Monkey
5. Maned Wolf
6. Patagonian Mara, Capybara
7. Andean Condor
8. Macaws (Military, Hycanith)

Herds
1. American Bison, American Elk
2. Przewalski's Horse, Dromedary Camel
3. Blackbuck, Chital Deer

Birds of the World
Exotic Walkthrough-Aviary
1. Ducks (Mandarin, American Wood-), Northern Mallard, New Zealand Scaup, Paradise Shelduck, Red Junglefowl, Pheasants (Golden, Lady Amherst's), Nicobar Pigeon, Ground-Doves (White-Breasted, Ruddy), Luzon Bleeding-Heart Dove, Salmon-Crested Cockatoo, Lories (Black-Capped, Red, Dusky), Macaws (Blue-and-Yellow, Scarlet, Red-Shouldered), Amazon-Parrots (Blue-Fronted, Red-Lored), Conures (Green-Cheeked, Sun), Black-Capped Caique, Pacific Parrotlet, Parakeets (Rose-Ringed, Blue-Winged, Plum-Headed), Red-Whiskered Bulbul, White-Rumped Shama, Red-Crested Cardinal, Red-Throated Parrot-Finch, Tricoloured Munia, Java Sparrow, Ring-Tailed Lemur
Temperate Forest
1. California Quail, Northern Bobwhite, Common Pheasant, Spotted Turtle-Dove, Common Blackbird, Nutmeg Mannikin, European Goldfinch
Africa
1. Chukar Partridge, Doves (Namaqua, Barbary), Parrots (African Grey-, Meyer's), Yellow-Collared Lovebird, Common Waxbill, Red Avadavat, Red-Cheeked Cordon-Bleu, Pin-Tailed Whydah, Southern Red-Bishop
Free-Range
1. Indian Peafowl, Wild Turkey, Mute Swan, Canada Goose

Reptile House
Swamps
1. Axolotl
2. Cane Toad
3. American Alligator, Red-Eared Slider
4. Alligator Snapping-Turtle
5. Golden Coin-Turtle, Philippine Sailfin-Dragon
6. Twist-Necked Turtle, Green Basilisk
7. Green Anaconda
8. African Clawed-Frog
Rainforests
1. Poison Dart-Frogs (Dyeing, Blue)
2. Indian Star-Tortoise, Fijian Crested-Iguana
3. Tokay Gecko
4. Madagascan Giant Day-Gecko
5. New Caledonian Giant-Gecko
6. Solomon Islands Skink
7. Boa Constrictor
8. Blood Python
9. Pythons (Burmese, Reticulated)
10. King Cobra
11. Eyelash Viper
12. Gaboon Viper
13. D'Albertis Python
14 Rainbow Boa
Temperate Forests
1. Tuatara
2. Eastern Box-Turtle, Corn Snake
3. European Glass-Lizard
4. Argentine Black-and-White Tegu
Deserts
1. Hermann's Tortoise, Veiled Chameleon
2. Gila Monster
3. Rhinoceros Iguana
4. Kenyan Sand-Boa
5. Ball Python
6. Pueblan Milk-Snake
7. Western Diamondback-Rattlesnake
8. Leopard Gecko
Outdoor Exhibits
1. Galapagos Giant-Tortoise
2. Green Iguana
3. Komodo Dragon
 
Once the zoo has been completed a few exhibts/areas may be added or changed. I'll write the precinct/area then the new addition. Either Sumatran Orangutan or Western Lowland-Gorilla will be kept not both. The proposed New Zealand precinct is a maybe as some species would be hard to aquire.
Additional Species
Kakadu
1. Asian Water-Buffalo
African Savanna
1. Barbary Sheep (mixed exhibit with Hamadryas Baboon)
2. African Lion
3. African Wild-Dog
South-East Asia
1. Asian Elephant
2. Sumatran Orangutan (instead of Western Lowland-Gorilla)
Amazon Rainforest
1. Black-Capped Squirrel-Monkey or Brown Capuchin

Bold = already @ zoo (these species will either be moved from their original exhibit or more will be added

Additional Precincts/Areas
New Zealand
1. New Zealand Scaup, Paradise Shelduck, Buff-Banded Rail, Grey Fantail, Sacred Kingfisher, Red-Crowned Parakeet, Silvereye, Yellowhammer, Common Chaffinch
2. Tuatara
3. North Island Brown-Kiwi
4. Northland Green-Gecko
African Forest (an area split off from African Savanna with some animals from there)
1. Bongo Antelope
2. Western Lowland-Gorilla (instead of Sumatran Orangutan)
3. Pygmy Hippopotamus, Egyptian Goose, Cichlids (Electric Yellow-, Peacock), Catfish (Upside-Down, Cuckoo)
4. Black-and-White Ruffed-Lemur, Radiated Tortoise
5. Black-and-White Colobus-Mnokey or Mandrill
 
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