Yeah, I'm glad that we will be able to see them swim, I'm just surprised.
Yeah, at least we're getting a species of an actually aquatic chelonian. I just think they could release bigger packs; like, they could use a model to make many alike species, for example, they make a small turtle model, and with small changes, they could create a bunch of species; not only the terapin, but sliders, amazon river turtles, side necked turtles, etc... Same for the gray seal and the caiman. There could be at least three species for each one (arctic, baikal seal/broad-snouted, black caimans), and it wouldn't be that much work for them...Honestly while the terrapin might not be iconic at all, I'm just glad that we have a swimming turtle. On the plus side, it'll seemingly be a lot more active than say a matamata or snapper, which is nice because Frontier would probably just stick to the usual formula of "sits in one place and moves when you're not looking" with the other turtles instead of being more ambitious like it is right now.
Yeah, I'm glad that we will be able to see them swim, I'm just surprised.
Surprise has tended to be a common thing in the Planet Zoo roster. Quite a few animals have been surprising in their appearance and the roster in general is a bit odd. Dall Sheep for example, and having both giant tortoises and two brown bears in the same pack. Yellow Anaconda over Green as well.
Equally surprising is some exemptions thus far, the highly popular Meerkat comes to mind in particular.
I certainly agree, but then it would go the way of Zoo Tycoon 2013: Too many varieties of what is ultimately one "kind" of animal.
I personally think that they should release packs less often, but give a large amount of creatures per pack (like South America could have Capybara, Spider Monkey, Green Anaconda, Maned Wolf, Chinchilla, Ocelot, Three-toed Sloth, and Mara along with the other creatures for a greater price)
That way we get more content so it feels more worth it, and so we get more animals that aren't just reskins (like how Australia probably included the dingo so they could modify the wolf model)
Good point, I just wasn't sure if one animal/dollar is too cheap.
The snapping turtle is quite lazy and they're often kept in smaller exhibits because of that. I'm not sure why they wouldn't go with it.
Alligator Snapping Turtles actually do much better in smaller exhibits.Not promoting bad welfare I would guess
Why? That doesn't make much sense to me.Alligator Snapping Turtles actually do much better in smaller exhibits.
They get more stressed in bigger exhibits, even they tend to spand all of their time in a single corner. In smaller spaces they are more relaxed and are easier to feed.Why? That doesn't make much sense to me.
Interesting.They get more stressed in bigger exhibits, even they tend to spand all of their time in a single corner. In smaller spaces they are more relaxed and are easier to feed.
They get more stressed in bigger exhibits, even they tend to spand all of their time in a single corner. In smaller spaces they are more relaxed and are easier to feed.
That's what I thought, because this means that in the wild they would be constantly stressed.According to everythingreptiles, a common snapper needs at least a 120-gallon tank and an alligator snapper likely needs an entire pond or a very large tank. The entire "reptiles get stressed in too big of a tank" thing is a myth, although snapping turtles do need places to hide.
The entire "reptiles get stressed in too big of a tank" thing is a myth, although snapping turtles do need places to hide.