World Creature Watch
This area in the park is themed on conservation and exploration. There is no specific region or continent here, just different threatened or more species. A few animal exhibits come before the main attraction in this land.
The first exhibit is another fenced red clay/desert-like exhibit with few vegetation and some mock rock and outcroppings. In here, a small herd of 1.4.0 Arabian oryx.
Not much further ahead another fenced exhibit but grassier and with a bit more vegetation and a small pond houses 1.1.0 Key deer and 1.1.0 whooping crane.
A bit down the path comes a netted enclosure with a lot of vegetation, artifical trees, ropes, live trees, perches, and hollow logs for 0.4.0 ring-tailed lemurs, 1.1.0 blue-eyed black lemurs, and 1.1.0 red ruffed lemurs.
A walk through a couple of stops along the way, with each having large, eye-catching signs with pictures related to its topic. The first stop features three tall signs about three different types of misunderstood animals and their role in the ecosystem: Snakes, spiders, and bats. Each sign goes into detail about how these animals aren't as bad as made to be and what they contribute to their environment, and how we can help them. The next stop speaks on how we can help earth, with the first sign giving tips on keeping a nature-friendly garden/yard without the use of pesticides or killing wildlife. The next sign talks about invasive species and although an established problem, what we can do to not contribute to it, such as researching pets before getting them and keeping certain animals indoors/in a controlled setting. The last sign talks about recycling both our standard paper, plastic, etc but also coltan and recycling old electronics.
Soon comes a large building with a statue of a mother African elephant and her calf.
Animal Rescue and Conservation Center
The automatic doors part and first a large vivarium with a sandy and pinestraw substrate, a couple of burrows, flat rocks stacked to make a hide, a log hide, and some live plants for an eastern indigo snake and a gopher tortoise.
This building is inspired by the Conservation Station and Conservation Action Center at DAK and Zoo Miami. In the entry and hallway, a dim room with the walls being a mural of several different species. I will list the species featured by class, but that doesn't mean that's how they appear on the murals, but rather just makes it easier to follow along. On the murals the animals are randomly next to or above each other etc.
Mural Animals
Mammals-
Amur tiger
Lion
Jaguar
Caracal
Cougar
Snow leopard
Bobcat
Spotted hyena
Aardwolf
Dhole
African painted dog
Red wolf
Bat-eared fox
Fennec fox
Red fox
Coyote
Ethiopian wolf
Bush dog
Tanuki
Wolverine
Sea otter
Asian small-clawed otter
Stoat (white phase)
European badger
Eastern spotted skunk
Red panda
Raccoon
Kinkajou
Giant panda
Asiatic black bear
Kodiak bear
Polar bear
Hooded seal
Leopard seal
Walrus
Steller's sea lion
Orca
Hourglass dolphin
Vaquita
Amazon river dolphin
Blue whale
Sperm whale
American bison
Gaur
Giant sable antelope
Golden takin
Muskox
Ugandan kob
Impala
Nilgai
Yak
Ellipsen waterbuck
Giant eland
Greater kudu
Moose
Elk
Giraffe
Zebra
Kiang
Przewalski's horse
Asian elephant
African forest elephant
Sumatran rhinceros
Eastern black rhinceros
Hippopotamus
Giant forest hog
Malayan culugo
Spectacled flying fox
Vampire bat
Big-eared bat
American beaver
Brazilian porcupine
Northern Luzon cloud rat
Pink fairy armadillo
Three-toed sloth
Lowland streaked tenrec
Duck-billed platypus
Water opossum
Greater glider
Red kangaroo
Quokka
Koala
Orangutan
Chimpanzee
Mountain gorilla
Colombian red howler monkey
White-faced saki
Bald uakari
Drill
Gelada
Proboscis monkey
Indri
Tarsier
Birds
Dalmatian pelican
Brown pelican
Shoebill
Buller's albatross
Laughing gull
Sandhill crane
Demonsielle crane
Gray-crowned crane
White stork
Jabiru
Wood stork
Green heron
Great blue heron
American robin
Blue jay
Scarlet macaw
Galah
Palm cockatoo
Kakapo
Channel-billed toucan
Laughing kookaburra
Guam kingfisher
Bald eagle
Martial eagle
Philippine eagle
Red-tailed hawk
Cooper's hawk
Osprey
Great horned owl
Elf owl
Southern white-faced owl
Ostrich
Emu
Double-wattled cassowary
Wild turkey
Reptiles
Aldabra giant tortoise
Leatherback sea turtle
Hawksbill sea turtle
Spiny softshell turtle
Alligator snapping turtle
Wood turtle
Eastern box turtle
Mata mata
Grand Cayman blue iguana
Flap-necked chameleon
Carpet chameleon
Frog-eyed gecko
Giant leaf-tailed gecko
Lace monitor
Perentie
Bengal monitor
Emerald tree skink
Burmese python
Green anaconda
Rubber boa
Eyelash viper
Mangrove snake
Saharan horned viper
King cobra
Eastern green mamba
Western diamondback rattlesnake
Scarlet kingsnake
Rhinceros viper
Bushmaster
Gharial
Black caiman
American alligator
Mugger crocodile
Amphibians
Northern green frog
Smoky jungle frog
Squirrel tree frog
Purple frog
Kaiser's newt
Rough-skinned newt
Olm
Chinese giant salamander
Mudpuppy
Marbled salamander
São Tomé caecilian
Fish
Emperor angelfish
Queen angelfish
French angelfish
Blue chromis
Garabaldi
Cocoa damselfish
Red Sea clownfish
Moorish idol
Bannerfish
Porcupinefish
Deep-sea anglerfish
Bowmouth guitarfish
Manta ray
Spotted eagle ray
Shortfin mako shark
Tiger shark
Great white shark
Great hammerhead shark
Whale shark
Blue shark
Oceanic whitetip shark
Common thresher
Dogtooth tuna
Dolphinfish
Swordfish
Ocean sunfish
Goliath grouper
Redtail catfish
Tiger shovelnose catfish
Blue catfish
Spotted gar
Smallmouth bass
Arctic char
Invertebrates
Warrior wasp
Eastern yellow jacket
Red paper wasp
Arctic bumblebee
European honeybee
Longhorn bee
Bulldog ant
Army ant
Leafcutter ant
Eastern eyed click beetle
Hercules beetle
Monarch butterfly
Blue morpho butterfly
Eastern tiger swallowtail butterfly
Atlas moth
Luna moth
Yellow garden spider
Regal jumping spider
Marbled orb-weaver
Yellow crab spider
Moon jelly
Box jelly
Box crab
Beadlet anemone
Yellow tube sponge
Coconut crab
Peacock mantis shrimp
Spiny lobster
Humboldt squid
Common octopus
This mural extends down the hall and slowly fades as we enter the biggest area. In this grand room, with the light shining through the glass on the ceiling and lighting it up, are several animal exhibits and other exhibits. A viewing window into the vet area where fortunate guests may catch a procedure, a viewn into a part of the animal kitchen where food is prepared for the park residents, a look into the lab where the park's animals things like horomones, samples, etc are studied. There's an area on the other side of the large room where there's a "mini muesum" with displays of artificats. In the first glass case, actual confiscated snares shaped into different species like African painted dogs, elephants, leopards, and more. Another display with various animal/zoology books, and even an actual tag once used on a sea creature in a display case, next to an image of a sea turtle with a tracker on its shell. On the other side of the tracker's case, a live tracker of the most current sea animal tagged and released by the park's zoologists/biologists.
There's also keeper talks in this room with ambassador animals, and live animal exhibits.
Smaller Worlds
This section features three sets of various enclosures for separate classes: invertebrates, reptiles, and amphibians. Each enclosure, of course, varies in size and appearance based on the species housed in them.
Invertebrates
(In order)
Diabolical ironclad beetle
Japanese beetle
Horrid king assasin bug
Manabi giant birdeater
Goliath beetle
Dune scorpion
Rusty millipede
Egyptian olive tarantula
Spiny flower mantis
Giant Australian walking stick
A large display window comes before the next set of invertebrates. In it, an insect case with these pinned specimens: Asian giant hornet, executioner wasp, tarantula hawk wasp, bald-faced hornet, eastern yellow jacket, and a cicada killer. Next to the case is a jar with a preserved cricket or other insect specimen with horsehair worms. Next, a molt of a cobalt blue tarantula. Finally, another case with pinned ants: Bullet ant, Colobopsis explodens, and a red hazelnut carpenter ant queen.
Live animals continued-
Six-spotted tiger beetle
Question mark cockroach
Green lynx spider
Black beauty stick insect
American burying beetle
Malaysian cherry bomb centipede
Obscure birdwing grasshopper
Goldsmith beetle
Vampire crab
A short walk to the next section.
Amphibians
(In order)
Colorado river toad
Mixed enclosure- Panamanian golden frog, Limosa harlequin frog, and lemur leaf frog
Lake Zacapu salamander
Houston toad
Cope's gray treefrog
Emperor newt
Malayan leaf frog
Another display window. In here, a sign that teaches about the threat of chytrid fungus and what's being done to resolve it, and next to it, a picture of a frog's life cycle and salamander life cycle.
Live animals continued-
Alpine newt
Borneo eared frog
Mixed enclosure- Golden mantella and green mantella
Spring salamander
Dusky gopher frog
Another short walk to the last section.
Reptiles
(In order)
Giant ameiva
Bog turtle
Jamaican iguana
Ford's boa
Louisiana pine snake
Aruba Island rattlesnake
Guatemalan beaded lizard
Eastern foxsnake
Smallwood's anole
This display window features the skulls of an alligator snapping turtle and tomistoma, a skin of a Burmese python, and the shed skin of a timber rattlesnake. It also features the carapace and plastron of a northern map turtle and the skeleton of a Parson's chameleon clinging to a small tree.
Live animals continued-
Arakan forest turtle
Giant leaf-tailed gecko
Bismarck ringed python
Cape file snake
Tuatara
Texas banded gecko
Impressed tortoise
Near the exit and the animal kitchen window are three large enclosures viewed through glass. The first is a darker exhibit with loose soil substrated, log hides, a shallow pool, and branches for a rotating male and female short-beaked echidna.
Next to the echidna is a brighter, more foliated exhibit with artifical trees, perches, and rope for 1.3.0 pygmy marmosets.
The last enclosure is similar to the marmosets', with branches, perches, trees, and shelters for a rotating breeding pair of Matschie's tree kangaroos.
On the other side of the building are smaller exhibits to be found. The first is are a couple open spider exhibits across each other, similar to what London Zoo does for their spiders. On the right side, the bundle of plants makes a home for an awaiting ogre-faced spider. Across it in an identical habitat, 0.1.0 yellow garden spider.
Near the spiders is an area with fake trees that create a "forest" in this section. One of the trees has a small enclosure in its trunk. Sandy substrate and some succlents make this exhibit for 0.1.0 red velvet ant.
Nearby, a larger vieiwng window for a darker exhibit with branches, foliage, and naturalisitc shelters for 1.0.0 pygmy slow loris, with the female living behind the scenes.
The last tree enclosure is a small leafy enclosure with many sticks and branches for a giant hooded katydid.
Upon exiting, on the outside of the building is another large window in a foliated exhibit with logs, trenches, a den, trees, and rocky outcroppings for 0.1.0 clouded leopard.
Connection Corner
Near the building is what may not be a Zoochat favorite but a popular for many: a petting zoo. The main yard is for the goats, sheep, and pigs (if they want to be out as they always have access to areas guests can't go), and fenced off areas for larger animals.
0.3.0 Toggenburg goat
0.4.0 Nubian goat
2.0.0 Nigerian dwarf goat
0.3.0 Southdown sheep
0.2.0 Black Welsh mountain sheep
2.0.0 Göttingen minipig
Fenced off area 1
0.2.0 Shetland pony
1.0.0 Llama
Fenced-off area 2
0.2.0 Miniature donkey
Fenced-off area 3
0.2.0 Holstein cows
Fenced-off area 4, with a divider in between separating the birds.
1.3.0 Plymouth rock chickens
1.3.0 Cayuga ducks
Outside of the petting zoo and down the trail are the last two exhibits in one area. A log cabin comes within view and attached to it, a fenced-off enclosure, sprawling and grassy with some trees, a pond, rocky outcroppings, logs, and fallen trees. This exhibit can also be viewed at another angle from inside the cabin behind a window. Above the viewing window, small T.V.s play a short documentary on the role of wolves in an ecosystem. In here, 1.3.0 Mexican wolves.
In another section of the cabin is another window into a similar exhibit but with a larger pool and a rushing waterfall into it. The T.V.s above this exhibit play bear and wildlife safety tips, and a sign shows the different species of bears in the world. There's also an outside view of this exhibit over a moat. In here, 0.2.0 grizzly bears.
That concludes the area and the major park areas.