I suppose that would be my journey to Suriname.
- Catching a wild Green anaconda
- Many tree frogs and small lizards not found in captivity, including Manaus spiny-backed frog, Red-snouted treefrog and a very rare subspecies of the Three-striped poison frog
- Leatherback sea turtle
- Guyana dolphin
- Various other animals common in captivity but still very cool to see in the wild (Cuvier's dwarf caiman, White-faced saki, Green iguana, Golden tegu, Cane toad, Turkey / American black vultures, Common squirrel monkey, Brown capuchin, Agoutis, etc)
- Various animals rare in captivity that were very cool to see in the wild (Giant ameiva, Blue-grey tanager, Great kiskadee, Rainbow whiptail, Guianan red howler, Great tinamou, Three-toed sloth, some form of Hummingbird which I couldn't recognise)
- Various fish and invertebrates that were mostly difficult to recognise, but the ones I could recognise include (Brazilian fiddler crab, Amazonian giant centipede, Banded leporinus, Krioba cichlid, Guppies, Four-eyed fish, Yellow-kneed skeleton tarantula, Megasoma beetle, Giant colonies of Leafcutter ants and Tree-dwelling termites)
Other than that there was also a zoo which wasn't much to write home about. Better than some Tropical zoos I've seen in the gallery, and clearly doing their best with very limited funds, but still not all that great. They did have Red brocket deer which are quite rare, as well as a few rarer fish but without signage I couldn't tell you which ones...
I also went to Zooparc Overloon but the two main rarities (Bloody Bay poison frog and Crab-eating raccoon) were both very well-hidden