Zoo New Hampshire (Fantasy Zoo)

Lycaon

Well-Known Member
This is a fictional species list for a zoo in New Hampshire. New Hampshire is a state that's really lacking in zoos (there is the Squam Lakes Science Center, but that isn't really that big of a facility), so I decided to make a species list for it.



Monkey Island

  • Japanese Macaque

Tropics World


Free-Flight Birds

  • Black Crake, Black-Throated Laughingthrush, Blue-Bellied Roller, Blue-Capped Cordon Bleu, Blue-Crowned Motmot, Blue-Grey Tanager, Crested Oropendola, Egyptian Fruit Bat, Gray-Capped Emerald Dove, Green Imperial Pigeon, Hadada Ibis, Hamerkop, Indian Flying Fox, Javan Pond Heron, Nicobar Pigeon, Pied Imperial-Pigeon, Red-Capped Cardinal, Red-Vented Bulbul, Saffron Finch, Silver-Beaked Tanager, Sunbittern, Venezuelan Troupial, Western Crowned Pigeon, White-Crested Laughingthrush, White-Headed Buffalo Weaver

Asia

  • Asian Small-Clawed Otter, Binturong

  • Komodo Dragon

  • Visayan Warty Pig

  • Clouded Leopard

  • Reticulated Python

  • Pygmy Slow Loris

  • Rhinoceros Hornbill

  • Francois’ Langur, Malayan Tapir

  • Asian Brown Tortoise, Burmese Star Tortoise

  • Northern White-Cheeked Gibbon, Sumatran Orangutan

  • Asian Arowana, Bala Shark, Fly River Turtle, Koi, Painted Terrapin, Red-Tailed Black Shark, Siamese Shark Catfish

  • Matschie’s Tree Kangaroo

  • Malayan Sun Bear

Africa

  • De Brazza’s Monkey, Red River Hog

  • Allen’s Swamp Monkey, Eastern Black & White Colobus Monkey, Pygmy Hippopotamus

  • African Slender-Snouted Crocodile

  • Madagascar Hissing Cockroach

  • Black & White Ruffed Lemur, Ring-Tailed Lemur

  • Radiated Tortoise

  • Black & Rufous Elephant Shrew, Violaceous Turaco

  • Greater Flamingo, Maccoa Duck, Sacred Ibis, White-Faced Whistling Duck

  • African Bullfrog, Home’s Hinge-Backed Tortoise

  • African Helmeted Turtle, Nile Softshell Turtle

Americas

  • Goeldi’s Monkey, Golden Lion Tamarin, Hoffman’s Two-Toed Sloth

  • Yucatan Spider Monkey

  • Amazon Milk Frog, Emerald Tree Boa

  • Brazillian Whiteknee Tarantula

  • Blue Poison Frog, Golden Poison Frog

  • Yellow Anaconda

  • Southern Tamandua

  • South American Bushmaster

  • Capybara, Red-Rumped Agouti

  • Toco Toucan

  • Arapaima, Red-Tail Catfish, Ripsaw Catfish, Tambaqui, Yellow-Spotted Amazon River Turtle

  • Green Iguana, Red-Footed Tortoise

  • Tiger Rat Snake

Quinn Family Aquarium

  • Atlantic Horseshoe Crab, Atlantic Stingray, Channeled Whelk, Clearnose Skate, Knobbed Whelk, Little Skate, Northern Moon Snail, Shark Eye

  • Bat Star, Giant Pacific Octopus, Purple Sea Star

  • Blueface Angelfish, Cinnamon Clownfish, Flame Angelfish, Harlequin Tuskfish, Longnose Butterflyfish, Powder Blue Tang, Purple Tang, Raccoon Butterflyfish, Threadfin Butterflyfish

  • Atlantic Blue Tang, Banded Butterflyfish, Blue & Gold Snapper, Brown Chromis, Bubble-Tip Anemone, Convict Tang, Cortez Angelfish, Eyestripe Surgeonfish, Foureye Butterflyfish, French Angelfish, Green Sea Turtle, King Angelfish, Longnose Butterflyfish, Ocellaris Clownfish, Porkfish, Powder Blue Tang, Queen Angelfish, Queen Triggerfish, Sergeant Major, Southern Stingray, Tomato Clownfish, White-Spotted Bamboo Shark, Yellowtail Snapper, Yellow Tang, Zebra Shark

  • Gentoo Penguin, King Penguin

  • Crevalle Jack, Nurse Shark, Largetooth Sawfish, Sandbar Shark, Sand Tiger Shark

  • Pacific Sea Nettle

  • Spotted Jellyfish

  • Upside-Down Jellyfish

  • Moon Jellyfish

  • Japanese Sea Nettle

  • Flower Hat Jellyfish

  • Lion’s Mane Jellyfish

  • Horn Shark, Leopard Shark, Swell Shark

  • Lined Seahorse, Northern Pipefish

  • Red Lionfish

  • Caribbean Spiny Lobster

  • Northern Sea Otter

  • Splendid Garden Eel

Northern Trail


Arctic Tundra

  • Polar Bear

  • Arctic Fox

  • Grey Seal, Harbor Seal

  • Caribou

Asian Highlands

  • Amur Tiger

  • Snow Leopard

  • Sichuan Takin

  • Bactrian Camel

  • Red Panda

Hampshire Trail

  • American Black Bear

  • Timber Wolf

  • North American River Otter

  • North American Beaver

  • Eurasian Wigeon, Northern Shoveler, Trumpeter Swan, Wood Duck

  • Canada Lynx

  • North American Porcupine

  • Cougar

  • Coyote

  • Bald Eagle

  • Snowy Owl

  • Great Horned Owl

  • American Elk

  • Moose

  • Sandhill Crane

The Desert

  • Slender-Tailed Meerkat

  • African Crested Porcupine

  • Naked Mole-Rat

  • Rock Hyrax

  • Caracal

  • Bat-Eared Fox

  • Moholi Bushbaby

  • Black-Footed Cat

Sandler Education Center


Incredible Invertebrates

  • Giant Leaf Insect

  • Blue Death Feigning Beetle

  • Mexican Red-Kneed Tarantula

  • Australian Walking Stick

  • American Cockroach

  • Emperor Scorpion

  • Caribbean Hermit Crab

  • Dead Leaf Mantis

New Hampshire Natives

  • Northern Leopard Frog

  • Timber Rattlesnake

  • American Toad

  • Eastern Hognose Snake

Hasbro Family Farm

  • Domestic Goat, Domestic Sheep

  • Domestic Chicken

  • Domestic Pig

  • Domestic Rabbit
And that is the species list right there. I may add some changes, but this the species list for now.
 
If you’re going to create a fantasy zoo you’re going to have to be more descriptive than just listing species. It’s one of the rules for this subforum:

individual designs for a fictional zoo where you have thought out how you might design exhibits, choose species to keep and encourage visitors - where other members may critique your design and make suggestions for improvement. The key word here is "design" - we expect some thought and detail, not simply listing species of animals.
 
If you’re going to create a fantasy zoo you’re going to have to be more descriptive than just listing species. It’s one of the rules for this subforum:
To add on to this, one way to do so would be to put it in a walkthrough-style description (which oils be split up into section), this way you could give descriptions of the exhibits and add the rights amounts of detail.
 
Here's a description of the first exhibit:

Monkey Island

The first exhibit that you see beyond the entrance is a small rocky island that opened with the zoo in 1976, which is home to a large group of Japanese Macaque. Usually, monkeys live in more tropical parts of the world, but not these guys. They are the northernmost primate besides humans and live in habitats that vary from subtropical forests in the southern populations to subarctic forests in the northern populations. Zoo New Hampshire is home to 12 macaques:10 females and 2 males. The zoo is also a prime breeding site for the species and has had over 50 macaque births since 2012.
 
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