As for Miami, they happen to be the only US zoo keeping and exhibiting pale spear-nosed bats. Strange how unique species seem to garner support only for more popular zoos...
They are kept in a unique enclosure that is the best I have seen for microbats. It is outdoors, and not artificially lit. Instead, it is split into two parts, each mesh-fronted and themed as a cave. The bats (three species: the spear-nosed bats, Seba's short-tailed fruit bats, and Jamaican fruit bats) can fly overhead visitors via a glass tube, allowing a clear view of them, which is hard to come by in zoos with traditional nocturnal houses.
Beyond that, the other exhibits for Miscellaneous Mammals in Amazon and Beyond are above average, with species such as red-rumped agouti, southern tamandua, and giant anteater. Elsewhere in the zoo there is a pair of Australian exhibtis (undergoing expansion) for Mastchie's tree kangaroo and koala. There is also a nice little aviary for Prevost's squirrel and golden pheasant, and an exhibit for African crested porcupine. The newest exhibit for an animal in this category is a great exhibit for raccoon in Florida: Mission Everglades. Overall, it has a smattering of nice exhibits throughout the zoo, some far better than others, but none bad.
They are kept in a unique enclosure that is the best I have seen for microbats. It is outdoors, and not artificially lit. Instead, it is split into two parts, each mesh-fronted and themed as a cave. The bats (three species: the spear-nosed bats, Seba's short-tailed fruit bats, and Jamaican fruit bats) can fly overhead visitors via a glass tube, allowing a clear view of them, which is hard to come by in zoos with traditional nocturnal houses.
Beyond that, the other exhibits for Miscellaneous Mammals in Amazon and Beyond are above average, with species such as red-rumped agouti, southern tamandua, and giant anteater. Elsewhere in the zoo there is a pair of Australian exhibtis (undergoing expansion) for Mastchie's tree kangaroo and koala. There is also a nice little aviary for Prevost's squirrel and golden pheasant, and an exhibit for African crested porcupine. The newest exhibit for an animal in this category is a great exhibit for raccoon in Florida: Mission Everglades. Overall, it has a smattering of nice exhibits throughout the zoo, some far better than others, but none bad.
Before this competition started, I considered doing some more research and becoming the American Dassie Rat, but with the lack of information available about some zoos (such as both that are competing tomorrow) it's not worth the effort.I think this is going to be a recurring problem in this competition. For Europe there is Zootierliste to provide insight. For the USA there is not anything even remotely similar. Europeans also travel widely for zoos so there are lots of forumers who will likely know both chosen zoos well in a European competition and can provide first-hand knowledge, whereas Americans (with exceptions) do not move around their country's zoos much. So a lot of the match-ups will probably come out as "Zoo A has great XYZ, but I don't know anything about Zoo B".