Essential small exhibit animals

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Link to random goat's thread: https://forums.frontier.co.uk/threads/30-essential-animals-meta-wishlist.561215/)

In a similar fashion to what player "random goat" did, here is a forum about what small exhibit animals you want in PZ. As with the other forum, only 30 per list.

And without further ado (with help from Random_goat and the keen eye of ReptoMin), the list:

Chameleon (Panther [16]); (Jackson's [10]); (Veiled [4]); (Four Horned [1]); (Namaqua [1]); (Parson's [4]); (No preference [1])
37​
Bearded Dragon (No preference [12]); (Central [4]); (Inland [1])
17​
Tuatara
16​
Frilled Lizard/Frill-Necked Lizard
14​
Thorny Devil/Moloch
14​
Basilisk (Plumed [6]); (No preference [5]); (Common [1]); (Green [1])
13​
Tokay Gecko
11​
Caiman Lizard (Northern [5]); (No preference [3])
8​
Day Gecko (Madagascar [3]); (Madagascar Giant [1]); (Gold Dust [1]); (No preference [1]); (Giant [2])
8​
Leopard Gecko
7​
Horned Lizard (Texas [2]); (Giant [1]); (Mountain [1]); (No preference [2])
6​
Agama (No preference [2]); (Rainbow [1]); (Red Headed [1]); (Spiderman [2])
6​
Alligator Lizard (Arboreal [1]); (Mexican [1]); (Northern [1]); (No preference [1])
4​
Water Dragon (Chinese [1]); (Asian [1]); (Philippine [1]); (Bearded [1])
4​
Chuckwalla
3​
Marine Iguana
3​
Philippine Sailfin Lizard
3​
Barking Gecko
2​
Chinese Crocodile Lizard
2​
Collared Lizard (Common [1]); (No preference [1])
2​
European Green Lizard
2​
Fijian Crested Iguana
2​
Five-Lined Skink
2​
New Caledonian Gecko
2​
Rhinoceros Iguana
2​
Spiny-Tailed Lizard (Ornate [1]); (No preference [1])
2​
Emerald Tree Skink
2​
Blue Anole
1​
Boyd's Forest Dragon
1​
Brazillian Pygmy Gecko
1​
Common Flying Dragon
1​
Common Leopard Gecko
1​
Desert Iguana
1​
Earless Monitor Lizard
1​
European Glass Lizard/Sheltopusik
1​
European Legless Lizard
1​
Fiji Iguana/Lau Banded Iguana
1​
Galapagos Pink Land Iguana
1​
Green Gecko
1​
Ibiza Wall Lizard/Pityuse Lizard
1​
Madagascar Leaf Gecko
1​
Madagascar Leaf Nosed Gecko
1​
Mexican Beaded Lizard
1​
Mexican Blind Lizard
1​
Northern Blue Tongue Skink
1​
Northland Green Gecko
1​
Ocellated Lizard/Jewelled Lizard
1​
Psychedelic Rock Gecko
1​
Rock Gecko
1​
Sand Lizard
1​
Sandfish Lizard
1​
South African Sungazer/Giant Gurdled Lizard
1​
Emerald Tree Monitor
1​
Timor Monitor
1​
Uromastyx
1​
Legless Lizard
1​
Shingleback Lizard
1​
Cobra (King [18]); (Indian/Spectacled [7]); (Egyptian [1]); (Monocled [1]); (Red Spitting [1]); (False Water [1]); (No Preference [1])
30​
Emerald Tree Boa
18​
Reticulated Python
15​
Black Mamba
15​
Gaboon Viper
12​
Green Anaconda
11​
Coral Snake (No Preference [6]); (Arizona [1]); (Faux [1])
8​
Kingsnake (Common/Eastern [4]); (Californian [2]); (Scarlet [2])
8​
Eyelash Viper
6​
Green Tree Python
5​
Burmese Python
5​
Water Mocassin/Cottonmouth
5​
Bushmaster (No Preference [3]); (South American [1])
4​
Rock Python (African [3]); (No preference [1])
4​
Inland Taipan
4​
Bush Viper (No Preference [1]); (African [1]); (Hairy [1])
3​
Copperhead
3​
Sea Snake/Sea Cobra (No Preference [2]); (Yellow-Bellied [1])
3​
Sidewinder
3​
Green Mamba
3​
Brazilian Rainbow Boa
2​
Cerastes Snake/Horned Vipers (No Preference [1]); (European [1])
2​
Fer-De-Lance
2​
Indian Python
2​
Milk Snake (No Preference [1]); (Sinaloan [1])
2​
Black-Headed Python
2​
Carpet Python
2​
Red Bellied Black Snake
2​
Amazonian Boa
1​
Aruba Island Rattlesnake
1​
Asp Viper
1​
Banded Krait
1​
Calabar's Python
1​
California Mountain Snake
1​
Emerald Green Pit Viper
1​
European Common Adder
1​
Green Tree Boa
1​
Hognose Snake
1​
Leopard Snake
1​
Pink Boa
1​
Rainbow Boa
1​
Royal Python
1​
Rubber Boa
1​
San Francisco Garter Snake
1​
Southwestern Speckled Rattlesnake
1​
Taiwanese Beauty Snake/Beauty Rat Snake
1​
Twig Snake
1​
Vine Snake
1​
Yarara Snake
1​
Yellow-Lipped Sea Krait
1​
Ball Python
1​
Tiger Snake
1​
Corn Snake
1​
Axolotl
19​
Giant Salamanader (Chinese [11]); (No Preference [1]); (Pacific [1]); (Japanese [2])
15​
Poison Dart Frog (Blue [6]); (Dyeing [2]); (Strawberry [3]); (No Preference [2])
13​
Fire Salamander
13​
Hellbender Salamander
8​
South American Horned Frog/Pacman Frog (Argentine/Ornate [4]); (No Preference [4])
8​
American Bullfrog
6​
Cane Toad
5​
Tiger Salamander (No preference [3]); (Eastern [2])
5​
Olm
3​
Alpine Newt
2​
Black Rain Frog
2​
Caecillian (No Preference [2])
2​
Corroboree Frog (No Preference [1]); (Southern [1])
2​
Malaysian Leaf Frog/Malayan Horned Frog
2​
Natterjack Toad
2​
Surinam Toad
2​
Wood Frog (Alaskan [1]); (No preference [1])
2​
Amazon Milk Frog
2​
White's Tree Frog
2​
Australian Green Tree Frog
2​
African Bullfrog
1​
Ambystona Salamander
1​
Asiatic Toad
1​
Colorado River Toad
1​
Common Frog
1​
Common Toad
1​
Coqui
1​
Darwin's Frog
1​
Emperor Newt
1​
Fire-Bellied Toad
1​
Giant Burrowing Frog
1​
Japanese Fire-Bellied Newt
1​
Kaiser's Newt
1​
Kihansi Spray Toad
1​
Mission Golden Eyed Frog
1​
Mountain Chicken
1​
Northern Leopard Frog
1​
Pacific Tree Frog
1​
Rough Skinned Newt
1​
Wolverine Frog
1​
Pixie Frog
1​
Desert Rain Frog
1​
Mantis (Praying [7]); (Giant Asian [4]); (Orchid [2]); (Chinese [1]); (Common Green [1]); (Eurasian [1]); No Preference [1])
17​
Hercules Beetle
14​
Millipede (Giant African [11]); (No Preference [1])
12​
Stick Insect (Giant Asian [2]); (Lord Howe [4]); (Giant prickly [3]); (Australian [1]); (Giant [1]); (Phasmatidae [1])
12​
Madagascar Hissing Cockroach
9​
Camel Spider
7​
Coconut Crab
7​
Giant Weta
6​
Leafcutter Ant
6​
Gooty Sapphire Ornamental Tarantula
4​
Monarch Butterfly
4​
Emperor Scorpion
3​
Goliath Stick Insect
3​
Funnel Web Spider (Sydney [2]); (Any [1])
3​
Atlas Moth
2​
Black Widow Spider
2​
Deserta Grande Wolf Spider
2​
Giant Water Bug
2​
Morpho Butterfly
2​
Vinegaroon (Giant [2])
2​
Golden Orb Weaver
2​
African Whip Spider
1​
Alaskan King Crab
1​
Aquatic Spider
1​
Arctic Wolf Spider
1​
Assassin Bug
1​
Atlantic Horseshoe Crab
1​
Atlas Beetle
1​
Australian Black Widow Spider/Redback Spider
1​
Bogong Moth
1​
Bombadier Beetle
1​
Bullet Ant
1​
Chesapeake Blue Crab
1​
Cobalt Blue Tarantula
1​
Comet Moth
1​
Cone Snail
1​
Dragonfly
1​
Eastern Lubber Grasshopper
1​
Elephant Beetle
1​
Emerald Wasp
1​
European Honeybee
1​
Giant Riverine Tiger Beetle
1​
Giant Stag Beetle
1​
Grasshopper
1​
Himalayan Jumping Spider
1​
Honeybee
1​
Horseshoe Crab
1​
Locust
1​
Luna Moth
1​
Mexican Redknee Tarantula
1​
Mydas Fly
1​
Ogre Spider
1​
Rhinoceros Beetle
1​
Stag Beetle
1​
Termite
1​
Trapdoor Spider
1​
Alligator Snapping Turtle
14​
Mata-Mata Turtle
13​
Box Turtle (No Preference [4]); (Eastern [5]); (Florida [1])
10​
Radiated Tortoise
7​
Softshell Turtle (African [1]); (Chinese [1]); (Florida [1]); Giant [1]); (No Preference [2])
6​
Eastern Long-Necked/Snake-Necked Turtle
6​
Red-Footed Tortoise
5​
Common Snapping Turtle
5​
Pancake Tortoise
5​
Pig-Nosed/Fly River Turtle
5​
Desert Tortoise
4​
Gopher Tortoise
3​
Leopard Tortoise
3​
Red-Eared Slider/Terrapin
3​
Indian Star Tortoise
2​
Mary River Turtle
2​
Painted Turtle
2​
Roti Island Snake Necked Turtle
2​
European Pond Turtle
2​
Egyptian Tortoise
1​
Greek Tortoise
1​
Hermann's Tortoise
1​
Loggerhead Musk Turtle
1​
Spider Tortoise
1​
Star Tortoise
1​
Yellow-Footed Tortoise
1​
Russian Tortoise
1​
Naked Mole Rat
10​
Elephant Shrew (Black and Rufous [1]); (No Preference [2])
3​
Mudskipper (No Preference [2]); (African [1])
3​
Chinchilla
3​
Dwarf Mongoose
3​
Golden Lion Tamarin
3​
Pygmy Marmoset
3​
Black-Footed Ferret
2​
Tree Shrew (Northern [1]); (No Preference [1])
2​
Piranha
2​
Sloth
2​
Tenrec
2​
Echidna
2​
Black Tailed Prairie Dogs
1​
Blue-Green Chromis
1​
Cloud Rat
1​
Clown Triggerfish
1​
Clownfish
1​
Common Octopus
1​
Cuban Solenodon
1​
Degu
1​
Desert Kangaroo Rat
1​
Desert Kit Fox
1​
Egyptian Fruit Bat
1​
Emperor Tamarin
1​
Goeldi's Monkey
1​
Golden Mole
1​
Hairy Armadillo
1​
Jellyfish
1​
Jerboa
1​
Kangaroo Rat
1​
Kiwi
1​
Lionfish
1​
Moholi Bushbaby
1​
Moon Jellyfish
1​
Nine-Banded Armadillo
1​
Peacock Fugu Pufferfish
1​
Powder Blue Tang
1​
Prevost's Squirrel
1​
Sand Dune Cat
1​
Seahorse
1​
Short Eared Sengi
1​
Slow Loris
1​
Solenodon (any)
1​
Southern Three-Banded Armadillo
1​
Southern Grasshopper Mouse
1​
Alston's Singing Mice
1​
Red Tree Vole
1​
Mouse Lemur
1​
Devil's Hole Pupfish
1​
Least Weasel
1​
Kakapo
1​
European Hamster
1​

*not actually lizards, but a separate classification
 
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(This has been updated with the actual species names that I forgot when I 1st made my list) I'll go first:

Snakes

1. Copperhead
2. Water Mocassin/Cottonouth
3. Coral Snake
4. Black Mamba
5. Green Mamba
6. Red Spitting Cobra
7. King Cobra
8. Yarara Snake
9. Green Tree Python
10. Twig Snake
11. Yellow-Lipped Sea Krait
12. Yellow-Bellied Sea Snake
13. Hognose Snake
14. Eyelash Viper

Lizards and Geckos

1. Frilled Lizard
2. Panther Chameleon
3. Marine Iguana
4. Five-Lined Skink
5. Tokay Gecko

Turtles and Tortoises

1. Alligator Snapping Turtle
2. Box Turtle

Amphibians

1. American Bullfrog
2. Axolotl
3. Snot Otter/Hellbender (salamander, I believe)
4. Fire Salamander
5. Strawberry Poison Dart Frog

Arthropods

1. Praying Mantis
2. Mexican Red Tarantula
3. Emperor Scorpion
4. Camel Spider
 
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Good idea, although 30 exhibit animals might be too many since they only add 1 per pack. I'm going to think about my list and I'll share it later.
 
Good idea, although 30 exhibit animals might be too many since they only add 1 per pack. I'm going to think about my list and I'll share it later.
True. But, remember that there are thousands of thousands (at least) of small animals. Too bad Frontier doesn't add more than 1 small exhibit species per pack. Makes you wonder, though, what the next pack will have. Can't wait to see your choices
 
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Keeping it somewhat true with the current features of PZ. Birds can be easily a 30 list on it's own and imo not an "exhibit" animal as PZ is.
Don't know if any of the species are not found in zoos, it was difficult to come up with a list.

1. San Francisco Garter Snake
2. Spectacled cobra (Indian Cobra)
3. Green Tree Python
4. Mountain Chicken
5. Axolotl
6. Emperor Scorpion
7. Orange Baboon Tarantula
8. Gooty Sapphire Ornamental
9. Yellow-Headed Box Turtle
10. Panther Chameleon
11. Thorny Devil
12. Praying Mantis
13. Emerald Green Pit Viper
14. Brazilian Rainbow Boa
15. New Caledonian gecko
16. Hercules Beetle
17. Tokay Gecko
18. Giant wētā
19. Oriental fire-bellied toad
20. Loggerhead musk turtle
21. Tiger Salamander
22. Frilled Lizard
23. Thailand Black Tarantula
24. Sydney funnel-web spider
25. Chinese Water Dragon
26. Camel Spider
27. Giant prickly stick insect
28. Deserta Grande wolf spider
29. African bush viper
30. Parson's chameleon
 
Now does any exhibit animal count like a reticulated python or is this strictly smaller animals for the exhibits.
 
I had to do a little research. Being honest, for many species I don't mind which subspecies we have (for example, I want any chameleon).

  1. Panther chameleon
  2. Gecko leopard
  3. Blue poison dart frog
  4. King cobra
  5. Reticulated Python
  6. Green anaconda
  7. Philippine sailfin lizard
  8. Frill-necked lizard
  9. Axolotl
  10. Common toad
  11. Fire salamander
  12. Chinese giant salamander
  13. Emerald tree boa
  14. Mexican beaded lizard
  15. Madagascar hissing cockroach
  16. Emperor scorpion
  17. Cobalt blue tarantula
  18. Thorny devil
  19. European green lizard
  20. Hermann's tortoise
  21. American bullfrog
  22. Giant African millipede
  23. Praying mantis
  24. Black mamba
  25. Lord Howe Island stick insect
  26. Tuatara
  27. Hercules beetle
  28. Alligator snapping turtle
  29. African rock python
  30. Camel spider
 
I like this thread, exhibit animals are usually very underrated in this forum and other platforms. In all fairness this is not due to the beautiful animals displayed, but the lack of variety in designs afforded by Frontier. This is one area of the game where their genius creativity was not implemented. Would love to make a list, however is it limited to the current lineup of reptiles/amphibians/insects? or can I include other species that I think would make for wonderful exhibit animals. Also, as far as the exhibits, how creative can I get, do I keep it limited to the same boring boxes we have now or can add next to each species an alternative design choice for their mini enclosures?


I have already a list of exhibit animals that I would like to see in the game. I had created it in case the at a later time mods could create additional exhibits and animals, independent than those found in the game. I would have to sort it out, since it is 543 species currently, it will be difficult to cut it down to 30 but I will try.
 
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I like this thread, exhibit animals are usually very underrated in this forum and other platforms. In all fairness this is not due to the beautiful animals displayed, but the lack of variety in designs afforded by Frontier. This is one area of the game where their genius creativity was not implemented. Would love to make a list, however is it limited to the current lineup of reptiles/amphibians/insects? or can I include other species that I think would make for wonderful exhibit animals. Also, as far as the exhibits, how creative can I get, do I keep it limited to the same boring boxes we have now or can add next to each species an alternative design choice for their mini enclosures?


I have already a list of exhibit animals that I would like to see in the game. I had created it in case the at a later time mods could create additional exhibits and animals, independent than those found in the game. I would have to sort it out, since it is 543 species currently, it will be difficult to cut it down to 30 but I will try.
Sure. Go ahead. Any small exhibit animal

Now does any exhibit animal count like a reticulated python or is this strictly smaller animals for the exhibits.
No. I considered green anaconda, once. But it can't be anything inordinate, like a crocodilian or something. It'd have to be an animal you can keep in an enclosure like the ones PZ has
 
I have decided to sort mine by habitat. The first three categories are the three we have in-game - the arid, tropical and coastal displays. The next one is a temperate woodland-type display (think lots of ferns, mossy logs, maybe some interchangeable small flowers) with the final one being a naturalistic observation beehive (made to look like a hollow tree, like in the picture here from Vienna Zoo: https://www.zoolex.org/gallery/image/1504/7)

This list is not arranged by preference, simply by habitat first and then alphabetical order:
  1. Colorado River toad (Arid)
  2. Desertas wolf spider (Arid)
  3. Eastern lubber grasshopper (Arid)
  4. Giant riverine tiger beetle (Arid)
  5. Ocellated lizard (Arid)
  6. Pancake tortoise (Arid)
  7. Sinaloan milk snake (Arid)
  8. Short eared sengi (Arid)
  9. Coconut crab (Tropical)
  10. Emerald tree boa (Tropical)
  11. Emperor newt (Tropical)
  12. Kihansi spray toad (Tropical)
  13. King cobra (Tropical)
  14. Mission golden eyed tree frog (Tropical)
  15. Psychedelic rock gecko (Tropical)
  16. Veiled chameleon (Tropical)
  17. African mudskipper (Coastal)
  18. Atlantic horseshoe crab (Coastal)
  19. Peacock fugu pufferfish (Coastal)
  20. Arboreal alligator lizard (New! Temperate)
  21. Copperhead (New! Temperate)
  22. Darwin’s frog (New! Temperate)
  23. Eastern box turtle (New! Temperate)
  24. Eurasian giant mantis (New! Temperate)
  25. European common adder (New! Temperate)
  26. Fire salamander (New! Temperate)
  27. Olimpia’s ground beetle (New! Temperate)
  28. Poor Knights giant weta (New! Temperate)
  29. Southern corroboree frog (New! Temperate)
  30. European honeybee (New! Bee Colony)
 
Well here’s my list of 30. Some I feel essential others I’d just like to see.
1) Emerald tree boa
2) Green Anaconda
1315DC1D-B059-42C6-A239-C4B00293A54A.jpeg

3) Frilled lizard
4) Praying Mantis
5) Thorny Devil
6) Bushmaster
C38A8FED-5D3E-4915-AD91-280A27927B14.jpeg

7) Common snapping turtle
8) African Bullfrog
4F15A287-9B20-4695-9320-D7201E239A69.jpeg

9) Sidewinder
10) African Rock Python
11) Giant Weta
12) Madagascar Hissing Cockroach
13) Vine snake
14) Cane toad
15) Hercules Beetle
EA98676D-FF1E-459D-B46F-0EF205CA765F.jpeg

16) Leaf cutter ant
17) Box turtle
18) Black Mamba
19) American Bullfrog
E8BD6903-BEF3-4A04-A7B3-7C916223244A.jpeg

20) Panther Chameleon
21) Reticulated Python
EEDB203F-7EF0-4EAA-81B7-3865EE3A2371.jpeg

22) King Cobra
23) Mata-Mata
24) Camel Spider
25) Gaboon Viper
26) Tokay Gecko
27) Bearded Dragon
DAAD7B9A-2BD4-4368-98AB-4268545E342F.jpeg

28) Eyelash Viper
29) Poison Dart Frog
30) Sloth(I know it’s a mammal but this seems like it would fit them best)
I didn’t choose the alligator snapper because I feel this could be a habitat animal with vey few animations since they are generally pretty lazy.
 
I'm also including a very few mammals and birds that are quite small and would obviously not work in habitats at all. I struggled to get to 30 so I questioned google on some interesting insects and reptiles, but I think I would have had no problem getting to 15 on my own.

1. King Cobra
2. Frilled Lizard
3. Alligator Snapping Turtle
4. Leopard Tortoise
5.Kiwi (I do think they will come this way if at all)
6. Black Mamba
7. Naked Mole Rat
8. Indian Cobra
9. Black Widow Spider ( I thoroughly dislike spiders but they are so well known)
10. Painted Turtle
11. Copperhead
12. Poison Dart Frog
13. Thorny Devil
14. Praying Mantis
15. Hercules Beetle
16. Coconut Crab
17. Bearded Dragon
18. Red King Crab
19. Chesapeake Blue Crab
20. Coral Snake
21. Fer-De-Lance
22. Leafcutter Ant
23. Monarch Butterfly
24. Swallowtail Butterfly
25. Chinchilla
26. Horned Toad
27. Rhinoceros Beetle
28. (Alaskan) King Crab
29. Axolotl
30. Mydas Fly (also known as Gauromydas heros, I am not sure it actually has a common name. Fun fact, it's the world's largest known fly)

Will also agree with potential with Sloth as an exhibit animal, but I didn't put it in here officially because if anything it would probably be a habitat animal. But, given how slowly they move, I'd be fine with it being in an exhibit.
 
1. Green Anaconda (Reptile - South America) the heaviest snake species
2. Reticulated Python (Reptile - Asia) the longest recorded snake species
3. Inland Taipan (Reptile - Oceania) Australia's most venomous snake
4. Black Mamba (Reptile - Africa) fastest venomous snake
5. King Cobra (Reptile - Asia) longest venomous snake
6. Emerald Tree Boa (Reptile - South America)
7. Gaboon Viper (Reptile - Africa)
8. Speckled Tortoise (Reptile - Africa) smallest tortoise species
9. Tuatara (Reptile - Oceania) unique and rare reptile and the only member found in its family
10. European Legless Lizard (Reptile - Europe)
11. Chuckwalla (Reptile - North America)
12. Thorny Devil (Reptile - Oceania)
13. Frilled Lizard (Reptile - Oceania)
14. Common Basilisk (Reptile - South America) also known as the Jesus Christ lizard, famous for running on water
15. Jackson's Chameleon (Reptile - Africa)
16. Common Flying Dragon (Reptile - Asia) flying species of lizard
17. Rio Cauca Caecillian (Amphibian - South America) unique legless species of amphibian
18. Panamanian Golden Frog (Amphibian - North America) an extremely rare frog extinct in the wild and a perfect flagship species for conservation projects
19. Hellbender Salamander (Amphibian - North America) third largest salamander (*Giant Chinese/Japanese should be habitat species instead of exhibits)
20. Giant African Milipede (Arthropod - Africa) largest milipede species
21. Himalayan Jumping Spider (Arthropod - Asia) highest altitude living species on earth
22. Arctic Wolf Spider (Arthropod - North America) spider endemic to Arctic latitudes
23. Giant Wētā (Arthropod - Oceania) insect endemic to New Zealand
24. Lord Howe Island Stick Insect (Arthropod - Oceania) one of the largest stick insects and a perfect in game conservation candidate
25. Leaf Cutter Ant (Arthropod - South America)
26. Hercules Beetle (Arthropod - South America) one of the largest beetles on earth
27. Giant Water Bug (Arthropod - South America) largest aquatic insect in earth
28. Tenrec (Mammal - Africa) mammal endemic to Madagascar
29. Cuban Solenodon (Mammal - North America) endangered mammal species endemic to Hispaniola, presumed extinct until it was rediscovered in 1974
30. Naked Mole Rat (Mammal - Africa)

More importantly I WOULD LOVE TO SEE larger exhibit sizes that are as large as two or even four exhibits combined!
Ex: a single animal exhibit could take up two grid squares, or four grid squares to make larger (more dynamic) exhibits.

I would also love to see interspecies enrichment for certain exhibit animals such as Gila Monsters, Horned Lizards, Chuckwallas and Desert Tortoises.

Lastly, I would like to see aquatic exhibits for small fish species, eels, and invertebrates, or some Arctic/Antarctic biome exhibits, with snow and ground terrains for the Himalayan Jumping Spiders and Arctic Wolf Spiders (or even the Antarctic Midges) I proposed.
 
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Lizards:
  1. Central Bearded Dragon
  2. Frilled-Necked Lizard
  3. Boyd's Forest Dragon
  4. South African Sungazer/Giant Girdled Lizard
  5. Northern Caiman Lizard (Semi-Aquatic!)
  6. Barking Gecko
  7. Tokay Gecko
Snakes:
  1. Inland Taipan
  2. Reticulated Python
  3. Black-Headed Python
  4. King Cobra
  5. Monocled Cobra
  6. Eyelash Viper
  7. Hairy Bush Viper
Turtles and Tortoises:
  1. Eastern Snake-Necked Turtle
  2. Northern Map Turtle
  3. Common Snapping Turtle
  4. Painted Turtle
  5. Indian Star Tortoise
  6. Serrated Hinged Terrapin
  7. Spider Tortoise
Invertebrates:
  1. Transvaal Fat-Tailed Scorpion
  2. African Giant Millipede
  3. Madagascar Hissing Cockroach
  4. Spiny Leaf Insect
  5. Goliath Stick Insect
Amphibians:
  1. Dyeing Poison Dart Frog
  2. Fire Salamander
  3. Southern Corroboree Frog
Tuataras:
  1. Northern Tuatara
 
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