This article by the Bronx Zoo director from 1968 might now be interesting to read.
After reading this I need to reassess my hot take. Bull frogs are no longer a disappointment.This article by the Bronx Zoo director from 1968 might now be interesting to read.
My point is that rather than fennec and Arctic foxes, we'd get African spurred tortoises and tundra swans. You don't need to sacrifice taxonomic variety in order to have biome variety. You just have to think outside the box and challenge paradigms.But they are such radically different species from radically different parts of the world with very different needs. Different niches in real life and different niches in the game.
If you’re building an Australian zoo you can include the fennec fox (not because they are an Australian species of course but Australian zoos have them) but not the Arctic. If you’re building a Nordic forest zoo you’re unlikely to include the fennec fox (Helsinki in does but that’s another story) but very likely to have Arctic foxes.
And if you are building a traditional city zoo you might have both, either side by side in a small mammal/carnivore/canid house or one in a nocturnal house/African zone and another in a boreal zone for example.
For those of us who build realistically according to location rather than a random zoo with a random selection of animals selected based on the fact that they look unique or add variety, animal selections like this are vital.
Sounds boring. I'd rather have 2 foxes than 3 giant tortoises, imho.My point is that rather than fennec and Arctic foxes, we'd get African spurred tortoises and tundra swans. You don't need to sacrifice taxonomic variety in order to have biome variety. You just have to think outside the box and challenge paradigms.
Fantastic article and a great case for why every real-life zoo should have a dedicated section to the native wildlife in its immediate area.This article by the Bronx Zoo director from 1968 might now be interesting to read.
I really just want to shout this out again. @Tim Smith , @Jens Erik ,@Eltanin Casciani and @Francesca Falcini, absolutely phenomenal job on this. I realize something like the mountain lion is probably a go-to when thinking of what animals to put into a NA themed pack, but really, using the list to get such highly requested animals, plus the Arctic fox, which was a bit lower but highly requested since the Arctic wolf was picked over it for the Arctic pack. I'm very pleased with the work your team has done, both on the choices and theming for this pack, but also for so many of the great features that will be included that were from the meta-suggestions list. It's always great to see everything come together at once and you 4 have a huge part in that. Thank you!Oh and for anyone keeping score, 5 of the animal choices were yoinked right from the meta-wishlists top 10. Nice job on that CMs!
One thing I'm curious about with the Arctic fox is how (if at all) they'll handle morphing. The main population of Arctic foxes changes fur colors from white in the winter to brown and grey in the summer.
I think the foxes will stay white. I think the Beaver pool enrichment will let them build lodges, just based on the wording of the initial post.This. Been thinking about it for a few hours, and this is one of my concerns. That, and dam building behavior in beavers.
Here is a magnificent find!Did you all notice, that we don't have these pieces?
Are this non grided? Like the mud pieces from the africa pack?
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And here-in lies the problem: public perception. Tortoises are an entire family of reptiles, while foxes are a mere tribe (largely composed of a single genus). People don't care enough about taxonomic variety, and I think that's quite disappointing. The three largest turtle species are all from different genera, while there's there's only 4 genera spread between the absurdly high canid count of 7.Sounds boring. I'd rather have 2 foxes than 3 giant tortoises, imho.
I think the foxes will stay white. I think the Beaver pool enrichment will let them build lodges, just based on the wording of the initial post.
I would also taken another rodent, the Grasshopper Mouse describes three species of carnivorous mice. They eat scorpions, spiders, centipedes, baby snakes, other mice. They would have been great here.And I think that's it! All of the animals that got in look so great that it's difficult to be too upset about the ones that didn't (and even then, most of them can now just transition into candidates for a future Europe or revisited SA pack... RIP to the raccoon tho). And those minor complaints aside, I really don't think I could be happier with this DLC.
- The bullfrog is a letdown, full stop. It's just the latest in a trend of Frontier throwing a curveball for the exhibit species when there are very obvious more popular choices (frill-necked lizard, a cobra, a chameleon, and now a salamander). I really don't get it. Like, bullfrogs are fine, but in a world where axolotls and hellbenders exist? This is a bizarre choice.
The Thorny Devil is a Australian Animal. You've probably confused it with the Horned Lizard which has the Ability to shoot Blood out of its Tear Glands to protect itself from PredatorsThe exhibit animal is kinda meh for me. An Eastern hellbender, thorny devil, axolotl or snapping turtle would all have been better choices imo, but the pack still gets a 9/10 from me![]()
The Sealion could be nice above the Seats in a Marine themed Zoo RestaurantView attachment 264113
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The prairie dog looks very similar to the scenery piece in the trailer. Maybe those pictures are in-game pieces?
I wish you lots of Luck. I know what this is like because I'm in a similar Situation. Needed 2 Years to finally get my first Job and now that I finally have one, I still need a second Job to earn enough MoneyI also can't buy it until I am employed again. So I basically can't lay Planet Zoo until I'm working, andm ay not have the time to play it. Yay for my life...
I don't hope that this'll happen. I like to see it in the Tropical Exhibit. I think the Ponds in which the African Bullfrog lives are also often almost completely drying out. Maybe they could add a Way to switch between different Designs but even then I would prefer a tropical Aquaterrarium instead of the same that the North American Animals have.I'm hoping this means they will be moving the African bullfrog to the aquatic exhibit as well
I find them really cool. Would be nice to keep one as a Pet one Day but I don't even know if they are available as Pets outside of Americathe California banana slug would have fit the theme perfectly
The Main Population? Is there a Population where it doesn't happen?One thing I'm curious about with the Arctic fox is how (if at all) they'll handle morphing. The main population of Arctic foxes changes fur colors from white in the winter to brown and grey in the summer.
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This sounds awesome. I really hope someday we'll get at least one Exhibit MammalI would also taken another rodent, the Grasshopper Mouse describes three species of carnivorous mice. They eat scorpions, spiders, centipedes, baby snakes, other mice. They would have been great here.
thinking about your timed scenarios again buddy?Everything wrong with meerkats is directly applicable to Prairie dogs and then some
Coastal populations usually maintain a grey/blue color year-round.The Main Population? Is there a Population where it doesn't happen?
This sounds awesome. I really hope someday we'll get at least one Exhibit Mammal(especially because making it a Exhibit Animal could cause Problems with Sloths in Case they wouldn't work as Habitat Animals. Of course we would need a bigger Exhibit first)