Cynogale bennettii's animal wishlist

And now for an animal that, the more I've learned about it, the higher it has gone on my personal wishlist...

Pacarana
Dinomys branickii

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Continents: South America
Countries: Bolivia, Brazil, Colombia, Ecuador, Peru, Venezuela

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Biomes: Temperate, Tropical, Taiga

The exact habitat requirements of this species are little-known, but it occurs primarily in montane forests ranging from 250-3,200m in elevation. They also occur in paramo, the high-altitude Andean grasslands, provided there is sufficient cover. They also use rocky areas, which provide caves for them to sleep in.

Red List status: Least Concern, with their population trend unknown.

Captive presence: Currently, these animals are not kept in either Europe or North America, although they were successfully kept and bred in several European zoos until the last animal died at Frankfurt Zoo in 1988 and they also did pretty well in American zoos until at least 2004, when a group of them were still being kept at San Diego Zoo (possibly also at Los Angeles). They are still kept in zoos in their native range, where they seem to breed well.

Reasoning: The pacarana is one of the world’s largest rodents, reaching around 15kg in weight – only the capybaras, beavers and crested porcupines are considerably larger than it. This animal could fill a lot of gaps, being not only another rodent but also a new South American species and a new mountain-dwelling species.

Pacarana have many different behaviours that would make them fascinating additions to the game. Although they are mostly terrestrial, they are able to climb, albeit clumsily, and also seem to be able to dig. I probably wouldn’t make them dig burrows, but would let them use the large animal burrow. It would be a bonus if, when the pacarana encounters the sprinkler or water jet rock enrichments, it does its brilliant washing behaviour.

The pacarana is a sociable species, living in groups of three to five adult individuals along with their young and are also very communicative – the communication system includes stamping the front feet, tooth chattering, whining, hissing and, during courtship, the male sings to attract a mate. As well as being sociable with their own kind, pacarana are apparently friendly towards other animals and have been successfully mixed with tamanduas, tamarins, sloths, various birds and tortoises.

Although they are listed as Least Concern, pacarana are still of conservation value. In 12 ecoregions in South America, the pacarana is the only mammal that has become locally extinct, because their slow and clumsy movements make them easy targets for hunters. Raising awareness of this animal would be an excellent reason to include it in the game.

Variations (if any): The pacarana comes in many colour variations, from a dark reddish-brown to richer brown and black, all with white spots along the flanks. Sometimes, the spots are joined up to form a whiteish line. I think five or six different colour morphs would be suitable for this species.

References:
Video of a breeding group of pacarana in an enclosure, showing the animals, their young and enclosure design:
Source: https://www.facebook.com/watch/?v=10155989461190273


A photograph showing two aviaries, each containing pacarana and a mixture of other animal species:

A paper about how reintroduction of pacarana would help restore lost mammal communities:

A video of a pacarana washing itself when its fur gets wet:
Source: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ckg3DDsDWWA
 
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Chilean flamingo
Phoenicopterus chilensis

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Continents: South America
Countries: Argentina, Bolivia, Chile, Paraguay, Peru; wintering in Brazil and Uruguay; introduced population in Western Europe

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Biomes: Aquatic, Desert (?), Grassland, Taiga, Temperate

Chilean flamingos are well-adapted to harsh conditions, provided there is sufficient water and mud banks for nesting. They live on coastal lagoons and freshwater lakes from sea level to 4,500m in the Andes. They also live in soda lakes in the Atacama Desert.

Red List status: Near Threatened, with a declining population.

Captive presence: This is one the most common flamingo species in captivity. Zootierliste records 164 zoos holding this species, of which 161 are in Europe, 1 in Israel, 1 in Taiwan and 1 in the UAE – it is only second to the greater flamingo. In North America, it is kept in 50-52 zoos, which is very close to the number of zoos holding American flamingo (56-58 zoos), the most common species on the continent.

Reasoning: As well as being one of the most commonly-kept flamingo species, this is probably the most traditionally ‘pink’ flamingos, rather than being mostly white like the greater flamingo or red like the American flamingo. Because it is also substantially smaller than the greater flamingo, it also adds one of the smaller species that can theoretically be kept in a smaller habitat.

This would add another species from the cooler southern tip of South America, as well as the Andean mountains. They have very broad temperature tolerance, able to exist in both deserts and in snowy glacial lakes. This would allow them to be kept in a much broader range of locations than the more tropical flamingo species. They do not occur in tropical habitats, so are easily differentiated from the current in-game greater flamingo.

Chilean flamingos are kept in many different ways – as well as being on standard flamingo lakes, they can live in the moats of primate islands, in covered aviaries, in walkthrough displays and free-roaming. Although they are commonly mixed with birds, including waterfowl, penguins and pelicans, the only other in-game Planet Zoo species I could find that is mixed with this species is the Galapagos giant tortoise.

Variations (if any): Chilean flamingos have very little in the way of plumage differences between individuals, but I would perhaps have a couple of variations between the extent of the red wing plumage visible on the bird’s side.

References:
A photograph showing wild Chilean flamingos in the taiga part of their natural habitat:

A chart showing the size differences between the flamingo species:

An open-top walkthrough lake enclosure normally home to Chilean flamingos:

A Chilean flamingo exhibit within a larger walkthrough South American aviary:

A smaller walkthrough aviary for Chilean flamingos:

A mixed enclosure for Chilean flamingos and Galapagos giant tortoises:

Chilean flamingos free-roaming on the grounds of a French castle:
 
Black-capped squirrel monkey
Saimiri boliviensis

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Continents: South America
Countries: Bolivia, Brazil, Peru

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Biomes: Tropical

The black-capped squirrel monkey is restricted to tropical rainforest, preferring seasonally flooded forests, floodplain forests and forests growing on the river’s edge.

Red List status: Least Concern, with a declining population.

Captive presence: This is a pretty common species in captivity, at least in some places. Zootierliste records 116 zoos that hold this species, with 110 in Europe, 2 in Israel, 3 in New Zealand and 1 in Taiwan. Of these, 95 are the standard Bolivian subspecies while the other 21 have the brown-capped Peruvian subspecies. They are the only squirrel monkey species kept in Australia, with 10 zoos keeping approximately 55 individuals (as of 2020). In North America, they are by far the scarcer of the squirrel monkeys, being held in 6 zoos in the USA and 1 in Mexico.

Reasoning: As mentioned in an earlier post, the black-capped squirrel monkey is one of my three preferred New World monkeys because it would add a brand new colour scheme to the game’s primates. Although they are small, they are considerably larger (79cm in total length from head-tail; weighing up to 1.1kg) than existing habitat species such as the meerkat (53cm, 0.9kg). They are probably the smallest monkey I would say unequivocally should be a habitat animal.

Black-capped squirrel monkeys are highly sociable, living in the wild in troops of up to 75 individuals. In the wild, they form single-sex groups, with males and females living separately apart from during the breeding season although in zoos this does not seem to be a rigid requirement. In captivity they can live in very large groups, with Apenhuel Primate Park in the Netherlands keeping up to 150 in their huge woodland enclosure. This sociality also makes them good for mixed enclosures – although the exact species involved are different, research at Edinburgh Zoo has shown that capuchin and squirrel monkeys get an interspecies bonus from each other. They can be mixed with giant anteaters, capybara, howler monkeys, mara, tamandua, tortoises, birds, spider monkeys, sloths and even spectacled bears, among other species.

Squirrel monkeys are often kept in open-topped enclosures such as islands, and they can also be kept in walkthrough enclosures with public access. They would be among the most versatile species of primate within South American sections of a zoo.

Variations (if any): Choosing variations for the Bolivian squirrel monkey is quite difficult, as there are two very different looking subspecies. The most familiar and commonly-kept has golden-yellow and olive fur along with a black head cap and tufted white ears, while the more rarely-kept subspecies has a brown cap and less tufty ears. I am thinking about possibly only including the more common Bolivian subspecies with a couple of minor variations in coat colour, as in real zoos the two subspecies are not mixed together.

References:
A stock photo of the brown-capped Peruvian subspecies:

Island exhibit for Bolivian squirrel monkeys:

Mixed enclosure for squirrel monkeys and giant anteaters, as well as mara and scarlet ibis:

Roofed over mixed enclosure for squirrel monkeys and capuchin monkeys:

A video showing the research done on capuchin and squirrel monkey welfare at Edinburgh Zoo:
Source: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fAksjSUmaWk


Bolivian squirrel monkey walkthrough enclosure at Apenhuel:
 
Now moving away from South American animals again, starting with...

Lesser Malay chevrotain
Tragulus kanchil

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Continents: Asia
Countries: Brunei, Cambodia, Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia, Myanmar, Singapore, Thailand, Vietnam

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Orange areas are confirmed locations, purple area is where the species has not been confirmed yet

Biomes: Tropical, Grassland

This species mainly lives in tropical rainforest, from sea level to 600m elevation. They are often associated with water and live in riverine and mangrove forests. They can also live in secondary forests and cultivated areas, so long as dense cover remains for them to hide in during the day.

Red List status: Least Concern, with their population trend unknown.

Captive presence: This is quite a difficult one to work out, as this species was quite recently split from the Javan chevrotain and the animals in zoos have not been identified according to this new taxonomy. It is thought likely, however, that most or all of the smaller chevrotains in captivity are the lesser Malay species. According to Zootierliste, either the lesser Malay or unidentified chevrotains live in 23 zoos, with 30 of those in Europe and 3 in Singapore (Singapore being the only place known for certain to keep lesser Malay chevrotain). They are also kept in zoos in Indonesia, Malaysia and Burma.

Reasoning: These are one of the world’s smallest ungulates, growing to a maximum of 50cm long and weighing up to 2kg; this is not too dissimilar in length to the meerkat to justify their inclusion in the game. A very small ungulate would be unlike anything else we have in the game at the moment and they could be used in many different ways.

As mentioned, they are quite versatile in their enclosure designs. They are most commonly kept indoors, either in diurnal or nocturnal enclosures and also often in tropical houses. They are not restricted to these displays however and can be kept in outdoor enclosures even in quite temperate climates. They can also be kept on island enclosures, although they are good swimmers and water should not be the only containing barrier. Although almost entirely solitary in the wild, in captivity they can be much more sociable and kept in pairs or even small groups, provided they have enough space and vegetation to avoid close proximity.

Being quite a small species, they are kept in a variety of mixed species enclosures including with binturongs, gibbons, squirrels, small monkeys, sloths, bats, lorises, lemurs, bear cuscus, tree kangaroos, lizards, tortoises and a large variety of birds including large hornbills and ground-dwelling species. As long as they have suitable retreat areas, they can also be kept successfully in walkthrough enclosures.

Unlike most other ungulates in the game, this species has high vegetation requirements and so would benefit from a highly planted enclosure – they would add something very different to the current roster.

Variations (if any): The lesser Malay chevrotain has quite a variety of coat patterns, with the base coat varying in how much orange or brown fur there is and also the white and dark patches on the throat vary between individuals. They also definitely have been recorded in albino form before.

References:
A recent scientific paper about the husbandry of lesser Malay chevrotains in European zoos:

An indoor glass-fronted, more exhibit-like, display for lesser Malay chevrotain:

A photograph of a larger indoor enclosure for lesser Malay chevrotains:

A walkthrough indoor tropical house that includes free-roaming chevrotains:

A picture showing a lesser Malay chevrotain mixed with a great argus pheasant:

A photograph showing a lesser Malay chevrotain mixed with a Livingstone’s flying fox:

A large enclosure for chevrotains and binturong:

An island enclosure for lesser Malay chevrotain, shared with gibbons and waterfowl:

An outdoor enclosure for a small group of lesser Malay chevrotains at Edinburgh Zoo:
 
Gelada
Theropithecus gelada

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Continents: Africa
Countries: Ethiopia

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Biomes: Taiga, Grassland (?)

These primates live only on high-altitude grasslands, with no vegetation other than grass and groves of giant lobelias. They also require nearby bare rocky cliffs and precipices on which they can sleep.

Red List status: Least Concern, with a declining population.

Captive presence: This species is becoming increasingly common in zoos. Zootierliste records 31 zoos in Europe that keep geladas, one of which only keeps the threatened Northern subspecies. They are also in 3 zoos in North America – Bronx and San Diego in the USA and Zoo Sauvage in Canada. Part of the reason I have chosen this above other baboon-like monkeys is because of local abundance – in the UK geladas are kept in as many zoos as Hamadryas, Guinea and olive baboons put together.

Reasoning: As well as being the most common baboon-like monkey in UK zoos, they have many other advantages. Firstly, they are among the most social of all monkeys and form huge groups sometimes up to a thousand strong. This should mean that, in game, they can be kept in large groups successfully. Certainly, the Naturzoo at Rheine, Germany, has 2 troops of geladas with 78 animals between them.

Geladas are almost entirely herbivorous and feed primarily on grass, with the only animal protein being the occasional insect. This diet, which is very different to the more omnivorous baboons, allows geladas to be safely kept in mixed enclosures with animals that a true baboon would hunt and eat. These include rock hyraxes, ground hornbills, waterfowl, dik-dik and spurfowl, as well as colobus monkeys and caprids such as ibex and aoudad.

Another interesting feature about geladas is their extensive range of communication. They almost constantly make contact calls when feeding, which would add to the zoo soundscape. I would also like to see how Frontier would handle the varied facial gestures that geladas make, including their raised eyebrows (a threat gesture) and the lip flip (a greeting). These sounds and gestures would make the geladas feel particularly realistic and interesting.

Because the climbing system can be troubled by bugs, this may be one of the best options for a monkey. Their natural habitat includes almost no trees and instead they are agile rock climbers. To showcase this, they could use the goat climbing mountain enrichment item. They also have very low temperature requirements, being one of the best-adapted monkeys to cold environments.

Variations (if any): There aren’t any strong variations in colouration, but I would add perhaps three variants, where the brown colouration in the fur and the redness of the bare chest patch are different, so that large troops of geladas have some distinguishing features.

References:
Full best-practice guidelines for the gelada, published by the EAZA:

A ZooLex entry for the gelada enclosure at Rotterdam Zoo, converted from the old lion enclosure:

An older-style rock enclosure at Stuttgart Zoo, mixed with Barbary sheep and rock hyrax:

A picture of a grassy hill enclosure for geladas:

Gelada enclosure mixed with Abyssinian ground hornbill:

Gelada enclosure viewed from a chairlift:

Bachelor gelada enclosure with climbing rocks (both being used):

Netted outdoor gelada enclosure:

Gelada enclosure with full access to live trees:

Gelada enclosure at Bronx Zoo:

Gelada enclosure at San Diego Zoo:

Perhaps the oddest enclosure – geladas living in the dry moat of an old castle (two can be seen at the base of the stairs, one near the rightmost support for the visitor walkway):
 
Northern talapoin monkey
Miopithecus ogouensis

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Continents: Africa
Countries: Angola, Cameroon, Congo, Equatorial Guinea, Gabon

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Biomes: Aquatic, Tropical

Northern talapoins are forest-dwelling primates but are tied very closely to water. It is never found more than 500m from a watercourse in the wild and often lives along riverbanks where the vegetation is especially dense. Water is primarily used as a means of escaping predators.

Red List status: Near Threatened, with a declining population.

Captive presence: As recently as 2009, only 5 European zoos kept Northern talapoins but since then a breeding programme and confiscation of smuggled animals has increased that number to 18 zoos by 2022. In North America, there were possibly 4 zoos with talapoins in the USA in 2009 (although it is not known if they were Northern or Southern), but today it seems they are all but absent from the country – only 1 zoo is now recorded holding Southern talapoins. The Northern talapoin is also kept in Brazil.

Reasoning: The Gabon talapoin is the smallest Old World monkey and can be considered the African equivalent of the squirrel monkey. They are ever so slightly larger than squirrel monkeys, with females weighed 1.2kg and the males 1.7 kg; their full head to tail length is around 1m, with the tail making up around half of that. I think for African rainforest monkeys, we should have at least four (possibly even five) species, varying in size and habits – there is nothing else quite like a talapoin monkey.

Talapoin monkeys are highly social, in the wild living in troops with up to 100 members, although they sub-divide into smaller single-sex groups in order to forage. Although the males and females do not interact much outside the mating season in the wild, in captivity they can be kept in mixed-sex groups successfully. They can be kept in mixed enclosures with a variety of species including gorillas, mangabeys, colobus, other guenons, dik-dik, sitatunga, duikers, pygmy hippopotamus, pouched rats, brush-tailed porcupines and waterfowl, but especially with primates the talapoins can be vulnerable to aggression. I would probably avoid giving talapoins a mixed-species bonus with anything.

While talapoins in the wild mainly swim to escape danger or move to new areas, in captivity water holds an attraction as a source of fun – in one study, a group of captive talapoins in Gabon would play in water, often diving and chasing one another underwater. Young hand-reared talapoins that had never encountered water before showed this behaviour, which shows it is a pretty key thing for this species. Having a monkey that could dive and swim underwater would be a very appealing addition.

Although they are small, talapoin monkeys are often kept in quite large outdoor enclosures. Although it is not open yet, there are plans next year for a walkthrough enclosure with talapoin monkeys to open at Apenhuel Primate Park in the Netherlands, mixed with colobus monkeys and African spurred tortoises.

Variations (if any): The only real variation I can see among Northern talapoin monkeys is the extent of pink or grey skin on their muzzles. I think three variants of this would be sufficient for this monkey, where individuals often look quite similar.

References:
Small outdoor netted enclosure for talapoins (shared with bush hyrax and brush-tailed porcupine):

Larger netted enclosure for talapoins and colobus monkeys:

Outdoor netted enclosure for talapoins:

Picture of outdoor mixed enclosure for talapoins, mona monkey, drill, pygmy hippo, sitatunga and waterbirds:

Picture from this exhibit, showing talapoin monkey with drills and sitatunga:

Current outdoor island for talapoin monkeys at Apenhuel:

Information about the upcoming talapoin walkthrough at Apenhuel (translated from Dutch by Google):

A paper about the benefits and problems of mixed enclosures for talapoin monkeys in Europe:

A French paper that includes swimming behaviour in talapoins (from page 68-70, translates well on Google):
 
Transcaspian urial
Ovis vignei arkal

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Continents: Asia
Countries: Kazakhstan, Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan

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Distribution of the Transcaspian urial is the orange area within the larger purple area (area where they possibly survive); the orange area below is another subspecies

Biomes: Desert, Taiga, Temperate

While the Transcaspian urial is mostly found in desert habitats, they also occur on alpine grasslands to 4,000m and in open woodlands of almond, pistachio and juniper.

Red List status: Critically Endangered, with a declining population.

Captive presence: This is not a commonly-kept species, but is widespread. Zootierliste records 5 zoos, all in Europe, holding them and 54 individuals. In 2019, there were 37 Transcaspian urial in 6 zoos in North America, with a recommendation to replace mouflon with urial. They are also kept in South Africa and Iran.

Reasoning: Among wild sheep kept in captivity, the Transcaspian urial is among the most magnificent. The male’s horns are considerably bigger and more extravagant than those of the Dall sheep, curling right around and growing to 3/4m long. The males also develop of ruff of fur on their necks – in that way, they have shared features with bighorn sheep and aoudad.

While it could be argued that this is another Asian species, this one occupies an area almost totally uninhabited by any other species – their entire range is centred around part of the Caspian Sea. Their habitat means they have very broad climatic tolerance and can withstand both high and low temperatures without much need for shelter.

Urial can be kept in a surprising number of different enclosures. They can be kept in terraced hillside enclosures, forested paddocks and huge safari-style enclosures with other species. Perhaps the most unusual urial enclosure it at Minnesota Zoo, where they are kept in a rocky indoor enclosure in a tropical house, mixed with red pandas.

As well as red pandas, Transcaspian urial can be mixed with a huge variety of other ungulates – they live on the Asian Savannah at the San Diego Zoo Safari Park where they are mixed with Indian rhinos, Przewalski’s horses, blackbuck, nilgai, Arabian oryx, banteng, aoudad, Nubian ibex and seven species or subspecies of deer. They are also very gregarious with their own kind, living in herds of up to 100 individuals in the wild. In captivity, they can be kept in single-sex and mixed-sex groups, with multiple males and females able to live together. They can also be kept in bachelor groups.

It is a good thing they can be kept in large, multi-sex groups, as the Transcaspian urial is quite fecund – they breed regularly and can have up to three lambs at a time. They would make a good filler exhibit or addition to a mixed enclosure in many Asian zones within a zoo.

Variations (if any): The main variation I would personally have is among the rams, with three different sizes of horns - one is a simple half-l like the Dall sheep, the second a whole-l where the horn tips end near the eyes and the third is a one-and-a-half l, where the horns grow out even further. There are pictures on Google Images that show these three horn types, but most are pictures of animals shot by hunters, so I will not be including them here.

References:
The AZA factsheet for this species:

Terraced hillside enclosure for Transcaspian urial in South Africa:

Grassy paddock for Transcaspian urial:

Transcaspian urial in the large Asian Savannah paddock at San Diego Zoo Safari Park:

Overview of the abovementioned Asian Savannah paddock, with Indian rhino pictured:

Indoor tropical house enclosure for urial and red panda:
 
And I'm back!

Cape ground squirrel
Xerus inauris

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Continents: Africa
Countries: Botswana, Lesotho, Namibia, South Africa

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Biomes: Grassland, Desert

This is a species of arid habitats, varying from 10-50cm of rain a year. They favour open habitats with sparse vegetation, and prefer having firm compacted sand for burrowing – they do not live in areas of loose shifting sand.

Red List status: Least Concern, with their population trend stable

Captive presence: This species is kept in twenty European zoos, as well as zoos in Indonesia, Singapore and their native South Africa. I’m not sure if they are still kept in North America, although San Diego did keep them in their famous Kopje exhibit until fairly recently.

Reasoning: This is a ground-dwelling squirrel that is fairly close in size to the meerkat. They would add another desert species, and would also be a species of ground squirrel that more closely resembles a traditional squirrel, with its long bushy tail.

What makes me really want the Cape ground squirrel, however, is its amenability to being mixed with other species. In the wild, they naturally sleep in the burrows of aardvarks and will also share warrens with meerkats – both have been mixed with ground squirrels in zoos (although I would hazard to say that they provide an enrichment bonus, as young squirrels are sometimes at risk of being attacked by meerkats). They have also been kept with fennec foxes as well as other African small mammals not currently in-game, such as crested porcupines, dik-diks, other mongoose species, spurred tortoises, a variety of birds and rock hyraxes.

They are often kept in open-topped enclosures, and have been successfully kept in walkthrough exhibits, so they have plenty of versatility in how they can be displayed.

Variations (if any): The Cape ground squirrel seems to come in quite a range of colours, from dark brown to a richer yellowish-brown. I would probably have three or four coat variations for this species.

References:
A pit-like display for Cape ground squirrels in a South African zoo:

An outdoor enclosure for ground squirrels and crested porcupines, with a window looking into the cheetah enclosure behind:

Outdoor enclosure for ground squirrels, showing their propensity for digging burrows:

A grassy mixed-species enclosure for ground squirrels and meerkats:

A walkthrough enclosure for ground squirrels, mixed with bush hyraxes and spurred tortoises:

A large indoor enclosure that mixes ground squirrels with rock hyrax, red-billed hornbills, lovebirds and weaverbirds:
 
Patas monkey
Erythrocebus patas

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Continents: Africa
Countries: Benin, Burkina Faso, Cameroon, Central African Republic, Chad, Cote d’Ivoire, Democratic Republic of Congo, Ethiopia, Gambia, Ghana, Guinea, Guinea-Bissau, Kenya, Mali, Mauritania, Niger, Nigeria, Senegal, Sierra Leone, South Sudan, Sudan, Togo, Uganda

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Biomes: Desert (?), Grassland

This primate is almost entirely associated with grasslands, and is particularly common in thinly-bushed acacia woodland. They also inhabit the Ennedi Plateau in Chad, which is a mostly desert landscape within the Sahara – however they are tied closely to granite outcrops with permanent water sources.

Red List status: Near Threatened, with a declining population.

Captive presence: This is probably one of the most common monkeys in zoos – according to my calculations, they are the tenth most common Old World monkey on Zootierliste. They are kept in 48 zoos, consisting of 44 in Europe and 1 zoo each in Israel, New Caledonia, Taiwan and the UAE. They are also kept in at least 33 zoos in North America, as well as zoos in China and South Africa.

Reasoning: This is a rather impressive and unusual-looking monkey, with very long legs in proportion to its body – they are the fastest-running primate on Earth and tend to use speed to escape predators, rather than climbing.

Because they tend to run rather than climb, they can be kept in enclosures with surprisingly low barriers. At Budapest Zoo, they have been successfully kept behind little more than a few strands of electric wire. They can also be kept in traditional mesh-roofed monkey enclosures, on islands, in open-topped paddocks and drive-through enclosures.

Although they are an open plains monkey, patas have rarely been mixed with other savannah animals. I know of a mix with common warthog, and they were kept with springbok at Apenhuel Primate Park in the Netherlands when it first opened (both also mixed with gorillas). Otherwise, I know they have been kept successfully with other monkeys (such as Barbary macaques, mantled guereza and grivets – although these mixes can fail just as frequently as they succeed), duikers, bongo, Aldabra giant tortoises and lowland gorillas. An attempted mix recently at a German zoo with patas monkeys, black rhinos and cheetahs ended about as well as could be expected. Even though it is not recorded, I would allow them to share space with other savannah species.

As far as monkeys go, there is nothing that could really replace the patas. They are more amenable to mixing than baboons, but not as dependent on climbing materials as any other African primate. This, coupled with their graceful appearance, makes them one of my most-wanted monkeys.

Variations (if any): I would personally give the patas two colour variations – one where the upperparts of the main body are a lighter orange and one where it is a more orangey-red colour.

References:
The Budapest Zoo patas enclosure, contained with only electric wire:

An island enclosure for patas monkeys:

Viewpoint over a patas monkey paddock-style enclosure:

Patas monkey paddock with a simple climbing frame:

A more wooded patas monkey enclosure, with a more complex climbing frame:

Mixed enclosure for patas monkeys and lowland gorillas:

A mixed enclosure for patas and Wolf’s monkeys, bay duikers and Aldabra giant tortoises:

Patas monkeys live on the plateau in this enclosure, with the lower areas home to African ungulates:

At certain angles, the above enclosure makes it seem like the monkeys and ungulates share a space:

Patas monkeys in a drive-through enclosure, shared with Barbary macaques, drills and bongo:

A patas monkey photographed in the Ennedi desert, also showing its running physique:
 
Southern ground hornbill
Bucorvus leadbeateri

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Continents: Africa
Countries: Angola, Botswana, Burundi, Democratic Republic of Congo, Eswatini, Kenya, Lesotho, Malawi, Mozambique, Namibia, Rwanda, South Africa, Tanzania, Uganda, Zambia, Zimbabwe

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Biomes: Grassland

This is a species of open savannah grassland and open woodland; they can live on the edge of forests, but do not live in thick woodland and they can also live at up to 3,000m above sea level in parts of East Africa.

Red List status: Vulnerable, with a declining population.

Captive presence: This is one of the more common hornbill species in captivity, with Zootierliste recording 103 zoos in Europe keeping them, as well as 1 zoo each in Singapore and the UAE. They are also kept in between 31-34 zoos in North America, as well as their native South Africa.

Reasoning: These are very striking birds, with their mostly black plumage contrasting with their bright throat pouches and white wing feathers. They also have among the most fabulous eyelashes of any bird. In an evolutionary sense they are very interesting as well – they probably resemble smaller social predatory dinosaurs in terms of behaviour and one scientist in the 1990s noted that they have followed a very similar evolutionary path to hominids, with a slow-breeding, terrestrial, ground-feeding, carnivorous savannah-dweller evolving from smaller, mostly fruit-eating cousins. But they are amazing in their own right, without having to compare them to dinosaurs or primates.

These birds have a fascinating social life – a dominant pair breeds, with the juveniles then staying on to help look after their younger siblings. Studies from zoos have shown that, if a young ground hornbill doesn’t get at least 7 years of experience looking after younger siblings, it will never learn how to successfully raise young on its own. The adult pair cement their bond with a loud booming duet call that would, I imagine, work well with the chorus calling feature in the game.

Being mostly ground-dwelling, these birds are commonly kept in large open-topped paddocks. They can also be kept on island displays or inside aviaries. They tend to be curious, rather than aggressive, and have been kept in walkthrough enclosures - one of the times where I know a walkthrough with ground hornbills didn't work was because they were overly curious towards visitors.

Southern ground hornbills are very amenable to being mixed with African hoofstock – I can find reference to zoos mixing these birds with white rhino, bongo, nyala, pygmy hippo, giraffe, gazelles, springbok, scimitar-horned oryx, Nile lechwe, zebra and warthog as well as ostrich. They have also been kept with gorillas and monkeys. While they often feed alongside large herbivores in the wild, I would hesitate to give them interspecies bonuses with most of them – a scientific paper about their wild biology does mention them being chased by zebras, wildebeest, buffalo and giraffes. One exception might be the warthog, as wild ground hornbills have been seen grooming warthogs for ticks.

Another big reason for wanting these birds is their lifespan – in a game where time can move very fast, a bird that can live to 70 years of age would be a welcome inclusion. Their long lives and social behaviour also leads to them being very intelligent; in captivity, they thrive when given access to lots of enrichment items they can manipulate and play with.

Variations (if any): Because there are clear differences between the sexes, and they do best in family units centred around a breeding pair, I don’t think variation is much needed. The males have an all-red throat pouch while the females have a dark blue patch on theirs. The juveniles would have a faded grey face and throat pouch.

References:
Many recordings of Southern ground hornbill calls, including their duet song, can be found here:

A fairly standard open-topped paddock for Southern ground hornbills:

An open-topped paddock at a French park, with traditional-looking indoor quarters:

A large single-species aviary for Southern ground hornbills:

A rather basic walkthrough aviary that mixes ground hornbills with other large birds:

An island at San Diego Zoo Safari Park, home to ground hornbills:

An overview of a paddock that mixes ground hornbills with seven other species:

A more wooded paddock that mixes ground hornbills with three species of antelope:

A picture of a pair of ground hornbills that share an enclosure with gorillas and De Brazza’s monkeys:

A photo showing a group of ground hornbills using the indoor barn in a giraffe mixed exhibit:

A ground hornbill shown mixed with sitatunga and springbok:

A Southern ground hornbill using a pumpkin enrichment item:
 
Im honest, i dont really care about the secretary bird anyways, but everytime i think about the southern ground hornbill it makes me sad remembering that the secretary birds popularity will propaply be the number 1 reason why the hornbill wont get into the game. In a perfect world we would get both, but of all the animals in this thread this is the one i want the most
 
African spoonbill
Platalea alba

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Continents: Africa
Countries: Angola, Botswana, Burkina Faso, Burundi, Cameroon, Central African Republic, Chad, Congo, Côte d'Ivoire, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Djibouti, Eritrea, Eswatini, Ethiopia, Gabon, Gambia, Guinea, Guinea-Bissau, Kenya, Lesotho, Liberia, Madagascar, Malawi, Mali, Mauritania, Mozambique, Namibia, Niger, Nigeria, Rwanda, Senegal, Sierra Leone, Somalia, South Africa, South Sudan, Sudan, Tanzania, Uganda, Zambia, Zimbabwe

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Biomes: Aquatic, Grassland, Tropical (?)

This bird occurs around shallow bodies of water, particularly around lakes and rivers although they also occur in coastal habitats. Much of their range seems to correspond with wetlands in the grassland biome, although in West Africa it may also occur in rivers near to more tropical forest habitat.

Red List status: Least Concern, with their population trend stable.

Captive presence: These are a decently-common species in captivity, with Zootierliste recording 75 zoos in Europe keeping them, as well as 1 in New Caledonia and 2 in the UAE. They are also kept in at least 18 zoos in North America.

Reasoning: This is the biggest species of spoonbill, measuring up to three feet in height. They are considerably bigger than any other species – indeed, perhaps surprisingly, the most-wanted spoonbill on the meta-wishlist (the roseate spoonbill) is actually the smallest species. Having a larger bird would make them more obvious.

While many ground-based birds are always kept in aviaries, and just chosen as habitat animals because of their mostly ground-based behaviour, the African spoonbill is, mostly in America, quite often kept in open-air enclosures. This makes me much more comfortable wanting them as a workable species in the current game mechanics. Obviously, they are also kept in aviaries as well. They can also be kept in walkthrough displays.

In open-air enclosures, African spoonbills have been successfully mixed with flamingos, as well as other ground birds such as white storks. At Bioparc Valencia in Spain, these birds were mixed with African elephants. Other in-game species that have been kept with African spoonbills in an aviary setting include African penguins, both common and pygmy hippopotamus and, at Antwerp Zoo, African buffalo.

Africa has a large variety of ground-based and waterbirds that could be added quite easily to the game; this species is widely-kept and can be successfully kept in open-air enclosures. Their unusual appearance and unique feeding behaviour would make them a recognisable addition to the game. These would be another good species for ‘entry-level’ zoos to start up with, as they can live for up to 17 years, are highly sociable but, being smaller, would have lesser space requirements than flamingos.

Variations (if any): These birds seem to have very little variation between individuals, so I would be comfortable with just a single variation for all adult spoonbills.

References:
Size chart showing the different spoonbill species compared to a person:

An open-topped island with moat housing African spoonbills at Disney’s Animal Kingdom:

Open-topped paddock mixing African spoonbills with lesser flamingos:

Another mix of spoonbills and lesser flamingos:

Both of these open-topped lagoons at San Diego Zoo contain African spoonbills with other birds:

An open paddock for African spoonbills along with flamingos and white storks, at Detroit Zoo:

A walkthrough aviary containing African spoonbill and greater flamingo, among other species:

A large aviary mixing spoonbills with flamingos and other birds, only viewable from vehicles:

African spoonbill at Bioparc Valencia that shares the elephant enclosure:

A photo of the hippo aviary at Zooparc de Beauval in France, which includes African spoonbills:

Zoolex entry for the Cape buffalo aviary at Antwerp Zoo, that contains African spoonbill:
 
Grivet monkey
Chlorocebus aethiops

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Continents: Africa
Countries: Djibouti, Eritrea, Ethiopia, South Sudan, Sudan

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Biomes: Grassland

The grivet monkey is a species of wooded savannahs, being found particularly near to water.

Red List status: Least Concern, with a declining population trend.

Captive presence: This is the third most commonly-kept Old World primate in zoos according to Zootierliste, being kept in 95 zoos in Europe, 1 on the French overseas territory of Guadeloupe and 6 in Israel. They are also kept in at least 10 zoos in the USA and 2 in Canada, making them only slightly less commonly-kept than the vervet in North America.

Reasoning: While the vervet monkey is often asked for, if you see a ‘vervet’ in a zoo, especially in Europe, you are almost certainly actually looking at a grivet. They have all of the features of a vervet, such as their amazing social behaviour and communication as well as the general body shape and habitat requirements, but are more richly coloured. They also have a partial ruff of long fur around their necks.

As mentioned above, they are highly sociable – in the wild they can live in troops of between 10 and 35 individuals. If this were possible in Planet Zoo, it would give a highly active and interesting smaller habitat monkey, which is something still not common in the game.

As well as being sociable with their own species, grivets are able to be mixed with other animals – they have been kept with mandrills, crested porcupines and other small African monkeys, but perhaps the most impressive mix with these monkeys is at Magdeburg Zoo, where grivets have access to an enclosure with African elephants, lechwe, impala, warthogs and bat-eared foxes.

They also have a lot of versatility in exhibit design, able to be kept in smaller mesh-roofed enclosures, on islands and in large open-topped enclosures. I am sure that, many years ago, they also had grivets in the drive-through monkey enclosure at Woburn Safari Park, although I can’t find anything now to support that.

The more I think about it, the more I think that the grivet may be one of my ideal monkeys - commonly-kept, small and highly sociable, able to be mixed with other species and represents the grassland biome rather than being another tropical forest primate.

Variations (if any): Finding images of variations among grivets is difficult online, as many people confuse both vervet and green monkeys with them, but it does seem there is some variation in the amount of fur in the neck ruff. I would also add a few different shades of brown, of varying intensity, on the animal’s backs.

References:
A mesh enclosure for grivet monkeys at Shepreth Wildlife Park (the last ones died off in 2021):

An open-topped enclosure for grivet monkeys:

A netted-over outdoor enclosure for grivet monkeys:

An island enclosure for grivet monkeys:

This huge forested enclosure mixes a troop of around 20 grivets (misnamed as green monkeys) with mandrills:

An old photograph of a mandrill at Chester Zoo grooming a grivet monkey:

A picture showing some of the species in the Magdeburg Zoo mix that also involves grivets:

A Zoolex page about the Magdeburg Zoo mix involving grivets (again, misnamed as green monkeys):
 
African spurred tortoise
Centrochelys sulcata

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Continents: Africa, possibly Asia
Countries: Burkina Faso, Central African Republic, Chad, Eritrea, Ethiopia, Mali, Mauritania, Niger, Nigeria, Senegal, Sudan; recent records from Saudi Arabia and Yemen may represent historical introduced animals

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Biomes: Desert, Grassland

This species lives in the Sahel, on the edge of the Sahara, and is especially linked to habitat with either permanent or seasonal water bodies. They can live on stabilised sand dunes and in areas with shrublands and high grasses.

Red List status: Endangered, with a declining population.

Captive presence: This is probably the most common species of tortoise in captivity. Zootierliste records exactly 400 zoos with them, with 376 zoos in Europe, 20 in Israel, 2 in Singapore and 2 in the UAE. There are no official listings I can find for North America, but they seem to be a commonly-kept species there as well. There are still two individuals (both females) in Australia.

Reasoning: Being probably the most common tortoise species in captivity has to count for something. They are also the world’s third-largest tortoise, with only the Galapagos and Aldabra giant tortoises outgrowing it. While there are plenty of choices for habitat tortoises, I would definitely say the African spurred is the most obvious missing species.

They are surprisingly versatile in how they can be kept – I have seen images of African spurred tortoises kept in indoor enclosures, in smaller outdoor spaces and in enormous paddocks. They can be kept in quite sizeable groups of their own kind, and so make for a surprisingly dynamic and interesting display species. They can also be kept in walkthrough exhibits. Their low mobility means they can be contained with surprisingly low and simple-looking barriers.

By virtue of their armoured shells and affable demeanours, African spurred tortoises are commonly mixed with all manner of species. Often in zoos they are kept with almost anything – I have seen pictures of these tortoises sharing with capybaras, wallabies, lemurs and petting zoo species among others. They have been mixed with large hoofstock such as zebras, antelopes, pygmy hippos, warthogs and okapis, ground-dwelling birds like ostrich and secretary bird, monitor lizards, fennec foxes, meerkats, crested porcupines and apparently at the Houston Zoo they were even kept with cheetahs.

If I were making a pack of animals for smaller zoos, or zoos just starting out, the African spurred tortoise would be a must-have. But they are far from being just a species for smaller places, with many large and famous zoos also displaying these impressive but easy-to-house tortoises.

A rather fun little thing that I recently discovered – rescued African spurred tortoises formerly kept as pets have been taken to Hawaii and turned loose in an enclosure to see if they can replace the grazing behaviour of a now-extinct turtle-headed duck. It seems it may be working, with the tortoises bringing noxious alien weeds under control.

Variations (if any): Most observable colour differences do seem to be due to dirtiness, so I would have just a single colour variant for this species.

References:
A fairly simple smaller enclosure for African spurred tortoises:

A grassy single-species enclosure for African spurred tortoises:

An African spurred tortoise enclosure with a very low barrier:

A spurred tortoise paddock with a simple fence design:

A low-fenced spurred tortoise paddock (foreground) separated from a larger enclosure for beisa oryx and lechwe:

A mixed-species paddock for spurred tortoises, zebra and lesser kudu:

A paddock for spurred tortoises, okapi and black duiker:

A mixed-species paddock for spurred tortoises and addax:

An outdoor glass-walled enclosure for spurred tortoises and rock monitors:

An indoor mixed enclosure for spurred tortoises, meerkats and crested porcupines:

An indoor desert enclosure for spurred tortoises, fennec foxes and free-flying birds:

A walkthrough outdoor enclosure for spurred tortoises, bush hyraxes and Cape ground squirrels:
 
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