New Animals For Commercial, Industry, And Science

Some species of animals were either brought back through De-Extinction or were genetically-engineered in order to survived, to become good pets, etc. in 2001-2014.

Dodo Birds
Dodo birds first started emerging as pets in the late 2007. They were mde de-extinct in 2007 by German scientists. Their intelligence much like that of pigeon's, passive nature and curiosity made them the most popular pet from 2008 to present. They are often most popular in young families of middle class workers and an average Dodo costs 30 Credits.

Thylacines
A group of scientists had brought the famous thylacine back to life through De-Extinction in 2014, and many were reintroduced to Tasmania, while some were favored as pets due to some of their similarities to dogs (behavior, size, etc.) and thylacines became popular pets, also the most popular (along with dogs).

Pet Tigers
While wild tigers are still currently endangered, the pet tigers, created in 2013 by a group of scientists, are becoming popular pets, and their population exploded due to their popularity. They resemble their wild ancestors, but are smaller, more peaceful, and less aggressive than endangered wild tigers. Pet tigers are not the only animals modified to be pets, foxes, coyotes, jackals, African wild dogs, lions, black bears, grizzly bears, jaguars, leopards, cheetahs, snow leopards, clouded leopards, servals, ocelots, bobcats, lynx, spotted hyenas, striped hyenas, mongooses, lemurs, monkeys (including spider monkeys, squirrel monkeys, colobus monkeys, and macaques), apes (including orangutans, chimpanzees, gorillas, and gibbons), wallabies, kangaroos, deer, and large rodents (including beavers, porcupines, capybaras, etc.) were also altered to be smaller (optional), peaceful, and less aggressive than their ancestors.

Robo-Cats
Some manufacturers in 2011 had invented artificial-intelligent robotic cats that acts as spies to track down terrorists or criminals. They have video recorders in their eyes to videotape on what had happened. They are most commonly used for police investigations and spying on enemies, but can be used as pets for owners who don't have enough money for real cats.

Glow-Pigs
People had problems on loosing their farm or pet pigs, so in 2006, the group of scientists had used Genetic-engineering to create pigs that glow in the dark, allowing people to find their pigs just in case if they get lost. The Glow-Pigs also have higher amount of protein, vitamins, and lower calories & fat.