List of introduced species in Mainland North America and Caribbean Islands

North America and the Caribbean Islands had histories of wide varieties of introduced species from the beginning and they have the largest collection of introduced species in the world, creating a melting biodiversity in the continent. Here's the list of the species that were introduced to mainland North America and the Caribbean islands.

Modern plants

 * Luminescent moss I (in the rest of North America)


 * Nonnative horsetails I


 * Modern ginkgo I


 * Monkey puzzle tree I


 * Gympie I


 * Ficus trees I


 * Buckthorn I


 * Deadly nightshade I


 * All known species of cattails/corndog grass I (in the entire North American continent)


 * All known species of tumbleweeds I (in the entire North American continent)


 * All known species of hickory trees I (in the entire North American continent)


 * All known species of willows I (in the entire North American continent)


 * Brazilian peppertree I


 * All known species of bromeliads I (in the entire North American continent)


 * Jumping bean plants I (in the rest of North America)


 * Cocoa tree I


 * Cape gum I


 * Fever tree I


 * Prickly acacia I


 * Red acacia I


 * Flat top acacia I


 * Umbrella thorn acacia I


 * False umbrella thorn I


 * Paperbark thorn I


 * Splendid thorn I


 * Whistling thorn I


 * Giraffe thorn I


 * Sweet thorn I


 * Indian thorn I


 * Mahua I


 * Indian-almond I


 * African myrrh I


 * Grandidier's baobab I


 * Japanese flowering crabapple I


 * Korean dogwood I


 * Winter cherry I


 * Japanese blue oak I


 * Japanese black pine I


 * Japanese white pine I


 * Japanese red cedar I


 * Korean red pine I


 * Common sunflower I (in the rest of North America)


 * Feral lime I


 * Feral lemon I


 * Feral orange I


 * Feral grapefruit I


 * Japanese pear I


 * Feral apple tree I


 * Wild apple tree I


 * Feral plum I


 * Ume I


 * Feral peach I


 * Common grape vine I


 * Wild pineapple I


 * Feral pineapple I


 * Tea plant I


 * Ghost pipe plant I


 * All known species of orchids I


 * Angel's trumpet I (note: unlike their ancestors, they are no longer deadly to touch or eat, due to genetic engineering, and they now also flourish well in cities and suburbs due to genetic engineering)


 * Doll's eye plant I (in the rest of North America) [note: unlike their ancestors, they are no longer deadly to touch or eat, due to genetic engineering, and they now also flourish well in cities and suburbs due to genetic engineering]


 * Pea I


 * Lettuce I


 * Feral carrot I


 * Feral corn I (in the rest of North America)


 * Pumpkin I (in the rest of North America)


 * Tomato I (in the rest of North America)


 * Eggplant I


 * Potato I (in the rest of North America)


 * Mangelwurzel I


 * Beetroot I


 * Sugar beet I


 * Turnip I


 * Radish I


 * Norway maple I


 * Brunsvigia I


 * All known species of Lygodium I (in the entire North American continent)


 * London plane I


 * Panicum I


 * Baynan fig I


 * Guava I


 * Bridal creeper I


 * Paterson's curse I


 * Koster's curse I (in the rest of North America)


 * Chrysanth I


 * Wolf's bane I (in the entire North American continent)


 * Wheat I (in the entire North American continent)


 * Oat I (in the entire North American continent)


 * Barley I (in the entire North American continent)


 * Scotch thistle I


 * Lantana I


 * Corpse flower I


 * Common hazel I


 * American hazelbush I (in the rest of North America)


 * Mulberry trees I (in the entire North American continent)


 * Choke cherry I (in the rest of North America)


 * Sour cherry I


 * Wild cherry I


 * Cherry blossom I


 * Blackberries I


 * Rocky Mountain raspberry I (in the rest of North America)


 * American red raspberry I (in the rest of North America)


 * European red raspberry I


 * Asian red raspberry I


 * Loganberry I


 * Boysenberry I


 * Oil palm I


 * Dandelion


 * Eurasian watermilfoil


 * Ice plant


 * Kapok I


 * Mountain tōtara I


 * Lowland tōtara I


 * New Zealand cedar I


 * Kāmahi I


 * Celery-top pine I


 * Snow totara I


 * Carex tussocks I


 * Chionochloa tussocks I


 * Festuca tussocks I


 * Poa tussocks I


 * Golden speargrass I


 * Mountain daisies I


 * Mount Cook Lilies I


 * Southern beeches I


 * Crown fern I


 * All known species of tree ferns I (in the entire North American continent)


 * All known species of Eucalypts I (in the entire North American continent)


 * New Zealand willowherb I


 * Common rhododendron I


 * Dame's rocket


 * Cow vetch


 * Hairy vetch


 * Japanese honeysuckle I


 * Armur honeysuckle


 * Multiflora rose


 * Purple loosestrife


 * Kudzu I


 * Oriental bittersweet


 * Autumn olive


 * Garlic mustard


 * Hydrilla


 * Water fern I


 * Water caltrop


 * Water Hyacinth I (eradicated)


 * Giant water lilies I


 * Water lettuce


 * Ipomoea I


 * Giant reed I


 * Poison hemlock


 * Giant salvinia


 * English ivy I


 * Tree of heaven I


 * Rockweed


 * Green sea fingers


 * Diffuse knapweed


 * Scotch broom


 * Johnson grass


 * Waterwheel I


 * Japanese sundew I


 * Cape sundew I


 * Spoon-leaved sundew I


 * Painted sundew I


 * Mexican butterwort I (in the rest of North America)


 * Common Asian bladderwort I


 * Common American bladderwort I (in the rest of North America)


 * Pimpernel sundew I


 * Venus flytrap I (in the rest of North America)


 * Sweet pitcher I (in the rest of North America)


 * Cane-brake pitcher I (in the rest of North America)


 * California pitcher I (in the rest of North America)


 * Purple pitcher I (in the rest of North America)


 * Southern marsh pitcher I


 * Tropical pitcher I


 * Protocarnivorous plant I


 * All known real species of seaweed I (note: they were genetically engineered to tolerate freshwater and brackish waters, not just saltwater, and were also modified to tolerated colder and warmer waters, as well as polluted waters, and were also genetically engineered to survive and flourish on land [making them grow upwards like in water], not just in water)


 * Common bamboo I (in California, Nevada, and Oregon)


 * Black bamboo I (in California, Oregon, Nevada, and Florida)


 * Giant bamboo I (in Florida only)


 * Hamilton's bamboo I (in California and Florida only)


 * Giant timber bamboo I (in California and Florida only)


 * White bamboo I (in California, Oregon, Nevada, and Florida)


 * Buddha's-belly bamboo I (in Florida only)


 * South American clumping bamboo I (in California and Florida only)


 * Atractantha I (in Florida only)


 * Vachellia I


 * Garlic I


 * Onion I


 * All known species of sequoia trees I (in the rest of North America)


 * Spruce I (in the rest of North America)


 * Oaks I (in the rest of North America)


 * Birch I (in the rest of North America)


 * African rainforest trees I (in most of USA, except the arctic regions)


 * Asian rainforest trees I (in most of USA, except the arctic regions)


 * South American rainforest trees I (in most of USA, except the arctic regions)


 * Tropical cycads & ferns I (in most of USA, except the arctic regions)


 * All known species of palm trees I (in most of USA, except the arctic regions)


 * Coconut trees I (in most of USA, except the arctic regions)


 * Bananna trees I (in most of USA, except the arctic regions)


 * Hawaiian plants I (in most of USA, except the arctic regions)


 * Nonnative sugarcanes I (in most of USA, except the arctic regions)


 * European roses I (in most of USA, except the desert and the arctic regions)


 * North American roses I (in the rest of USA, except the desert and the arctic regions)


 * Common Asian Fern Bamboo I


 * Giant Fern Bamboo I


 * Common Fern Bamboo I


 * Darwin's Fern Bamboo I


 * Fern Bamboo Of Life I


 * Greater African Fern Bamboo I


 * European Fern Bamboo I


 * Australian Fern Bamboo I


 * Cycad Bamboo I


 * Horsetail Bamboo I

Prehistoric plants

 * Common tree-like horsetails I


 * Greater tree-like horsetail I


 * Drepanophycales I


 * Scale tree-like moss I


 * Carboniferous seed ferns I


 * Prehistoric ginkgos I


 * Carboniferous conifers I


 * Greater cooksonias I


 * BBC's cooksonia I

Former fictional plants

 * Spitfire Tree I from the Future Is Wild documentary to real life North America


 * Grass Tree I from the Future Is Wild documentary to real life North America


 * Deathbottle I from the Future Is Wild documentary to real life North America


 * Lichen Tree I from the Future Is Wild documentary to real life North America


 * Coralizing red algae I (note: due to the introduction of reef gliders from the Future is Wild documentary universe to real life North American shorelines [being brought in America's shorelines around 1910s], sapient species/beings knew that reef gliders need their own food source, the former fictional species of red algae from the reef glider's home universe, so the coralizing red algae were introduced [possibly around 2 weeks after the reef glider's introduction to real life] as a result, fortunately, they have no impact to coral reefs, kelp forests, etc, and now coexist alongside coral reefs and other native habitats)


 * All known species of DinosaursRoar's dream plants I from DinosaursRoar's dream to real life North America (note: unlike their ancestors, the formerly aggressive plants that came from DinosaursRoar's dream are not aggressive, killers, nor evil, as the ones that are aggressive, predatory/killers, or evil aren't tolerated)


 * Speculative Evolution's plants I


 * Knuppe plants I


 * Phytomorphs I


 * Mundodendralis (aka massive jelly-like sea plant) I


 * Campanalamia (aka gripping eyed plant) I


 * North American witch-hazels I


 * Ungulate-eating plant I


 * Dorakorum I


 * Glowing mosses I


 * Glow tree I


 * Serenna veriformans I Jurassic Park franchise to real life/modern North America


 * Karacosis wutansis I Jurassic Park franchise to real life/modern North America


 * All known species of Algaphytes I


 * Octopus carnivorous plant (aka octopus tree plant) I


 * Shredder carnivorous plant (aka common shredder plant) I


 * Sunflora flower I


 * Pink nut palm I


 * Oddgrass and relatives I


 * Hoppylion I


 * Bellsprouting plant and relatives I


 * Blue Maltese tumbleweed I


 * Budrose (aka budrose plant or budrose flower) I


 * Lichen reef I


 * Yaro root I


 * Hearty herb I


 * Giant tomato I


 * Tomatoblob I (note: unlike their ancestors, they are no longer stubborn nor very unintelligent, despite having no brain, so this reduce the chance of them killing someone or something by accident)


 * Urban Future's grasses I


 * Flora colossus I from Guardians of the Galaxy films to real life North America


 * Red mountain-spike I


 * Plaque-bark tree I


 * Tube-grass I


 * Screeweed I


 * Cliff-polyp I


 * Aerophyte I


 * Gourd tree I


 * Jelly-bladder plant I


 * All of the known species of plants from Avatar film I (note: all species of plants from Avatar film were successfully brought to North America, even the Baja tickler, which was genetically modified so they don't poison the earth's atmosphere, so they now have no dangers towards native earth species and earth itself)


 * Sulfurian Balloon Plant I from Natural History of an Alien documentary to real life North America


 * Epona Pagoda Tree I from Natural History of an Alien documentary to real life North America


 * Blue Moon Pagoda Tree I from Extraterrestrial TV Documentary to real life North America


 * Blue Moon Balloon Plant I from Extraterrestrial TV Documentary to real life North America


 * Aurelian Water Lily I from Extraterrestrial TV Documentary to real life North America


 * Herbivorous flower I from Disney's Mars and Beyond to real life North America


 * Audrey II I from Little Shop Of Horrors 1986 film to real life Florida and California (note: unlike their ancestors, they could no longer talk as all of the talking Audrey IIs used curse words, which aren't tolerated by sapient beings, so they now only make grunting and groan sounds, they are also now small, only about as small as this newborn Audrey II to about as large as this young Audrey II being held by this human, so, therefore, are no longer dangerous and no longer could take over the world and eating everyone, so these North American Audrey IIs are now completely harmless, other than they can occasionally bite the legs or ankles of large animals and beings such as humans, dylanusids, horses, cattle, sheep, goats, deer, antelopes, hadrosaurs, iguanodonts, vampires, etc, to drink their blood, but has no effect to the individuals of the species and beings that were bitten by these tiny Audrey IIs)


 * African strangler plant I


 * Carnivorous Flower I (in southern Florida only)


 * Anger Berry I


 * Calm Berry I


 * Toot Fruit I


 * Smash Fruit I


 * Dark Fruit I


 * Magical golden flower (aka sun drop flower) I


 * Zhu Jiao plant I


 * Magical berry tree I from this video and this video to real life North America


 * Truffula tree (aka Seuss's tree) I from Dr. Suess's franchise to real life North America


 * Red-headed smurf-eating flower I


 * Yellow smurf-eating flower (aka Lost Village's smurf-eating flower) I


 * Kissing flower I


 * Boxing flower I


 * Meat tree I from Toriko anime series to real life North America


 * Beef tree I from imagination to real life North America


 * Bacon rose I from imagination to real life North America


 * Pizza plant I from imagination to real life North America


 * Burger flower I from imagination to real life North America


 * Spaghetti tree I from the Spaghetti Tree hoax to real life North America


 * Macaroni plant I from imagination to real life North America


 * Lasagna plant I from imagination to real life North America (note: it is a gigantic plant that [strangely] grows a huge lasagna-like flowering parts, just like real lasagna, it isn't deadly and tastes good, but unlike real lasagnas, it is healthy rather than unhealthy and can reach about 1 meter across to about 7 meters across)


 * Giant sandwich plant (aka world's largest sandwich) I from imagination to real life North America (note: it is a strange species of huge plant that grows a gigantic sandwich-like fruit, which isn't deadly and is healthy, just like the lasagna plant, and this plant can range in size from 4 meters across to 8 meters across)


 * Night howler I from Zootopia film to real life North America


 * Sea spinach I


 * Hoppip plant I


 * Bubbletip algae I


 * All known species of harmless central Earth's plants I from Journey to the Center of the Earth movie to real life North America


 * All known species of Spongebob's underwater plants I (note: they were genetically engineered to tolerate freshwater and brackish waters, not just saltwater, and were also modified to tolerated colder and warmer waters, as well as polluted waters, and were also genetically engineered to survive and flourish on land [making them grow upwards like in water], not just in water)


 * Man-Thing (aka plant creature) I (note: unlike their ancestors, they are no longer evil nor try to kill any sapient species/beings, as the ones that do so aren't tolerated, and there are now female Man-Things, not just males, so their kind could live on in real life North America)


 * Ya-te-veo from cryptozoology islands to real life North America

Monotremes and relatives

 * Common platypus I


 * Australian long-beaked echidna I


 * Australian short-beaked echidna I


 * South American echidna


 * Giant echidna I


 * Teinolophos I


 * Obdurodon I


 * Platypus-like Steropodon I


 * Coati-like Steropodon I


 * Speculative Evolution's Gondwanatherians I


 * Skeptid (aka kangaroo-like bipedal mammal or bipedal walking monotreme) I


 * Tailless platypus I


 * Carrion-eater platypus I


 * Duck-actor platypus (aka duck-like platypus) I


 * Bulldozer platypus I


 * Mergotery I


 * Antsistrotery I


 * Wood echidna I


 * Stegoechidna I


 * Dinosaurian Teritiary monotremes I


 * Common ground monotreme I


 * Greater ramphodon I


 * Diverse ramphodon I


 * Monotremed Triceratops (aka Mammalian Triceratops) I


 * Mammalian Parasaurolophus (aka Monotremish Parasaurolophus) I


 * Iguanodontian mammal (aka gray Iguanodontotherium) I


 * Sapient echidna I from Legend of the Guardians: The Owls of Ga'Hoole 2010 film to real life North America


 * Long-tailed echidna I


 * Mount Lofty bunyip I


 * Kangaplatypus I


 * Arctoplatypus I


 * Sand ambusher I


 * Sundrunning echidna I


 * Pygmy grassland echidna I


 * Steppe echidna (aka true giant echidna) I


 * Desert echidna I


 * Earth fish I


 * Spoonbill platypus I


 * Sawbill I


 * Leviapus I


 * Bottlenose delphinoid I


 * Beaked delphinoid I


 * Crested delphinoid I


 * Kelalogak I


 * Molechidna I


 * Short-thorned echidna I


 * Crested echidna I


 * Broadbill platypus I


 * Paddlepus I


 * Snow platypus I


 * Beaked otter (aka false otter platypus) I


 * Carpenter platypus I


 * False shrew (aka shrew-like egg-laying mammal) I


 * Pygmy egg-laying mammal I


 * Ant platypus I


 * Billdad I


 * Psygoldduck I


 * Lotudipus I


 * Giant herbivorous platypus I


 * Red-crested pouls I


 * Crowned Chi-chen I


 * Dogopus I


 * Tigerpus I


 * Weaselpus I


 * Sealpus I


 * Momitorpus I


 * Walrupus I


 * Gryffypus I


 * Speculative Evolution's monotremes I


 * Bunducky I


 * Montauk monotreme I (it is a species of monotreme which is a very bizarre amphibious marine mammal, having a turtle-like mouth, pig-like skin, and webbed dog-like feet, this is what the Montauk monotremes look like when they are alive)


 * Hodag I (note: it is a species of monotreme which is a carnivore, having a somewhat weird dinosaur-like appearance)


 * Furby I from 2005 Furby CGI TV series to real life North America


 * Giant echidna I


 * Tlaquanaru I


 * Platypus dog I


 * Platychidna I


 * Electypus I


 * Leucrota I


 * Ammuta I


 * Ammit I


 * Antarctican platycow I


 * Frog-mimicer I


 * Reptopus I


 * Ankylosaur-like monotreme (aka dog-sized armochidna) I


 * Jam (aka jamchidna) I


 * Link (aka Linkochidna) I


 * Holioid I (note: it is named because it resembles a true holio, but is completely harmless and does not create black holes, so it is now 100% harmless)


 * Babyfier (aka Babypus) I (note: unlike their ancestors, they lost their babyfying powder in their tails as they no longer turn anyone to babies, as the ones that do so are NOT tolerated by any sapient species/beings, they also don't have pacifiers as they aren't baby humans and they need to eat and communicate, they also have cute puppy-like barks and cat-like meows and purrs, they are omnivores that feed mainly on leaves, fruits, vegetables, roots, tubers, insects, non-deadly spiders, small fish, small non-deadly frogs, small lizards, small non-poisonous snakes, small birds, eggs, smaller mammals, carrion, and man-made food)


 * Digger (aka digchidna) I


 * Gotchu (aka gotchupus) I


 * Heckler (aka heckelpus) I


 * Boomer (aka boomerpus) I


 * All Todays echidna (aka toothy reptilian-looking echidna or mouth-opening scavenging echidna) I from the Deviantart series, All Todays to real life North America


 * Monotremed human I

Marsupials and relatives

 * Virginia opossum I (in the rest of North America)


 * Common opossum I


 * Andean opossum I


 * Anderson's four-eyed opossum I


 * Woolly opossum I


 * Brown four-eyed opossum


 * Lutrine opossum


 * Yapok I


 * Monito del monte I


 * Common brushtail possum I


 * Common ringtail possum I


 * Leadbeater's possum I


 * Striped possum I


 * Sugar glider I


 * Yellow-bellied glider I


 * Feathertail glider I


 * Greater glider I


 * Tasmanian devil I


 * Tree koala I (note: It was introduced to North American forests to control the already invasive eucalyptus trees and people are using koalas to help stop the spread of the invasive trees, but the koalas themselves have also became invasive species due to the lack of its native Australian predators)


 * Tiger quoll I


 * Short-nosed bandicoot I


 * Eastern barred bandicoot I


 * Northern brown bandicoot I


 * Greater biliby I


 * Common wombat I


 * Hairy-nosed wombat I


 * Common spotted cuscus I


 * Sulawesi bear cuscus I


 * Ground cuscus I


 * Sulawesi dwarf cuscus I


 * All known species of Australian potoroos I (note: they were genetically engineered to tolerate habitat loss and predators like foxes and such, so they are flourishing in North American habitats, including human settlements)


 * Quokka I


 * Eastern bettong I


 * Boodie I


 * Red-legged pademelon I


 * Agile wallaby I


 * Bennett's wallaby I


 * Brush-tailed rock wallaby I


 * Yellow-footed rock wallaby I


 * Common wallaroo I


 * Musky rat-kangaroo I


 * Goodfellow's tree-kangaroo I


 * Western grey kangaroo I


 * Eastern grey kangaroo I


 * Red kangaroo I


 * Diprotodon I


 * Procoptodon I


 * Meganarctos (aka giant ground koala) I


 * Marsupial gorilla I


 * Marsupial monkey I


 * Cavygos I


 * Thylacine I


 * Domestic Thylacine I


 * False Domestic Thylacine I


 * Thylacoline I


 * Common Alphadon I


 * Playing-Possum Alphadon I


 * Silver Alphadon I


 * Deltatheridium I


 * Sinodelphys I


 * Otter-Like Didelphodon I


 * Badger-Like Didelphodon I


 * Iguanoroo I


 * Wartkangaroo I


 * Canined kangaroo I


 * Humboldt glider I


 * Yellow kangaroo I


 * Ahuizotl opossum I


 * Koaleopard I (note: it is now much smaller than its ancestors, about the size of a jaguar, due to competition for territories and food)


 * Nean pocket zerda I


 * Chuckaboo I from After Man book series to real life North America


 * Giantala I from After Man book series to real life North America


 * Posset I from After Man book series to real life North America


 * Slobber I from After Man book series to real life North America


 * Hiri-Hiri I from After Man book series to real life North America


 * Common rangatooth I


 * Dusky fangaroo I


 * Great marsupial striger I


 * Brown marsupial striger I


 * Queensland marsupial striger I


 * Drop's thylacoleonid I


 * Greater Papuan wallabies I


 * Desert wallaby I


 * Dusky fangaroo I


 * Striped forsbeast I


 * False lemuroo I


 * Mirotherium I


 * Greater marsupial badger I


 * Marsupial whale I


 * Macroroo I


 * Kangafex I


 * Maned kangaroo I


 * Polar wallaby (aka woollaby) I


 * Pinecone tail I


 * Kite possum I


 * Queensland wolf I


 * Marsupial horse I


 * Great elewombat I


 * Ombat (aka terrier-size wombat) I


 * Allomaxodon I


 * Maxodon I


 * Dwarf maxodon I


 * Clash boaricoot I


 * Unda I


 * Giant water possum I


 * Booral I


 * Possum bear I


 * Blind cave opossum I


 * Yowieroo I


 * Snow wallaby I


 * Long-necked kangaroo I


 * Donkey kangaroo I


 * Knuckle-walking kangaroo I


 * Gibbon kangaroo I


 * Gliding kangaroo I


 * Gamba I


 * Cave joey I


 * Ravenous bladetooth I


 * Quillpossum I


 * Marsupial anteater I


 * Marsupial skunk I


 * Marsupial galago I


 * Marsupial mongoose I


 * Marsupial manatee I


 * Bandar I


 * Gnawtooth I


 * Gamba I


 * Porcupine paihamu I


 * Giant paihamu I


 * Common crocopossum I


 * Saw-toothed crocopossum I


 * Marsupial chupacabra I


 * Southern marsupial chupacabra I


 * Marsupial cow I


 * Pouchmouth I


 * Roonoceros I


 * Quadraroo I


 * Ursine cuscus I


 * Marsupial canine I


 * Marsupial pig I


 * Heavy kangaroo I


 * Marsupial lemur I


 * Marsupial sloth I


 * Ocean short-trunk kangaroo I


 * Greater island possums I


 * Rabbitroo possum I


 * Death possum I


 * Long-snouted bandicoot possum I


 * Australourus I


 * Trichopteryx I (note: it is a species of marsupial that can glide from tree to tree. It is very closely related to the cuscus, one of its cousins. In addition, the female of this species is capable of carrying two to three young in her pouch)


 * Night marsupial lemur I


 * Burgundy bandicoot I


 * Bladdernose kangaroo I


 * Gigaroo I


 * Hook-fingered kangaroo I


 * Carnivorous wallaby I


 * Marsupial sharp toother I


 * Mirriuula I


 * Elephant kangaroo I


 * Fat-tailed marsupial dormouse I


 * Marsupial spiketail I


 * Longteeth wombat I


 * Ostrich kangaroo I


 * Day marsupial lemur I


 * Marsupial shrew I


 * Marsupial hermin I


 * Doctor caenolestes I


 * Erucotherium I


 * Filicide embryotherium I


 * Mole opossum I


 * Sarcotherium I


 * Thorn-backed opossum I


 * Speculative Evolution's Nesodelphians I


 * Speculative Evolution's Metatherians I


 * Zwim I


 * Real marsupial panda I


 * Lesser marsupial panda I


 * Marsupial biruang I


 * Osodontidaes I


 * Tufted courier wallaby I


 * Tachyodon I


 * Fairy koala I


 * Chancebat I


 * Mew I


 * Mewtwo I (note: unlike their ancestors, their spinal cords (tubes) no longer protrude out of their shoulders or their neck and head, so these tubes are now inside their bodies like most other mammals)


 * Mega Mewtwo X I (note: they are now a completely different species from common Mewtwos and Mega Mewtwo Ys, so they couldn't interbred with them and so each species could continue to live on as purebreds on Earth)


 * Mega Mewtwo Y I (note: they are now a completely different species from common Mewtwos and Mega Mewtwo Xs, so they couldn't interbred with them and so each species could continue to live on as purebreds on Earth)


 * Marsupial human I (note: it is a descendant of a prehistoric group of opossums that evolved into a human-like marsupial with varied diets, bipedalism, sapience, etc)


 * Koalaman I


 * Marsupial bat I


 * Marsupial seal I


 * Opossumman I


 * Sapient wombatman I


 * Ground koala I


 * Humboldt glider I


 * TFIF opossums I


 * Long-necked bunyip I


 * Namrodo I


 * Wishy-Washy (aka Wishala) I


 * Phantasmo (aka phantasmoroo) I (note: unlike their ancestors, they no longer cause mischief nor they could invade/possess any objects, as the ones that do so aren't tolerated by any sapient species/beings, so they are completely peaceful and harmless)


 * Fibber (aka fibberala) I


 * Sample (aka Sampleroo) I


 * True marsupial otters I


 * Greater marsupial pterodactyl I


 * Diverse marsupial pterodactyls I


 * Earless marsupial pterodactyls I


 * Rodent-like koala I


 * All known species of all todays kangaroos I from the Deviantart series, All Todays, to real life North America


 * Dinosaur-like kangaroo I


 * Reptilian-looking aquatic kangaroo I


 * Reptilian kangaroo I


 * Reptilian opossum I


 * All Todays Tasmanian devil from the Deviantart series, All Todays, to real life North America


 * All Todays Looney Tune-ish Tasmanian devil I from the Deviantart series, All Todays, to real life North America


 * Lawn opossum I


 * Tree jumper I


 * Town kangaroo I


 * Urban marsupial otter I

Mongooses and relatives

 * Stripe-necked mongoose I


 * Small Asian mongoose I (in California and Florida only)


 * Black mongoose I


 * Slender mongoose I


 * Indian brown mongoose


 * Indian gray mongoose I


 * Egyptian mongoose I


 * Yellow mongoose I


 * Crab-eating mongooses I


 * Fossa I


 * Falanouc


 * Striped civet I


 * Ring-tailed mongoose I


 * Giant-striped mongoose I


 * Narrow-striped mongoose I


 * Brown-tailed mongoose I


 * Asian palm civet I


 * Small Indian civet I


 * Binturong I


 * Banded palm civet


 * African palm civet


 * Otter civet I


 * Masked palm civet


 * Spotted linsang I


 * Banded linsang


 * African civet


 * African linsang


 * Common genet I


 * Cape genet


 * Pardine genet I


 * Giant forest genet I


 * Haussa genet


 * Ethiopian genet I


 * Common dwarf mongoose


 * White-tailed mongoose I


 * Meller's mongoose


 * Common kusimanse I


 * Wild meerkat I


 * Feral meerkat


 * Ghole I from After Man Book and Documentary series to real life North America


 * Climbing meerkat I


 * Silvery harbinger I


 * Dire suricate I


 * African antkivette I


 * Asiatic antkivette I


 * Tenturun I


 * Madagascar giant civet I


 * Fox-mimicing civet I


 * Arboreal tree civet I


 * Hawaiian cat (aka cat mimicer) I


 * Hippo civet I


 * Civhippo I


 * Civipotamus I


 * Long-snouted civhale I


 * Common civwhale I


 * Diverse civhales I


 * Giant filter civhale I


 * Yaarp (aka yarpkat) I


 * Sparky (aka spargoose) I


 * Monkey-tailed genet I


 * Pardinia I


 * Leomongus I


 * Kurithi I


 * Cetofelisomimus I


 * Sapient meerkat I (note: unlike their ancestors, they are no longer scared of any sapient species/beings nor are they ignorant about everything including the emvironment, they also now live with and work with any sapient species/beings, except vampires due to bloody conflicts with them, they also now live for about 100 years, they can talk like any sapient species/beings and can speak in many languages including English)


 * Yard mongoose I

Hyenas and relatives

 * Striped hyena


 * Spotted hyena


 * Brown hyena


 * Aardwolf I


 * Manged cave hyena


 * Spotted cave hyena


 * Running hyena


 * Liena I from fictional future world's North America to modern/real life North America


 * Long-necked hyena I


 * Porcupine gnoll (aka porcupine hyena) I


 * Gorgon's hyena I


 * Marafil I


 * Long-legged hyena I


 * Hyaena I (not to be mistaken for modern-styled hyenas)


 * Bear hyenas I


 * Persian necrophagonax I


 * Fishing hyena I


 * Diverse hyenas I


 * Chihena I


 * Horse hyena I


 * Ursine hyena I


 * Sapient hyena I (note: unlike their ancestors, they are no longer aggressive nor scared of any sapient species/beings and no longer take everything as jokes, unlike in the Lion King franchise they came from, and they now live with and work with any sapient species/beings, except vampires due to bloody conflicts with them, they also now live for about 100 years and not less than 50s-40s anymore [possibly due to modern medicine on sapient species/beings], they can talk like any sapient species and can speak in many languages including English)


 * Retro (aka Retroena) I

Dylanuses and relatives

 * Domestic dylanus I (introduced in Florida only, native to most of North America like their wild ancestors)


 * Indian giant dylanus I (introduced to replace the extinct Pleistocene American giant dylanus)


 * Madagascar giant dylanus I (introduced to replace the extinct Pleistocene steppe dylanus)


 * New Zealand giant dylanus I (introduded ro replace the extinct Pleistocene marbled dylanus)


 * Madagascar trumpet-nosed dylanus I (introduced to replace the extinct Pleistocene lowland dylanus)


 * European dylanus I (introduced to replace the extinct Pleistocene highland dylanus)


 * African dylanus I (introduced to replaced the extinct Pleistocene southern desert dylanus)


 * Asian dylanus I (introduced unintentionally after being stowed away from native eastern Asia to replace the extinct Pleistocene Joc's dylanus)


 * Long-eared dylanus I (introduced to Nevada, Oregon, California, and Arizona to replace the extinct Pleistocene Jefferson's dylanus)


 * Florida running dylanus I (introduced to Oregon, Texas, Nevada, New Mexico, Utah, Arizona, and California to replace the extinct Pleistocene western running dylanus)


 * Phantom I


 * European hunchback I


 * Chinese hunchback I


 * Darwin's hunchback I


 * Georgian hunchback I


 * African hunchback I


 * Siberian hunchback I


 * Pakistan hunchback I


 * Japanese hunchback I


 * Taiwanese hunchback I


 * Indian hunchback I


 * Bladdernosed hunchback I


 * Greater hunchback I


 * Maverick Hunters I (from native California to the rest of North America)


 * Protoman I (from native Florida to the rest of North America)


 * Bass.EXEs I (from native New Jersey to the rest of North America)


 * Hibogibbus I (introduced to replace the extinct Allohomodon)


 * Homodon (reintroduced)


 * Lutonsotherium (reintroduced)


 * Cetofelis (reintroduced)


 * Marthanus (reintroduced)


 * Bass I


 * Megaman I


 * Megaman.EXE I


 * Protoman.EXE I


 * Megaman-dylanus I


 * Mega-Dylanus X I


 * Proto-Dylanus I


 * Quint I


 * Enker I


 * Ballade I


 * Crashman I


 * Quickman I


 * Geminiman I


 * Shadowman I


 * Snakeman I


 * Starman I


 * Slashman I


 * Tornadoman I


 * Fuseman I


 * Blastman I


 * Zoan's Quickman (aka Zoan Quickman mimic) I


 * Lustinsotherium I


 * Spitter dylanus (aka Dilophosaurus-spit dylanus) I


 * Robo-armed dylanus (aka Doc Ock-armed dylanus) I


 * Dylanzilla (aka elephant-sized herbivorous dylanus) I


 * Hyena-dylanus I


 * Eagle-winged dylanus (aka bird-winged dylanus) I


 * Flashlight dylanus I (from New Pleistocene series to real life North America)


 * Sapient dylanus I from the fictional future world's North America to real life North America


 * Predator dylanus I from the fictional future world's North America to real life North America


 * Saber-toothed dylanus I from the fictional future world's North America to real life North America


 * Marine dylanus I from the fictional future world to real life North America


 * Flying dylanus I from the fictional future world to real life North America


 * Underground dylanus I from the fictional future world's Europe to real life North America


 * Space dylanus I from the fictional future world to real life North America


 * All known species of Dinonuses I from speculative evolution world to real life North America


 * All known species of all todays dylanuses I from the Deviantart series, All Todays, to real life North America


 * Were-Maverick Hunter I from mythical world to real life North America


 * Common Rushman I


 * Greater Rushman I


 * Beatman I


 * Trebleman I


 * Kelpie I


 * Ralts I from Pokemon series to real life North America


 * Kirlia I from Pokemon series to real life North America


 * Gardevoir I from Pokemon series to real life North America


 * Gallade I from Pokemon series to real life North America (note: there are now female Gallades, not just male Gallades, so their species could live on in real life)


 * Ralgardalladia (aka feline dylanus) I (note: this species is named due to its resemblance to Ralts, Kirlia, Gardevoir, and Gallade, with offspring resembling Ralts, juveniles resembling Kirlias, females resembling Gardevoirs, and males resembling Gallades)


 * Werecats I (note: werecats actually transforms from wild dylanuses and/or domestic dylanuses, not from humans, unlike in myths, during the full moon if bitten by a werecat of the same species)
 * Common werecat I
 * Weretiger I
 * Wereleopard I
 * Werejaguar I
 * Werelion I
 * Werelynx I
 * Werecheetah I


 * Sewage dylanus I from the DeviantArt series, Urban Future, to real life North America


 * Clones of Timmy Turner I (note: there are now female counterparts of this being, so their species could live on in real life North America, they are also no longer considered as humans as their DNA shows, so they don't grow any beards, mustaches, get obese, etc. that are only found on humans, so they are now known to be related to dylanusids)


 * Ghost I (note: since their introduction into real life, all people, dylanuses, and other humanoids that die will live forever when they become ghosts themselves)


 * Angel I

Pinnipeds and relatives

 * Southern elephant seal I (in the Great Lakes and California's Lake Tahoe)


 * Nortern elephant seal I (in the Great Lakes and California's Lake Tahoe)


 * Common walrus I (in the Great Lakes and California's Lake Tahoe)


 * California sea lion I (in the Great Lakes and California's Lake Tahoe)


 * Northern fur seal I (in the Great Lakes and California's Lake Tahoe)


 * Skull Island fur seal I (in the Great Lakes, California's Lake Tahoe, and in coastlines off the coast of Oregon, Washington, Baja California, and California)


 * Grey seal I (in the Great Lakes and California's Lake Tahoe)


 * Harbor seal I (in the Great Lakes and California's Lake Tahoe)


 * Hawaiian monk seal I (in the Great Lakes and California's Lake Tahoe)


 * Leopard seal I (in the Great Lakes and California's Lake Tahoe)


 * Weddel seal I (in the Great Lakes and California's Lake Tahoe)


 * Baikal seal I (in the Great Lakes and California's Lake Tahoe)


 * Ladoga seal I (in the Great Lakes and California's Lake Tahoe)


 * Sapient leopard seal I from Happy Feet film series to real life North America (note: unlike their ancestors, their talking can now be heard by dylanusids and sapient species/beings, they could no longer breed with any species of non-sapient seals due to their DNAs being too different, they no longer bully nor kill penguins as sapient species/beings bullying or killing others is not tolerated by other sapient species/beings, also unlike the films they came from, they tolerate penguin species as well as dancing, they also now know all about humans, who they once considered as "aliens", and what they have and make, they also now work and live in peace with all sapient species and beings, except vampires)


 * Sapient elephant seal I from Happy Feet film series to real life North America (note: unlike their ancestors, their talking can now be heard by dylanusids and sapient species/beings, they could no longer breed with any species of non-sapient seals due to their DNAs being too different, they no longer bully penguins as sapient species/beings bullying or killing others is not tolerated by other sapient species/beings, also unlike the films they came from, they tolerate penguin species as well as dancing, they also now know all about humans, who they once considered as "aliens", and what they have and make, they also now work and live in peace with all sapient species and beings, except vampires)


 * Terralion I


 * Spotted dolpheal I


 * Greater leoseal I


 * Spotted snakeseal I


 * Whale-mimic killer orcseal I


 * King seal I (in the Great Lakes and California's Lake Tahoe)


 * Dwarf otterseal I


 * Crocodile seal I


 * Killer seal I


 * Shrimp-eater I (in the Great Lakes and California's Lake Tahoe)


 * Plesiolion I


 * Kelpeater (aka kelp-eating pinniped or common herbivorous pinniped) I


 * Long-necked seal I (in the Great Lakes and California's Lake Tahoe)


 * Long-necked sea lion I (in the Great Lakes and California's Lake Tahoe)


 * Plesioseal I


 * Common water horse I (in the Great Lakes and California's Lake Tahoe)


 * Greater water horse I (in the Great Lakes and California's Lake Tahoe)


 * Common herbivorous cowseal I (in the Great Lakes and California's Lake Tahoe)


 * Greater herbivorous cowseal I (in the Great Lakes and California's Lake Tahoe)


 * Mosasaur-like freshwater seal I


 * Krakken I (in the Great Lakes and shorelines Central America, Mexico, Baja California, Washington, California, and Oregon) (note: Contrary to its name, The Krakken isn't a giant cephalopod, but a future cousin of the Sea lion. Filling the similar role to real life whales, they have evolved a similar structure to their baleen from their whiskers. The male is smaller than the female. These are the largest creatures seen in the film they originally came from. Adults have no enemies, but their offspring are vulnerable to predators (like the Jabberwockys), which is why they live in family groups)


 * Hairmouth I


 * Deep diving walrus I


 * Bokiru I


 * Saber-toothed seal (aka vampire seal) I (note: this harbor seal-sized seal species is named because of its large sharp canine teeth, which are used not only for cutting down windpipes of animals [from crow-sized ones to horse-sized ones], and not only eats meat, but also to suck the blood out of animals larger than itself [from horse-sized ones to gigantic whale-sized ones], making these seals infamous and the scariest of all marine mammals, but fortunately, they pose no threat to any sapient species/beings)


 * Unicorn seal I


 * Fantail seal I


 * Sapient sea lion I from Finding Dory movie to real life North America (note: unlike their ancestors, their talking can now be heard by any other sapient species/beings, they are also as smart as humans and now work with and live with any sapient species/beings, except vampires)


 * Sea glider (aka glider seal) I


 * Domestic seal I


 * Walwhale I


 * Common landeal I


 * Reptilian-looking gray bear-seal I


 * Green reptilian land walrus I from All Todays series to real life/modern North America


 * Reptilian-looking blue-green bear-seal I


 * Tetraseal I


 * Spheal I (note: unlike their ancestors, they no longer evolve into Sealeo as they are now a completely different species entirely, baby spheals are also a little smaller than half the size of the adult spheals)


 * Sealeo I (note: unlike their ancestors, they no longer evolve from Spheal nor evolve into Walrein as they are now a completely different species entirely, baby sealeos are also a little smaller than half the size of the adult spheals)


 * Walrein I (note: unlike their ancestors, they no longer evolve from Sealeo as they are now a completely different species entirely, baby walreins are also a little smaller than half the size of the adult spheals)


 * Frenchfry (aka fryseal) I


 * Horker I from Elder Scrolls franchise to real life Great Lakes, California's Lake Tahoe, and coastlines of Oregon, California, Baja California, Washington, western Canada, Alaska, and Mexico


 * River lion I


 * River seal I

Whales and relatives

 * Amazon river dolphin I (in Oregon, Arizona, Nevada, Utah, Alabama, Georgia, Florida, Louisiana, Mississippi, Texas, Utah, Colorado, Wyoming, New Mexico, Arizona, Nevada, California, and Oregon)


 * South Asian river dolphin I (in Louisiana, Mississippi, Oregon, Arizona, Nevada, California, Alabama, Georgia, and Florida)


 * Common killer whale I (in The Great Lakes and California's Lake Tahoe)


 * White killer whale I (in California's Lake Tahoe only)


 * False killer whale I (in California's Lake Tahoe only)


 * Pygmy killer whale I (in California's Lake Tahoe only)


 * Melon-headed whale I (in California's Lake Tahoe only)


 * Commerson's dolphin I (in The Great Lakes and California's Lake Tahoe)


 * Atlantic spotted dolphin I (in The Great Lakes and California's Lake Tahoe)


 * Striped dolphin I (in The Great Lakes and California's Lake Tahoe)


 * Common dolphin I (in The Great Lakes and California's Lake Tahoe)


 * Pacific Bottlenose dolphin I (in The Great Lakes and California's Lake Tahoe)


 * Wholphin I (in California's Lake Tahoe only)


 * Sapient dolphin I from Finding Nemo and Finding Dory movies to real life North America (note: unlike their ancestors, their talking can now be heard by any other sapient species/beings, they are also as smart as humans and now work with and live with any sapient species/beings, except vampires)


 * Two species of pilot whales I (in The Great Lakes and California's Lake Tahoe)


 * White pilot whale I (in California's Lake Tahoe only)


 * White beluga whale I (in The Great Lakes and California's Lake Tahoe)


 * Black beluga whale I (in California's Lake Tahoe only)


 * Sapient beluga whale I from Finding Dory movie to real life North America (note: unlike their ancestors, their talking can now be heard by any other sapient species/beings, they are also as smart as humans and now work with and live with any sapient species/beings, except vampires)


 * horned narwhal I (in The Great Lakes and California's Lake Tahoe)


 * Common narwhal I (in California's Lake Tahoe only)


 * Harbour porpoise I (in The Great Lakes and California's Lake Tahoe)


 * Vaquita I (in The Great Lakes and California's Lake Tahoe) [unlike native ones in the Gulf of California, vaquitas in the Great Lakes and Lake Tahoe are thriving well, even with pollution and other human activities]


 * Finless porpoise I (in The Great Lakes and California's Lake Tahoe) [unlike native ones in Asia, finless porpoises in the Great Lakes and Lake Tahoe are thriving well, even with pollution and other human activities]


 * Sperm whale I (in The Great Lakes only)


 * Pygmy sperm whale I (in The Great Lakes and California's Lake Tahoe)


 * Dwarf sperm whale I (in The Great Lakes and California's Lake Tahoe)


 * Humpback whale I (in The Great Lakes and California's Lake Tahoe)


 * Gray whale I (in The Great Lakes and California's Lake Tahoe)


 * Common minke whaleI (in The Great Lakes and California's Lake Tahoe)


 * Antarctic minke whaleI (in The Great Lakes and California's Lake Tahoe)


 * Fin whale I (in The Great Lakes only)


 * Blue whale I (in The Great Lakes only)


 * All known "true" right whale species I (in The Great Lakes and California's Lake Tahoe)


 * Pygmy right whale I (in The Great Lakes and California's Lake Tahoe)


 * Common hippopotamus I (in marshes and swamps of Mississippi, New Mexico, California, Louisiana, Texas, Utah, Arizona, Oregon, Nevada, Alabama, Georgia, and Florida) (note: Unlike native ones in Africa, hippos in North America are peaceful, rather than aggressive)


 * Pygmy hippopotamus I (in marshes and swamps of Mississippi, New Mexico, California, Louisiana, Texas, Utah, Arizona, Oregon, Nevada, Alabama, Georgia, and Florida)


 * Giant hippopotamus I (in marshes and swamps of Mississippi, New Mexico, Louisiana, California, Texas, Utah, Arizona, Oregon, Nevada, Alabama, Georgia, and Florida) (note: Unlike native ones in Africa, hippos in North America are peaceful, rather than aggressive)


 * Domestic hippopotamus I (in marshes and swamps of Mississippi, New Mexico, Louisiana, California, Texas, Utah, Arizona, Oregon, Nevada, Alabama, Georgia, and Florida)


 * Satan's Whale I (in the coastlines of California, Oregon, an Baja California)


 * Dwarf killer whale I (in the coastlines of California, Oregon, an Baja California)


 * Blunt-snouted dolphin (aka blunt-snoted pilot whale) I (in the coastlines of California, Oregon, an Baja California)


 * Dolphin-Tailed Odobenocetops I (in the Great Lakes, California's Lake Tahoe, and coastlines of California, Oregon, an Baja California)


 * Paddle-Tailed Odobenocetops I (in the Great Lakes, California's Lake Tahoe, and coastlines of California, Oregon, an Baja California)


 * Cetotherium I (in the Great Lakes, California's Lake Tahoe, and coastlines of California, Oregon, an Baja California)


 * All known species of formerly extinct Balaenoptera whales I


 * Nanocetus I (in the Great Lakes, California's Lake Tahoe, and coastlines of California, Oregon, and Baja California)


 * Great Brygmophyseter I (in all of the oceans around North America)


 * White-Headed Brygmophyseter I (in all of the oceans around North America)


 * Livyatan I (in all of the oceans around North America)


 * Aulophyseter I (in all of the oceans around North America)


 * Acrophyseter I (in all of the oceans around North America)


 * Orycterocetus I (in all of the oceans around North America)


 * Zygophyseter I (in all of the oceans around North America)


 * Maiabalaena I (in all of the oceans around North America)


 * Common Dorudon I (in the Great Lakes, California's Lake Tahoe, and coastlines of California, Oregon, and Baja California)


 * Greater Dorudon I (in the Great Lakes, California's Lake Tahoe, and coastlines of California, Oregon, and Baja California)


 * Whale-like Dorudon I (in the Great Lakes, California's Lake Tahoe, and coastlines of California, Oregon, and Baja California)


 * Common Basilosaurus I (in the Great Lakes only)


 * Blubbery Basilosaurus I


 * Greater Basilosaurus I


 * Whale-like Basilosaurus I (in the Great Lakes only)


 * Lesser Rodhocetus I


 * Greater Rodhocetus I


 * Georgiacetus I


 * Kutchicetus I


 * Asian Ambulocetus I


 * European Ambulocetus I


 * Coastal Ambulocetus I


 * Gray Ambulocetus I


 * Society Ambulocetus I


 * Common Pakicetus I


 * Greater Pakicetus I


 * Indohyus I


 * Greater European hippopotamus I


 * Giant European hippopotamus I


 * Gorgon's hippopotamus I


 * Crete dwarf hippopotamus I (note: unlike their ancestors, due to genetic engineering, they now tolerate native American and nonnative predators, by being aggressive towards them [but not to sapient species/beings], so their species will survive)


 * Sicilian hippopotamus I (note: unlike their ancestors, due to genetic engineering, they now tolerate native American and nonnative predators, by being aggressive towards them [but not to sapient species/beings], so their species will survive)


 * Cyprus dwarf hippopotamus I (note: unlike their ancestors, due to genetic engineering, they now tolerate native American and nonnative predators, by being aggressive towards them [but not to sapient species/beings], so their species will survive)


 * Malagasy dwarf hippopotamus I (note: unlike their ancestors, due to genetic engineering, they now tolerate native American and nonnative predators, by being aggressive towards them [but not to sapient species/beings], so their species will survive)


 * Anthracotherium I


 * Libycosaurus I


 * Merycoporamus I


 * Common Entelodont I


 * Pygmy Entelodont I


 * Greater Entelodont I


 * Red-Headed Entelodont I


 * Hippo-Faced Entelodont (aka Gentle Herbivorous Entelodont) I


 * Hippo-Skinned Entelodont I


 * Red-Crowned Entelodont I


 * Boney-Cheeked Entelodont I


 * Giant Entelodont I


 * Grassland Hastadont (aka Horned Entelodont or Saber-Toothed Entelodont) I


 * Herbivorous Entelodont I


 * Entelodont Andrewsarchus I


 * Mesonychid Andrewsarchus I


 * Grizzly Andrewsarchus I


 * Pygmy Mesonychid I


 * Greater Mesonychid I


 * Slowpowpotamus I


 * Semiaquatic river dolphins I


 * Semiaquatic Basilosaurid I


 * Whalehead (aka omnivorous fully-terrestrial bear-whale) I


 * Semiaquatic eared whale I


 * Tyrannudontotherium I


 * Hyaenodontotherium I


 * State Georgia river dolphin I


 * Killer river dolphin I


 * African saw-toothed river dolphin I


 * Long-necked river dolphin I


 * Bower's treewhale I


 * Qucha (aka common sapient dolphin) I


 * Koloha (aka giant orca-like sapient dolphin) I


 * Moon-like whale I


 * Barbidont I


 * Dolphin ray I


 * Hippopotopod I


 * Huburalut I (in the Great Lakes and California's Lake Tahoe)


 * Alula whale I (in the Great Lakes and California's Lake Tahoe)


 * Anbonacetus I


 * Huburalut I


 * Martian whale I (in the Great Lakes only)


 * Common high-finned sperm whale I (in the Great Lakes and California's Lake Tahoe)


 * Antarctican high-finned sperm whale I (in the Great Lakes and California's Lake Tahoe)


 * Double-finned whale I (in the Great Lakes and California's Lake Tahoe)


 * Bloop I (in the Pacific ocean and the Atlantic ocean)


 * Leviawhale I


 * Wailmerlord I


 * Gambo I (in the Pacific ocean and the Atlantic ocean)


 * Long-tailed serpentwhale I (in the Pacific ocean and the Atlantic ocean)


 * Razorback dolphin I


 * Sawtoothed dolphin I


 * Short-billed narwhal I


 * Porray I


 * Bird-billed whale I


 * Croco's Ottterwhale I


 * Night dolphin (aka nocturnal dolphin and deep-sea dolphin) I


 * Cetaceoid I (in the coasts off of California and Baja California, the Great Lakes, and California's Lake Tahoe)


 * Sirenwhale (aka Mermaidwhale) I


 * Microwhale (aka tiny sperm whale or cat-sized whale) I (note: it is the smallest whale species on Earth and the most adaptable, being freshwater tolerant and saltwater tolerant, as well as having the ability to feed on any fish, crustaceans, etc)


 * Ketos I (in the Great Lakes, and California's Lake Tahoe)


 * Pigokeels I (in the coasts off of California and Baja California, the Great Lakes, and California's Lake Tahoe)


 * Boar-snouted dolphin I


 * Zebra whale I


 * Titan dolphin I from the Future Is Wild virtual reality to real life North America


 * Dolphin predator I from the Future Is Wild virtual reality to real life North America


 * Land varanid dolphin I


 * Amphibious dolphin predator I


 * Kelperycete I


 * Ground whale I


 * Bearded whale I (in the Great Lakes and California's Lake Tahoe)


 * Killer dolphin I


 * Fish-shaped dolphin I


 * Dwarf herbivorous whale I


 * Death whale I (in the Pacific ocean and the Atlantic ocean)


 * Island-backed whale I (in the Pacific ocean and the Atlantic ocean)


 * Finger-flippered whale I (in the Great Lakes and California's Lake Tahoe)


 * Sea boar I (in the Great Lakes and California's Lake Tahoe)


 * Elephant mimic whale I (in the Pacific ocean and the Atlantic ocean)


 * Snakewhale I (in the Pacific ocean and the Atlantic ocean)


 * Little blue hippopotamus I


 * Juggernaut hippopotamus I


 * Common woolly hippopotamus I


 * Greater woolly hippopotamus I


 * Wandering hippopotamus I


 * Carnopotamus I


 * Sauropod-like hippopotamus I


 * Minosarchus I


 * Wendisarchus I


 * Dinosarchus I


 * Cannonball (aka cannonpotamus) I


 * Sharp-tooth predatory beluga I


 * Dolphin-snouted sperm whale I


 * Reptilian-looking sperm whale I


 * Midnight cuttlevenator I


 * Reptilian paddle-tailed whale I


 * Clawed reptowhales I


 * Terrestrial burrowing furry whale I


 * Alienoid river dolphin I


 * Mosasaurian bottlenose dolphin I


 * Reptilian bottlenose dolphin I


 * Reptile-like bottlenose dolphin I


 * Greater reptilowhales I


 * Reptilian porpoise I


 * Reptilian orca I


 * Reptilian river dolphin I


 * Mosawhale I


 * Terrestrial digging dolphin (aka mole dolphin) I from Deviantart series, All Todays, to real life North America


 * Webbed dolphin (aka Ambulocetus-like amphibious dolphin) I from Deviantart series, All Todays, to real life North America


 * Four-flippered dolphin (aka Pliosaur-like dolphin) I from Deviantart series, All Todays, to real life North America


 * Marine fingered right whale I


 * Bug-jaw I


 * Mosasorca I


 * Mosasaur-like whales I


 * Crested jormunithan I


 * Jaw-splitting death whale I


 * Outdated-looking gentle hippopotamus I from DeviantArt's series All Todays to real life North America


 * Hairy earless hippopotamus I


 * Carnivorous hippopotamus I


 * Red-headed meat-eater-potamus I


 * Brontusk I


 * Megathere-like predatory reptilian hippopotamus I


 * Megapredatory reptilian hippopotamus I


 * Bipedal dinosaurian hippopotamus I


 * Clawed carnivorous hippopotamus I


 * High-crested carnivorous hippopotamus I


 * Red-jawed reptilian hippopotamus I


 * Bipedal reptilian Andrewsarchus I


 * Whalewolf I


 * Lemuracetotheres I


 * Gigantocetotheres I


 * Sealtacean I


 * Tursiopods I


 * Stegodolphins I


 * Carnotacean I


 * Catursuid I


 * Enceladolphins I


 * Swamp dolphin I


 * Dwarf humpback I


 * Hipposaurus I

Rhinoceroses and relatives

 * White rhinoceros (in California, Oregon, Nevada, and Arizona)


 * Black rhinoceros (in California only)


 * Indian rhinoceros (in California, Nevada, and Arizona)


 * Javan rhinoceros (in Florida only)


 * Sumatran rhinoceros (in Florida only)


 * American Rhinoceros (in the rest of North America)


 * Giant-Horned Rhinoceros (in Northern USA and most of Canada)


 * Great woolly rhinoceros (were brought back and were introduced to the Great Plains, Canada, and Alaska, and they are spreading to most of North America)


 * White-fronted woolly rhinoceros


 * Polar woolly rhinoceros


 * Greater Elasmotherium (were brought back and were introduced to the Great Plains and are spreading to most of North America)


 * Tawny Elasmotherium


 * Southeastern Elasmotherium


 * Menoceras (were brought back and were reintroduced to southern North America and were introduced to California)


 * Metaynodon (were brought back and were reintroduced to swamplands and marshlands of the both middle and western parts of North America and were introduced to swamplands and marshlands of eastern parts of North America)


 * Subhyracodon (were brought back and reintroduced to middle parts of USA and were introduced to Nevada, Arizona, Oregon, and California)


 * Juxia (were brought back and were introduced to western and eastern North American areas)


 * Forstercooperia (were brought back and were introduced to California)


 * Wild Paraceratherium (were brought back and were introduced to California, Oregon, Arizona, and Nevada)


 * Domestic Paraceratherium


 * Indricotherium


 * Alloceros I


 * Herbigradus I


 * Hopping rhinoceros I


 * Horned paraceratherium I


 * Zhevra I


 * Pacyceratherium I


 * Hornless white rhinoceros (aka stripe-nosed white rhinoceros) I (note: despite the scar-like appearances, the lines on their snouts are luckily/fortunately not scars at all, but have evolved red colorations on the male's snouts to make up for having no horns to attract mates, they are also much more aggressive towards other non-sapient non-dylanus species to make up for no horns)


 * Blunt-horned white rhinoceros I


 * Blunt-horned Indian rhinoceros


 * Kongoceras I


 * Jobitheres I


 * Campebistrotherium rex I


 * Long-horned unicorn rhinoceros I


 * Pliny's unicorn rhinoceros I


 * Greater unicorn rhinoceros I


 * Lesser unicorn rhinoceros I


 * Stripe-legged unicorn rhinoceros I


 * Common unicorn rhinoceroses I


 * Giant unicorn rhinoceros I


 * Indian unicorn rhinoceros I


 * Forest unicorn rhinoceros I


 * Long-eared outback rhinoceros I


 * Falumpaset I


 * Dinosaur-Like Indricothere I


 * Dinosaur-like rhinoceros I


 * Reptilioceros I


 * Moschops-like rhinoceros I


 * Dangerceros I


 * Modified rhinoceros I


 * Elephant rhinoceros I


 * Ornacorn I


 * Elephant-like rhinoceros I


 * Rhyhorn I


 * Rhydon I


 * Rhyperior I


 * Uintahrhinoceros I


 * Winged rhinoceros (aka flying rhino or flying rhinoceros) I


 * Sapient Indian rhinoceros I from The Jungle Book 2016 film to real life North America (note: unlike their ancestors, they are no longer scared of humans or any other sapient species/beings and they now live with and work with any sapient species/beings, except vampires due to bloody conflicts with them, these Indian rhinoceroses can also talk like any sapient species/beings and can speak in many different languages like English and others, also unlike non-sapient Indian rhinoceroses, they can live for about 100 years, not just about 20 or under)


 * Pygmy rhinoceros I


 * Dwarf rhinoceros I

Horses and relatives

 * Asian wild horse from Pleistocene Asia to the modern Great Plains and grasslands of California (note: it is the wild ancestor of domestic horses that resembles a hybrid between a tarpan and a Mongolian wild horse)


 * Mongolian wild horse


 * Mustang (in the Great Plains)


 * Clydesdale (in the grasslands of California)


 * Heck horse (in the grasslands and forests in the state of New York)


 * Yakutian horse (in the Great Plains and the grasslands of California)


 * Amercan quater horse (in the Great Plains and the grasslands of California)


 * Thoroughbred (in the Great Plains and the grasslands of California)


 * Miniature horse (in the grasslands of California)


 * Feral donkey (in the Great Plains and scrublands and deserts of Nevada, California, Arizona, and Oregon)


 * African wild donkey (in the Great Plains and grasslands, scrublands, and deserts of Nevada, California, Arizona, Oregon, New Mexico, Texas, and Utah)


 * Kiang (in the Great Plains and grasslands, scrublands, and deserts of Nevada, California, Arizona, Oregon, New Mexico, Texas, and Utah)


 * Onager (in the Great Plains and grasslands, scrublands, and deserts of Nevada, California, Arizona, Oregon, New Mexico, Texas, and Utah)


 * Quagga (in the Great Plains and other grasslands and savannas of North America)


 * Tarpan I


 * Grevy's zebra (in the Great Plains and other grasslands and savannas of North America)


 * Plains zebra (in California and Oregon only)


 * Burchell's zebra (in California and Nevada only)


 * Eastern Forest horse I (in California only)


 * Western horse (reintroduced)


 * Hagerman horse (reintroduced)


 * Mexican horse (reintroduced)


 * Common stilt-legged horse (reintroduced)


 * Greater stilt-legged horse (reintroduced)


 * Giant horse (reintroduced)


 * Amerhippus I


 * Hippidion I


 * Dinohippus I


 * Astrohippus I


 * Pseudhipparion I


 * Neohipparion I


 * Nannippus I


 * Cormohipparion I


 * Pliohippus I


 * Protohippus I


 * Hipparion I


 * Merychippus I


 * Parahippus I


 * Megahippus I


 * Hypohippus I


 * Sinohippus I


 * Anchitherium I


 * Kalobatippus I


 * Miohippus I


 * Mesohippus I


 * Epihippus I


 * Eohippus I


 * Orohippus I


 * Palaeotherium I


 * Hyracotherium I


 * Eurohippus I


 * Equine Propalaeotherium I


 * True Propalaeotherium I


 * Phenacodus I


 * Meniscotherium I


 * Bronthoequus I


 * Kelpie I


 * Ferrari horse I from the Disney's Bedtime Stories film to real life North America


 * Dog horse I


 * Anteater donkey I


 * Thicktail donkey I


 * Oxenequus I


 * Martian horse I


 * Behemoth (aka Indricothere-like giant horse) I


 * Firey unicorn-like horse I


 * Mudbray I from Pokemon series to real life North America


 * Fathier I


 * Merhorse I


 * Reptilian-looking zebra I


 * Straight-haired reptilian horse I


 * Reptilian-looking horse I


 * Reptilian red-headed horse I


 * Unicorn (from mythical Europe to real life North America, this animal resembles a normal white horse, but with antelope-like feet and horns that resembles a narwhal's tusks)


 * Fantasian unicorn I from Fantasia to real life North America


 * Pegasus (from mythical Europe to real life North America, this animal resembles a normal white horse, but has airsac organs [like bird's, but with helium to help it as it flies] and large wings with stitched fur that resembles feathers, but aren't feathers)


 * Fantasian pegasus from Fantasia to real life North America


 * Unicorn donkey I


 * Dronkey I


 * Pegasusmon I


 * Pinkie horse I

Tapirs, Chalicotheres, and relatives

 * Baird's tapir (in the entire North American continent)


 * South American tapir (in the entire North American continent)


 * Little black tapir (in the entire North American continent)


 * Mountain tapir (in the entire North American continent)


 * Malayan tapir (in Florida only)


 * Domestic tapir (in Florida only)


 * Eastern tapir I (in California only)


 * Stilt tapir I


 * European tapir I


 * African tapir I


 * Madagascian tapir I


 * East Asian tapir I


 * Common tapir I


 * Elephant tapir I


 * Naked tapir I


 * Hippopotamoid I


 * Giant tapir (in California and Florida only)


 * Miocene tapir I (in the entire North American continent)


 * Early tapir I (in the entire North American continent)


 * Heptodon I (in the entire North American continent)


 * Woolly chalico (reintroduced)


 * Chalicoman I (in the rest of North America)


 * Domestic Mesoron I


 * European Chalicotherium I from Oligocene Asia to modern North America


 * Mongolian Chalicotherium I


 * Wild Moropus I from Miocene North America to modern North America


 * Domestic Moropus I (note: they were domesticated by humans for their meat and leather, but were/are mainly used for carrying people and supplies across the landscapes)


 * Tylocephalonyx I from Miocene North America to modern North America


 * Lowland Ancylotherium I from Pliocene Africa to modern North America


 * Black-Headed Ancylotherium I


 * Protomoropus I


 * Great Embulotherium I


 * Common Embulotherium I


 * Wild Megacerops I


 * Domestic Megacerops I (note: they were domesticated by humans for meat and milk, but also for transportation of supplies and people)


 * Metarhinus


 * Protitanops


 * Protitanotherium


 * Telmatherium


 * Dolichorhinus I from Eocene North America to modern North America


 * Sphenocoelus


 * Eotitanops


 * Goatapir I from fictional world's future North America to real life North America


 * All known species of Psudeotapirids I from fictional world's future North America to real life North America


 * Common tundra tapir I


 * White-cheeked tundra tapir I


 * Horse tapir I (note: this species of tapir is a grazing herbivore that fills a similar niche to horses that were also introduced and reintroduced, yet horse tapirs still thrive)


 * Desert tapir I


 * Hippotapirus I


 * Lopari I


 * Onsepan (aka fleshtapir or greater meat-eating tapir) I


 * Tahorse I


 * Elephant tapir I


 * Megalobrontotapirus I


 * Molochotherium I


 * Gladiotherium I


 * Neobrontotherium I


 * Centrotherium I


 * Plains tapir I


 * Humanoid-bodied tapir (aka bipedal tapir or orangutan-intelligented tapir) I


 * Narabeen (aka sapient tapirman) I


 * Carnivorous tapir I


 * Bakutapir I


 * Centaurthere I


 * Long-tailed carnotapir (aka false carnivorous tapir) I


 * Greenland tapir I


 * Challenger's tapir I


 * Common marine tapir I


 * Striped marine tapir I


 * Giraffe tapir I


 * Five death's tusked tapir I


 * Tusked tapir I


 * Tapirchenia I


 * Southern tapiphant I


 * Amalgm I


 * Loxotapir I


 * Elepir I


 * False mastodon (aka Deinothere-mimicing tapir) I


 * Mastotapir I


 * Gas tapir I


 * Antarcticotheres I


 * Anteating tapir I


 * Anomalotapirus I


 * Minotaurotherium I


 * Chalicosapien (aka Centaurotherium) I


 * Palkratheres I


 * Rhinopotamus I


 * Himalayan brontothere I


 * Arctic brontothere I


 * Hippotapirus I


 * Eopie I


 * Maned tapir I


 * Drowzee I from Pokemon series to real life North America


 * Hypno I from Pokemon series to real life North America (note: unlike their ancestors from Pokemon series, they no longer evolve from Drowzees nor do Drowzees evolve into Hypnos, since they are no a completely different species)


 * Lax (aka pirlax) I


 * Blowhard (aka blowpir) I


 * Urban Future's urban tapir I


 * Common all todays tapir I from DeviantArt's series All Todays to real life North America


 * Heartnose (aka hearthnosed all todays tapir) I

Camels and relatives

 * Dromedary camel (in most of USA)


 * Domestic bactrian camel (in most of USA, Mexico, and Canada)


 * Wild bactrian camel (in most of USA and Canada)


 * Domestic llama (aka domestic greater Argentine camel) (in most of USA and Canada)


 * Domestic alpaca (aka domestic common Argentine camel) (in Oregon, Nevada, Washington, Utah, Colorado, Idaho, Wyoming, California, and Montana)


 * Guanaco (aka wild greater Argentine camel) (in California only)


 * Vicuña (aka wild common Argentine camel) (in California and Oregon only)


 * Fertile cama I (in Oregon, Nevada, Arizona, and California)


 * Big-headed llama (reintroduced)


 * Stout-legged llama (reintroduced)


 * American camel (reintroduced)


 * High Arctic camel I


 * Darwin's camel I


 * Syrian camel I


 * Giant camel I


 * Greater camel I


 * Highland camel I


 * Giraffe-necked camel I


 * Moose-niched camel I


 * Gazelle-legged camel I


 * Early camel I


 * Goat-mimic camel I


 * Dog-mimic camel I


 * Tapir-mimic llama I


 * Hippo-mimic alpaca I


 * Pig-mimic alpaca I


 * Spencer's runner I


 * Clawed runner I


 * Cudhog I


 * Common roamer I


 * Snowy roamer I


 * Horned camel I


 * Swamp camel I


 * Gazelle camel I


 * Proboscis camel I


 * Elephant camel I


 * Mountain camazella I


 * Steppe temee I


 * Elephant-nosed camel I


 * Vicunaffe I


 * Humped guanaco I


 * Oztitan I


 * Humprunner I


 * Brontocamelus I


 * Andean grazer llama-mimic I


 * Giraffe guanaco I


 * Indricothere guanaco I


 * Great outbacker I


 * Giraffamel I


 * Camelope I


 * Camelerupt I


 * Indricamelus I


 * Koobish from Home cartoon series to real life North America


 * Dinosaur-like camel I


 * Street camel I

Giraffes and relatives

 * Common giraffe (aka-long-necked giraffe or greater giraffe) I (in Utah, Wyoming, Colorado, Texas, South Dakota, Nevada, Oregon, California, Arizona, and New Mexico)


 * Straight-necked giraffe I (in Oregon, Nevada, Arizona, Idaho, Utah, Wyoming, Colorada, South Dakota, California, North Dakota, New Mexico, Texas, Missisippi, Louisiana, Alabama, Gerogia, and Florida)


 * Greater okapi I (in Oregon, Nevada, Arizona, Idaho, Utah, Wyoming, Colorada, South Dakota, California, North Dakota, New Mexico, Texas, Missisippi, Louisiana, Alabama, Gerogia, and Florida)


 * Samotherium I


 * African Sivatherium I


 * Arabian Sivatherium I


 * Asian Sivatherium I


 * Birgerbohlinia (aka European Sivathere) I


 * Shansitherium I


 * Helladotherium I


 * Mitilanotherium I


 * Palaeotragus I


 * Giraffokeryx I


 * Climacoceras I


 * Prolibytherium I


 * Rhinocerakeryx I (note: it is a species of rhinoceros-like mammal that is actually a kind of giraffe related to okapis and giraffes, despite their appearances, and have some skeletal features similar to more common giraffids, like skull shape, etc)


 * Qilinotherium I


 * Ikopi I


 * Herd-dwelling okapi I


 * Manned giraffe I


 * Girafarig I


 * Girorse I


 * Horsapi I


 * Kryotherium I


 * Carnotherium I


 * Giraffopod I from DeviantArt's series All Todays to real life North America


 * Furry reptilian-looking giraffe I from DeviantArt's series All Todays to real life North America


 * Bendy-necked reptilian giraffe I


 * Reptilian-looking giraffe I


 * Dinosaur-like giraffe I


 * Sauropod-like giraffe I


 * Greater web-legged giraffe I


 * Swimming web-legged giraffe I


 * Towering stilt-legged reptilian okapi I


 * Parker's hornhead I

Pigs and relatives

 * Wild boar (aka razorback boar, feral boar, feral pig, or wild pig) I


 * Pygmy hog I


 * Red river hog I


 * Bushpig I


 * Giant forest hog I


 * Celebes warty pig I


 * Bornean bearded pig I


 * Modern warthog I


 * Chacoan peccary (in California, Arizona, New Mexico, and Texas)


 * Collared peccary (in the entire western, southwestern, and southern USA) I


 * Babirusa I


 * Kubanochoerus I


 * Moose-pig I (it is a very large aggressive herbivorous wild pig species with large tusks for knocking over small trees and digging out roots and tubers, as well as defense against predators)


 * Uinoceros I


 * Rhinohog I


 * Baconator pig I


 * Brontohyus I


 * Californian bush-boar I


 * Gomphothere pig (aka giant mega-warthog, giant herbivorous elephig, or rhino-niched pigant) I


 * Scrofa I from the Future Is Wild documentary to real life North America


 * Trumi I from After Man Book series to real life North America


 * Zarander I from After Man Book series to real life North America


 * Varaha I


 * False scrofa I


 * Great shaggy boar I


 * Boarctos I


 * Green pig (aka recycler pig or trash pig) I


 * Daggertooth I


 * Boaratheon I


 * Terror hog I


 * Mountain king I


 * Wedgehog I


 * Uglyhog I


 * Greenpaint spikeback I


 * River bacon I


 * Elephant-mimic pig I


 * Hunter bulugan I


 * Bakutherium I


 * Oganer I


 * Lelikevark I


 * Hathi I


 * Congoboar I


 * American mumak I


 * Potavarke I


 * Oliphant I


 * Mediterranean mumak I


 * Patagonian longsnout I


 * Argentine longsnout I


 * Peccason I


 * Shovel boar I


 * Common osteothere I


 * Mergul I


 * Turtle pig I


 * Trisoplid I


 * Entelodont-mimicing peccary I


 * Estramboticotherium I


 * Shovel-snouted pig I


 * Shovel-tusked scrofathere I


 * Boaropotamus I


 * Boatboar I


 * Nozdrokh I


 * Probosuid I


 * Mammoth boar I


 * Carnoscrofathus I


 * Northern rumbleswine I


 * Ice piercer boar I


 * Barotholus I


 * Stag-hog I


 * Armor-headed warthog I


 * Bikifaru I


 * White polar boar I


 * Swinub I (note: unlike their ancestors, they no longer evolved into Plioswine and Mamoswine, as they are now a completely different species entirely, and like all placental Pokemon-type mammals, they don't come from eggs and their newly born young are about the size of a black rat without a tail)


 * Plioswine I (note: unlike their ancestors, they no longer evolved from Swinub and into Mamoswine, as they are now a completely different species entirely, and like all placental Pokemon-type mammals, they don't come from eggs and their newly born young are about the size of a rabbit)


 * Mamoswine I (note: unlike their ancestors, they no longer evolved from Swinub and Plioswine, as they are now a completely different species entirely, and like all placental Pokemon-type mammals, they don't come from eggs and their newly born young are about the size of a medium sized dog)


 * Sapient pygmy hog I from The Jungle Book 2016 film to real life North America (note: unlike their ancestors, they are no longer scared of humans or any other sapient species/beings and they now live with and work with any sapient species/beings, except vampires due to bloody conflicts with them, these pygmy hogs can also talk like any sapient species/beings and can speak in many different languages like English and others, also unlike non-sapient pygmy hogs, they can live for about 100 years, not just about 20 or under, they are also very common and not endangered, unlike the non-sapient pygmy hogs in their native range)


 * Great Pigman I (note: they are very peaceful towards humans and this is what great pigmen looks like in real life)


 * Giant pigman I (note: they are named because they are huge, about 7 feet tall and weighs about 500-700 pounds, they are also now friendly to humans and dylanuses, unlike their ancestors, they are no longer undead and are now living, this is what the giant pigmen looks like in real life)


 * Green Pigman (aka Suidohomus sentius) I from the Angry Birds Movie to real life North America (note: they no longer try to steal and eat Birdmen eggs and are now friends to Birdmen since they now find human food and real life chicken eggs more tasty)


 * Long-legged boar I


 * Chipboar I


 * Terror pig I


 * Makkapite I


 * Brontothere hornhog I


 * Bullhog I


 * Allochoerus I


 * Siberian shurga I


 * Flattooth I


 * Horsehog I


 * Prairie Scrofatherium I


 * Siberian Scrofatherium I


 * Japanese Scrofatherium I


 * Marsh scrofaphant I


 * Woolly scrofaphant I


 * Tapiroid (aka Tapir-mimicing pig) I


 * Mammopliswine I


 * Spoinpigrump I


 * Dominosuid-grouped pigs I


 * Lambdi thrunderhog I


 * Ruling pigs I


 * Varaha I


 * Spotted mud pig I


 * Giant browsing pig I


 * Tapir-like peccary I


 * Stig I


 * Happabore I


 * Rusty entelodont-looking pig I


 * Blue-patched Dicynodont-like pig I


 * Boaratheon I


 * Woops (aka woopsepig) I


 * Bristleback I


 * Daggerback I


 * Entelodon-mimicing carnivorous pig I


 * Giraffe pig I


 * City boar I


 * Yard peccary I


 * Outdater's warthog (aka B's warthog or woolly warthog) I


 * Sapient warthog I (note: unlike their ancestors, they are not aggressive to nor scared of any sapient species/beings, they also now live with and work with any sapient species/beings except vampires due to bloody conflicts with them, they can now live for about 100 years, they can talk like any sapient species/beings and can speak in many languages including English)


 * Half-sapient-half-non-sapient pig I from Peter Rabbit (2018 film) to real life North America


 * Targ I

Cattle-grouped Bovines and relatives

 * Plains bison (reintroduced, but were also introduced to the rest of North America)


 * Wood bison (reintroduced, but were also introduced to the rest of North America)


 * Domestic bison I (in Florida, California, and Texas)


 * Ancient bison (reintroduced)


 * Steppe bison (reintroduced)


 * Long-horned bison (reintroduced)


 * Lesser bison (reintroduced)


 * Zebu I


 * Feral cattle I


 * Aurochs I


 * Tamaraw I


 * Anoa I


 * Wild water buffalo I


 * Feral water buffalo I


 * African buffalo I


 * Giant buffalo


 * Megabuffalo


 * Gayal I


 * Asian Gaur


 * Skull Island Gaur


 * Banteng


 * Kouprey I


 * Domestic yak


 * Wild yak


 * Wisent


 * Saola I


 * Corgicow I


 * Diggercow (aka maintain-marg) I


 * Milker I


 * Megacattle I


 * Hunchback blue buffacow I


 * White-collared bison I


 * Ground beef (aka burrowing bison) I


 * Great giant bison I from Disney Pixar's The Good Dinosaur to real life North America


 * Sail-backed bison I


 * Jerba I


 * Bantha I


 * Tauros I


 * Miltank I (note: unlike their ancestors, there are now male miltanks (despite having udders for producing milk), not just females, just like how there are now female Tauroses as well as males, so their species will live on, and are a completely different species from Tauroses, they also now breed very well without human help and no longer need their help to mate or give birth)


 * Two-legged cattle I (note: it is a species of cattle that stands, walks, and runs on its hind legs with no problem like many bipedal animals and, unlike domestic cattle with a similar-looking rare condition, this animal is a completely different species)


 * Long-tailed cattle I


 * Water cattle I


 * Bison-like cattle I


 * Deer cow I


 * European steppe bovine I


 * Dwarf bison I


 * Pronghorned buffalo I


 * Multi-tailed bison I


 * Bullpuppy I


 * Buffalippo I


 * Sapient water buffalo I from The Jungle Book 2016 film to real life North America (note: unlike their ancestors, they are no longer scared of humans or any other sapient species/beings and they now live with and work with any sapient species/beings, except vampires due to bloody conflicts with them, these water buffalos can also talk like any sapient species/beings and can speak in many different languages like English and others, also unlike non-sapient wild/domestic water buffalos, they can live for about 100 years, not just about 20 or under)


 * Martian cattle I


 * Lunar bison I


 * Lunar unicorn cattle I


 * Quorno I


 * False prairie buffalo I


 * Mooshroom I (note: it is a close relative of domestic cattle and aurochs [the extinct ancestors of domestic cattle], but is red and white and has mushrooms growing on their heads and their backs, and unlike in games, they don't actually become domestic cattle if the mushrooms on their backs are sheared or pulled off, instead, they're still mooshrooms, also, the mushrooms on their backs will grow back about 1-2 months)


 * All Todays African buffalo (aka reptilian Cape buffalo) I


 * All Todays water buffalo (aka All Todays Asian buffalo or reptilian water buffalo) I


 * Dinosaur-like bison I


 * Ouranosaurus-like bison I


 * Iguanodont-like bison I


 * Reptilian-looking bison I


 * Greater sailbacked reptilian bison I


 * Tawny sailbacked reptilian bison I


 * Tall-backed reptilian bison I


 * Tall-humped reptilian bison I


 * Bipedal theropod-like bison I from DeviantArt's series All Todays to real life North America


 * Dinosaur-like cattle I


 * Bipedal bovine I


 * Echatere I

Sheep-Goat-grouped bovines and relatives

 * Common takin I


 * Northern steppe takin I


 * Mainland serow


 * Himalayan serow I


 * Japanese serow I


 * Chamois I


 * Markhor


 * Snow sheep


 * Gorals I


 * Argali I


 * European mouflon I


 * Bharal I


 * Barbary sheep I


 * Domestic goat I


 * Wild goat I


 * Siberian ibex I


 * Spanish ibex I


 * Nubian ibex I


 * Alpine ibex I


 * East Caucasian tur I


 * West Caucasian tur I


 * Stone sheep I (in the rest of North America)


 * Mountain goat I (in the rest of North America)


 * Bighorn sheep I (in the rest of North America)


 * Dall sheep I (in the rest of North America)


 * Domestic sheep I


 * Wild sheep I


 * Barbary sheep


 * Arabian tahr


 * Nilgiri tahr


 * Himalayan tahr


 * Moran I


 * Balearic Islands cave goat I


 * Shinehorn I


 * Bone-headed sheep I


 * Steppe giant goat I


 * Two-legged goat I (note: it is a species of goat that stands, walks, and runs on its hind legs with no problem like many bipedal animals and, unlike a domestic goat with a similar-looking rare condition, this animal is a completely different species)


 * Minimagoat I


 * Takyak I


 * Gnubok I


 * Alpacovis I


 * Buffalovis I


 * False musk-ox I


 * Great white goat I


 * Elephant goat I


 * Saurogoat I


 * Electric sheep I


 * Mammoth goat I


 * Taurovis I


 * Angasto I


 * Snerg I


 * Ravenshold beast I


 * Great goatlope I


 * Spirit gox I


 * False llama I


 * All Todays sheep I from DeviantArt's series All Todays to real life North America


 * Drowsy (aka Drowsheep) I


 * Cotton candy sheep I from Charlie and the Chocolate Factory film to real life North America


 * Godmonster I from a bad horror B-movie Godmonsters of Indian Flats to real life North America (note: unlike their ancestors, these bipedal ground sloth-like sheep now have functional and moveable mouths like (almost) all land vertebrates, they also are no longer aggressive nor predatory, as the aggressive ones were not tolerated, but they have now been tolerated by sapient species/beings since they now only feed on small non-sapient species/beings [plants, insects, fish, small frogs, small lizards, small nonvenomous snakes, small birds, eggs, smaller mammals, carrion, and man-made food, they also now have regular-looking front legs that resemble that of ground sloths)

Antelopes

 * Gemsbok I


 * Blackbuck I


 * Nilgai I


 * Impala


 * Hartebeest


 * Wildebeest


 * Springbok


 * Gazelles
 * Thomson's gazelle
 * Mongalla gazelle
 * Red-fronted gazelle
 * Indian gazelle
 * Cuvier's gazelle
 * Mountain gazelle
 * Dama gazelle
 * Soemmerring's gazelle
 * Mongolian gazelle
 * Shaggy gazelle I


 * Saiga


 * Günther's dik-dik


 * Suni


 * Royal antelope


 * Klipspringer


 * Oribi


 * Steenbok


 * Bontebok


 * Four-horned antelope


 * Bongo (in California, Texas, and Florida)


 * Greater kudu


 * Bushbuck


 * Nyala


 * Common eland


 * Yellow-backed duiker


 * Zebra duiker


 * Common duiker


 * Roan antelope


 * Sable antelope


 * Scimitar oryx


 * Addax


 * Tibetan antelope


 * Grey rhebok


 * Waterbuck


 * Kob


 * Lechwe


 * Puku


 * Southern reedbuck


 * Mountain reedbuck


 * Bohor reedbuck


 * Megalotragus I


 * Rusingoryx I


 * Gigantelope I from After Man Book and Documentary series to real life North America


 * Hornheads I from After Man Book series to real life North America


 * Snorke I from After Man Book series to real life North America


 * Long-necked yippa I from After Man Book series to real life North America


 * Valuphant I from After Man Book series to real life North America


 * Cleft-back antelope I from After Man Book series to real life North America


 * Sapient blackbuck I from The Jungle Book 2016 film to real life North America (note: unlike their ancestors, they are no longer scared of humans or any other sapient species/beings and they now live with and work with any sapient species/beings, except vampires due to bloody conflicts with them, these blackbucks can also talk like any sapient species/beings and can speak in many different languages like English and others, also unlike non-sapient blackbucks, they can live for about 100 years, not just about 20 or under)


 * Sapient nilgai I from The Jungle Book 2016 film to real life North America (note: unlike their ancestors, they are no longer scared of humans or any other sapient species/beings and they now live with and work with any sapient species/beings, except vampires due to bloody conflicts with them, these nilgais can also talk like any sapient species/beings and can speak in many different languages like English and others, also unlike non-sapient nilgais, they can live for about 100 years, not just about 20 or under)


 * Silverback megalantilopus I


 * Vertibeast I


 * Saimoose I


 * Stiltbok I


 * Gazellox I


 * Giraffazelle I


 * Quadrobok I


 * Reusbokke I


 * Oxen mimic I


 * Banthathere I


 * Rooia I


 * Velocilopes I


 * Great mountainbeest I


 * African gigantothere I


 * Woolly gigantothere I


 * Stake-horned gigantothere I


 * Greater helmethorn I


 * Mountain helmethorn I


 * Unicorn antelope I


 * Brontozelle I


 * Kivuli I


 * Gerenaffe I


 * Humzwian Antolope I


 * Carnozelle I


 * Dinosaur-like antelope I


 * Horsalope I


 * Hippalope I

Deer ahd relatives

 * Sika deer I


 * Axis deer I


 * Reindeer (in the rest of North America)


 * Moose (in the rest of North America)


 * Elk I (in the rest of North America)


 * Bactrian deer I


 * Roe deer I


 * Sambar deer I


 * Red deer I


 * Fallow deer I


 * Père David's deer I


 * North Andean deer I


 * South Andean deer I


 * Red brocket I


 * Gray brocket I


 * Marsh deer I


 * Pampas deer I


 * Pudú I


 * Yucatan brown brocket I


 * Pygmy brocket I


 * Little red brocket I


 * Indian hog deer I


 * Reeve's muntjac I


 * Swamp deer I


 * Tufted deer I


 * Musk deer I


 * Water deer I


 * Water chevrotain I


 * Indian spotted chevrotain I


 * White-spotted chevrotain I


 * Java mouse-deer I


 * Greater mouse-deer I


 * Lesser mouse-deer I


 * Stag-moose (reintroduced)


 * All known real species of Megaloceros


 * White-Faced Megaloceros


 * Common pronghorn-mimic deer I


 * False pronghorn-mimic deer I


 * Rabbit-eared deer (aka jackalope deer) I


 * Gigantoceros I


 * Digger deer I


 * Diggeer I


 * Spinodeer I


 * Swamp sailhorn I


 * Kanji sailhorn I


 * Deerson I


 * Snow-plowing deer I


 * Flaghorn I


 * Black-faced tuskjak I


 * Helmet-horn mastodontian deer I


 * Trumpetdeer I


 * Great false okapi I


 * Horned false okapi I


 * Deersimil I


 * Stantler I


 * Antdeer I


 * Marsh antlered deer I


 * Badlands rapiddeer I


 * Golacorn I


 * Three-horned chevrotain I


 * Wompu (aka short-faced elk) I


 * Upright deer I


 * Savannah deer I


 * King chevrotain I


 * Elebuck I


 * Hippopotamoose I


 * Woolly chested elk I


 * Bowl-horned moose I


 * Giant moose I


 * Moorse I


 * Domestic moose I


 * Deerosaur I


 * Hathor's galeacorn I


 * Vale deer I


 * Giant reindeer I (note: it is a giant relative of a common reindeer, but is more muscular and more elk-like in appearance, but with reindeer-like fur and antlers)


 * Seamoose I


 * Proto's chevrotain whale I


 * Lizard-like chevrotain whale I


 * Darwin's chevrotain whale I


 * Otter-like chevrotain whale I


 * Megamouth chevrotain whale I


 * Ambulocetus-like chevrotain whale I


 * Suchocete I


 * Thick-snouted chevrotain whale I


 * Mosasaur-like chevrotain whale I


 * Paddle-tailed chevrotain whale I


 * Logger-body chevrotain whale I


 * Giant crocodile chevrotain whale I


 * Giant chevrotain whale I


 * Greater bottlenose chevrotain dolphin I


 * Beaked chevrotain dolphin I


 * Chevrotain porpoise I


 * Striped shroud deer I


 * Giant striped deer I

Insectivores and relatives

 * Etruscan shrew I


 * Greater white-toothed shrew I


 * Asian house shrew I


 * Solenodons I


 * Desmans I


 * European hedgehog I


 * African pygmy hedgehog I


 * European mole I


 * Star-nosed mole I (in the rest of North America)


 * Moonrat I


 * Saber-Tooth Hedgehog I


 * Molehog I


 * Giant Hedgehog I


 * Flying Hedgehog I


 * Killer Shrew I (in the rest of North America)


 * Deinogalerix I


 * Macrocranion I


 * Leptictis I


 * Running Leptictidium I


 * Walking Leptictidium I


 * Hopping Leptictidium I


 * Batodonoides I


 * Predator shrew I


 * Common bette I


 * Bipedal bette I


 * Woolly pinecone I


 * Mole mutt I


 * Hedgegolin I


 * Termite-eater I


 * Crocomole I


 * Tree drummer I from After Man Book and Documentary series to real life North America


 * Parashrew I from After Man Book and Documentary series to real life North America


 * Reedstilt I from After Man Book series to real life North America


 * Trovamp I from After Man Book series to real life North America


 * Tusked mole I from After Man Book series to real life North America


 * Pfrit I from After Man Book series to real life North America


 * Truteal I from After Man Book series to real life North America


 * Testadon I from After Man Book series to real life North America


 * Leaping devil I from After Man Book series to real life North America


 * Desert shark I from After Man Book series to real life North America


 * Fishing shrew I


 * Snailer I


 * Azorean tree hedgehog I


 * Scaly hedgehog I


 * Spinywolf I


 * Wormtonguer I


 * Catshrew I


 * Hydrusotherium nilus I


 * Predatorhog (aka giant Preda's hedgehog or relative of Caninese hogovore) I


 * Cat-sized shrew (aka predatory shrewcat) I


 * Coastal jumping shrew I


 * Sabre-toothed shrew I


 * Vyloo (aka flying shrew) I (note: unlike their ancestors, they are no longer dangerous and no longer causes anyone's noses to be lost, as the ones that were dangerous and caused nose losses weren't tolerated, and they now flourish very well in forests, grasslands, scrublands, swamps, rainforests, and cities across North America and also make good exotic pets)


 * Sapient star-nosed mole I from Disney's G-Force movie to real life North America (note: unlike their ancestors, they can now talk naturally, so they don't need devices to help them talk anymore, they are also not evil nor try to end civilizations, unlike the fictional sapient star-nosed mole, Speckles, as evil creatures of any kind aren't tolerated, they are also not blind, unlike their ancestors, so they can actually see as well as an average human, they also now live with and work with any sapient species/beings, except vampires due to bloody conflicts with them)


 * Hill wanderer I


 * Scalehog I


 * Sordger I


 * Velvethide 'I


 * Molar mole I


 * Insectivorocene insectivorans I


 * Giant naked mole-shrew I


 * Crested poison hedgehog I


 * Crested quillupin I


 * Brown quillupin I


 * Dire quillupin I


 * Haiana I


 * Hedgedog I


 * Reek I


 * Blind cave mole I


 * Lymlos I


 * Common shintrole I


 * Aquamole I


 * Squole (aka aquatic mole) I


 * Grizzly hedgehog I


 * Panda hedgehog I


 * Myrmecoticdium I


 * Termite-eater hedgehog I


 * Ankylosaur-like giant hedgehog I


 * Ruling insectivorans I


 * Grizzlyhog I


 * Long-spiked azogalerix I


 * Ruling shrews I


 * Theropod-mimic predatory mammal I


 * Pygmy bug-eater I


 * Gorgoleptictis I


 * Scalerat I


 * Hopping skullface I


 * Sabre shrew I


 * Tchagrin I


 * Great Avipods I


 * Common Avipods I


 * Octocorn I


 * New Zealand hedgehog I


 * Shrewhog I


 * Ferocious condylutra I


 * Shredder (aka shreddershrew) I


 * Shush (aka shushrew) I


 * Phoonshrew I


 * Backhoe (aka backmole) I


 * Molarbear I


 * Film's killer shrew I from the Killer Shrews 1959 film to real life North America (note: unlike their ancestors, they are no longer aggressive towards humans or dylanuses, so they wouldn't be attacking humans like these killer shrews trying to attack humans, so they are now friendly to humans and dylanuses])


 * Pig mole I


 * Reptilian-looking shrew I


 * All Todays hedgehog I from Deviantart series, All Todays, to real life North America


 * Sonic-like predator I


 * Half-sapient-half-non-sapient hedgehog I from Peter Rabbit (2018 film) to real life North America


 * Sapient hedgehog I

Bats

 * New Zealand short-tailed bats I (note: like all invasive North American animals that originated from islands without predators or competition, these bats were genetically modifed to tolerate competition and predatation by cats and other predators, so these bats now reproduced fast like many native American urban bats, and can now crawl/sprint fast enough to escape from house cats, dogs, native predators [bears, wolves, coyotes, foxes, cougars, bobcats, etc], and other animals)


 * Mexican free-tailed bat I (in the rest of North America)


 * Bulldog bats I (in the rest of North America)


 * Desert long-eared bat I


 * Brown long-eared bat I


 * Grey long-eared bat I


 * Alpine long-eared bat I


 * Large slit-faced bat I


 * Lesser whiskered bat I


 * Tent-making bat I


 * Harmless serotine I


 * Bumblebee bat I


 * Common pipstrelle I


 * Common noctule I


 * Greater noctule I


 * Greater mouse-eared bat I


 * Japanese house bat I


 * Northern bat I


 * Serotine bat I


 * Dark long-tongued bat I


 * Big-headed woolly bat I


 * Great evening bat I


 * Golden bat I


 * Northern white bat I


 * Honduran white bat I


 * Wrinkle-lipped free-tailed bat I


 * Horseshoe bats I


 * Ghost bat I


 * Spectral bat I


 * Common vampire bat I (note: these bats were introduced from laboratories after many labs during The Great Depression closed and let these bats loose, and they now thrive in California, Oregon, Florida, and most other parts of the USA)


 * Wing-winged vampire bat I (note: these bats were introduced from laboratories after many labs during the Great Depression closed and let these bats loose, and they now thrive in California, Oregon, Florida, and most other parts of the USA)


 * Hairy-legged vampire bat I (note: these bats were introduced from laboratories after many labs during the Great Depression closed and let these bats loose, and they now thrive in California, Oregon, Florida, and most other parts of the USA)


 * All known species of fruit bats I (note: all of the known fruit bat species in North America are descended from ones that escaped from zoos and safari parks that closed in 1960's 1970's, and they now live in most of Mexico, Central America, and USA)


 * Shark-Jawed Bat I in the rest of North America


 * Pig-Faced Bat I in the rest of North America


 * Snowbat I in the rest of North America


 * Domestic Flying Fox I


 * Red-Winged Bat I


 * Hyena Fruit Bat I


 * Lion-Tailed Bat I


 * All known species of Hawaiian flightless bats I (in the entire mainland North America)


 * Giant vampire bat I


 * Stock's vampire bat I


 * Cuban vampire bat I


 * Vulcanops I


 * Onychonycteris I


 * Icaronycteris I


 * Archaeonycteris I


 * Palaeochiropteryx I


 * Protovampirus I


 * Purrip Bat I from After Man Book to real life North America


 * Flightless Shalloth I from After Man Book to real life North America


 * Surfbat I from After Man Book and Documentary series to real life North America


 * Flooer I from After Man Book and Documentary series to real life North America


 * Nightstalker I from After Man Book and Documentary series to real life North America


 * Deathgleaner I from the Future Is Wild documentary to real life North America


 * Bat of prey I


 * Batguin I


 * Batowl I


 * Crowbat I


 * Emubat I


 * Gamebat I


 * Hummingbat I


 * Eaglebat I


 * Parrotbat I


 * Pigeobat I


 * Sea bat I


 * Songbat I


 * Spadesnout I


 * Swiftbat I


 * Wading bat I


 * Waterfowling bat I


 * Woodpecking bat I


 * Gigapterus I


 * Velocipterus I


 * Nosferapoda I


 * Daystalker (aka shagbat) I


 * Common flightless vampire bat I


 * Eyeless flightless vampire bat I


 * Onyc-bat I


 * Cave bat I


 * Battket (aka swinging battket) I


 * Batodactyl I


 * Sea-swimmer bat I


 * Daystalker I


 * Red assassin bat I


 * Diverse-winged bats I


 * Common-winged bats I


 * Long-tailed flightless bat I


 * Terror bats I


 * Butterfly bat I


 * Anachrotherium (aka sauropod-like mammal) I


 * Hoatzin bat I


 * Otter bat I


 * Yellow ugruk I


 * Grey ugruk I


 * Vespesciurus I


 * Gargouillebat I


 * Woolly gremlin I


 * Jumbo I


 * Flightless slothbat I


 * Night crawler I


 * Thumb bat I


 * Sealbat I


 * Nea's flightless bats I


 * Common flightless bats I


 * Greater flightless bats I


 * Ruling flightless bats I


 * Lesser flightless bats I


 * Terrorbat I


 * Vulturebat I


 * Squeekly I


 * Charle's multibat I


 * Sableye bat I


 * Bat-bird I


 * Chalicothere bat I


 * Groomer bat I


 * Goosebat I


 * TFIF lesser bats I


 * TFIF ruler bats I


 * TFIF common bats I


 * Shadow claw I


 * Olitbun I


 * Craleo I


 * Rusty daevere I


 * Tree creeping bat I


 * Orang bat I


 * Atlantic bat turtle I


 * Carnivorous ground sloth bat I


 * Puerto Rican predator bat I


 * Water wesils I


 * Imperial fruit bat I


 * Pterobat I


 * False gibbon I


 * Giant bat I


 * Ahool I (it is a giant predatory bat species that resembles a hybrid between a flying fox and a vampire bat, but with a long baboon-like tail)


 * Jackrobat I


 * Giant rhinoceros tigerbat I


 * Megapredatory flightless bat I


 * Devil Bat I from The Devil Bat film to real life North America (note: one family, Charles Nickins (Son), Fred Nickins (Dad), and Marry Nickins (Mom) had brought some devil bats after their vacation from The Devil Bat film universe and released them into real life North America, causing some negative impact towards some native real life dylanus species of North America, including some populations of Florida Running Dylanus)


 * Chupacabra (aka bat of death) I


 * Starling bat I from Dracula Untold film to real life North America (note: they are named because just like European starlings, which are native to real life, these bats are known to flock together in large masses like what this image shows, but are not mind-controlled, instead, they inherently have this behavior for protection against predators)


 * Greater dracula I


 * Pygmy dracula I


 * Bipedal flightless carnivorous foxbat I


 * Bird bats I


 * Dinosaur-like bat I


 * Lizard-like bat I


 * Climbing predabat I


 * Swimming predabat I


 * Diving bat I


 * Greater giga bat I from a Sony Animation film, Hotel Transylvania 2, to real life North America (Note: unlike their ancestors, the North American greater giga bats are now friendly with sapient beings, as the evil/aggressive ones are not tolerated)


 * False mothman (aka the giant false bat and the western mothman) I (note: it is a very unusual species of giant bat, lacking echolocation and is a biped when not in the air, their behaviour however is more similar to an owl: this animal sits most of the time on high spots such as branches from where it can search for prey. They use their huge eyes and mask on their face to locate them and when that's done, they simply glide or fly soundlessly towards their victim to catch it with their feet. The teeth are then used to deliver the fatal bite. On the ground they have to be careful though: they are light build because of the hollow bones and slow because of their extremely long legs connected to each other by a membrane. A cougar, wolf or even coyote can kill them if they aren't scared off by the huge wings. The giant false bat can take of fast though because it uses the same squad launch as its cousins. They feel the most comfortable in trees or cliffs where they can climb around without having to touch the ground that often)


 * Welwa (aka ratbat) I


 * Werebat I


 * City vampire bat I


 * Sewerage bat I


 * Water-runner I

Rodents

 * All known vole species I (in the rest of North America)


 * Arctic lemming I (in the rest of North America)


 * Wood lemming I


 * Steppe lemming I


 * Norway lemming I


 * Alpine marmot I


 * Yellow-bellied marmot I (in the rest of North America)


 * Hoary marmot I (in the rest of North America)


 * Vancouver Island marmot I (in the rest of North America) [note: unlike their ancestors, they are no longer threatened to extinction as they were genetically modified to tolerate climate change, habitat loss, and will now easily cooperate and socialize with other Vancouver Island marmots without acting aggressively, so this will ensure the further survival of this species]


 * Arctic ground squirrel I (in the rest of North America)


 * Abert's squirrel I (in the rest of North America)


 * Pallas's squirrel I


 * Finlayson's squirrel I


 * Neotropical pygmy squirrel I


 * Tufted ground squirrel I


 * European red squirrel I


 * Forest giant squirrel I


 * Jungle palm squirrel I


 * Indian palm squirrel I


 * Indian giant squirrel I


 * Grizzled giant squirrel I


 * Black giant squirrel I


 * Cream-coloured giant squirrel I


 * Prevost's squirrel I


 * Shrew-faced squirrel I


 * Tufted ground squirrel (aka groove-toothed squirrel or vampire squirrel) I


 * Namdapha flying squirrel I


 * Laotian giant flying squirrel I


 * Indian giant flying squirrel I


 * Red and white giant squirrel I


 * Spotted giant flying squirrel I


 * Black flying squirrel I


 * Southern flying squirrel I (in the rest of North America)


 * Northern flying squirrel I (in the rest of North America)


 * African false flying squirrel I


 * Purple squirrel I (note: it is a species of squirrel with purple fur colorations)


 * Prairie dog I (in the rest of North America)


 * Springhares I


 * Jerboa I


 * All known species of grasshopper mice I (in the rest of North America)


 * Fawn hopping mouse I


 * Spinifex hopping mouse I


 * Mitchell's hopping mouse I


 * All known zebra mice species I


 * Edible dormouse I


 * Hazel dormouse I


 * Garden dormouse I (note: unlike their ancestors, they now tolerate climate changes, so their species will survive for much longer in a distant future)


 * All known species of greater giant dormouse I (note: unlike their ancestors, they now tolerate predators well, even introduced and native American predators, so their species will survive)


 * All known species of common giant dormouse I (note: unlike their ancestors, they now tolerate predators well, even introduced and native American predators, so their species will survive)


 * Pale gerbil I


 * Lesser gerbil I


 * Mongolian gerbil I


 * House Mouse I


 * Macedonian mouse I


 * Mainland European wood mouse I


 * St Kilda field mluse I


 * Black rat I


 * Brown rat I


 * Key largo woodrat I (note: Even though it is endangered in Florida, it was introduced to the rest of USA, where they are thriving, despite competition with brown rats)


 * Amazon bamboo rat I (note: It was accidentally introduced when people brought some South American plants into North America, and it now thrives in California, Oregon, Arizona, Georgia, Alabama, and Florida)


 * Atlantic bamboo rat I (note: It was accidentally introduced when people brought some South American plants into North America, and it now thrives in California, Oregon, Arizona, Georgia, Alabama, and Florida)


 * Galapagos rice rat I (note: unlike their ancestors, they are not vulnerable nor endangered of becoming extinct due to being genetically engineered to tolerate competition and predation from any life forms)


 * Bosavi woolly rat I


 * Mouse-like hamster I


 * Golden hamster I


 * Chinese hamster I


 * Dwarf hamsters I


 * Short-tailed chinchilla I


 * Long-tailed chinchilla I


 * African crested porcupine I


 * Cape porcupine I


 * Malayan porcupine I


 * Indian crested porcupine I


 * Nutria I


 * Mara I


 * Lowland paca I


 * Mountain paca I


 * Common agouti I


 * Degu I


 * Rock cavy I


 * Mountain cavy I


 * Yellow-toothed cavy I


 * Greater guinea pig I


 * Shiny guinea pig I


 * Brazilian guinea pig I


 * Montane guinea pig I


 * All known real feral guinea pig breeds I


 * Bug-eyed guinea pig I from the Disney's Bedtime Stories film to real life North America


 * South American capybara I (in Florida and California only)


 * Giant porcupine


 * Asian groundhog I


 * Galapagos woolly-tailed rat I


 * Little rat I


 * Big rat I


 * Real giant rat I


 * Big mouse I


 * Giant mouse I


 * Common flying mouse I


 * Black flying mouse I


 * Giant Ground Squirrel I in the rest of North America


 * Saber-toothed squirrel I (reintroduced)


 * North American capybara I (reintroduced)


 * Greater giant beaver (reintroduced)


 * Urban giant beaver I


 * Rhinoceros mouse I


 * Elephant rat


 * European Islands giant rat I (note: unlike their ancestors, they now tolerate predators well, even introduced and native American predators, so their species will survive)


 * Ailuravus I


 * Megamurid I


 * Space rat I


 * Tisso rat I


 * Hypo rat I


 * Neuro rat I


 * Chihuahua-sized rodent (aka common herbivorous rodent) I


 * Biped beaver I


 * Beefer I


 * Wapaloosie I


 * Meerrat I


 * Merikrat I


 * Pantherine predatory rat I


 * Taprine herbivorous megatorat I


 * Leoprat I


 * False hippopotamus rat I


 * Rattaracodon I


 * Brontobeaver I


 * Beavanatee I


 * Swaneaver I


 * Ratbird (aka bird-winged rat) I


 * New York giant rat I


 * King rat I


 * Common tusked squirrel I


 * Double-tusked squirrel I


 * Desert Leaper I from After Man Book and Documentary series to real life North America


 * Strick I from the After Man Book series to real life North America


 * Wakka I from the After Man Book series to real life North America


 * Sand flapjack I from After Man Book series to real life North America


 * Tapimus I from After Man Book series to real life North America


 * Trevel I from After Man Book series to real life North America


 * Terratail I from After Man Book series to real life North America


 * Rootsucker I from After Man Book series to real life North America


 * Spine-tailed squirrel I from After Man Book series to real life North America


 * Grobbit I from After Man Book series to real life North America


 * Chiselhead I from After Man Book series to real life North America


 * Meaching I from After Man Book series to real life North America


 * Desert spickle I from After Man Book series to real life North America


 * Spitting featherfoot I from After Man Book series to real life North America


 * Mighty grasscutter I


 * Giant kangaroo jerboa I


 * Groundsloth rodent I


 * Hawaiian flower rat I


 * Honey small rat I


 * Mask-forelocked squirrel I


 * Garden squirrel I


 * Poison-toothed giant rat I


 * Renopila I


 * Roll rat I


 * Common saber-tooth beaver I


 * Lily rat I


 * Rativra I


 * Giant sabertooth rat I


 * Sapient squirrel I from The Jungle Book 2016 film to real life North America (note: unlike their ancestors, they are no longer scared of humans or any other sapient species/beings and they now live with and work with any sapient species/beings, except vampires due to bloody conflicts with them, these squirrels can also talk like any sapient species/beings and can speak in many different languages like English and others, also unlike non-sapient squirrels, they can live for about 100 years, not just about 20 or under)


 * Sapient crested porcupine I from The Jungle Book 2016 film to real life North America (note: unlike their ancestors, they are no longer scared of humans or any other sapient species/beings and they now live with and work with any sapient species/beings, except vampires due to bloody conflicts with them, they also can now control their quils so they don't injure any other sapient species/beings by accident, these porcupines can also talk like any sapient species/beings and can speak in many different languages like English and others, also unlike non-sapient crested porcupines, they can live for about 100 years, not just about 20 or under)


 * Sapient guinea pig I from Disney's G-Force movie to real life North America (note: unlike their ancestors, they can now talk naturally, so they don't need devices to help them talk anymore, they also now live with and work with any sapient species/beings, except vampires due to bloody conflicts with them)


 * Sapient hamster I from Disney's G-Force movie to real life North America (note: unlike their ancestors, they can now talk naturally, so they don't need devices to help them talk anymore, they also now live with and work with any sapient species/beings, except vampires due to bloody conflicts with them)


 * True sapient mouse I from Disney's G-Force movie to real life North America (note: unlike their ancestors, they are actually very smart, about as smart as sapient guinea pigs, so they know almost everything about life and such, they can also now talk naturally, so they don't need devices to help them talk anymore, they come in two similar-looking subspecies, one with high-pitch voices and the other with regular-sounding voices, they also now live with and work with any sapient species/beings, except vampires due to bloody conflicts with them)


 * All known species of Fluttersquips I


 * Mountents I


 * Great beaver-mimic I


 * Cave mouse I


 * Howler porkey I


 * Porcitherium I


 * Ratbull I


 * Chiapagouti I


 * Treetail rat I


 * Sloth porcupine I


 * Arctic giant porcupine I


 * Camel rat I


 * Ring-tailed squirrel I


 * Pincermaus I


 * Carnivorous verma I


 * Rough-backed verma I


 * Spotted verma I


 * Gigasciurotherium I


 * Sirenutria I


 * Coygong I


 * Mapinguarirat I


 * Cavypotamus I


 * Daggerhorn rat I


 * Afanc I


 * Oromo I


 * Armadillo porcupine I


 * Stegohystrix I


 * Cristahystricotherium I


 * Brontagouti I


 * Woolly sciurutherium I


 * Poggle I from the Future Is Wild documentary to real life North America


 * Shagrat I from the Future Is Wild documentary to real life North America


 * Shagmuth I


 * Desert Rattleback I from the Future Is Wild documentary to real life North America


 * Savanna Rattleback I from the Future Is Wild documentary to real life North America


 * Common rattleback I


 * Caribbean rattleback I


 * Clatterback I


 * Manabara I


 * Toothpecker I


 * Tortuporq I


 * Mowdent I


 * Trenchant hopper I


 * Termice I


 * Tusked elephant-like rodent I


 * False shagrat I


 * Corticochaeris I (note: it is a large rodent the size of a cow and is one of the capybara's cousin, it is very similar to hippos in build and is semi-aquatic, feeding mainly on underwater plants and grass)


 * Savanna kangoohopper I


 * Common magrat I


 * Giant sharp-toothed capybara I


 * Neogoutis I


 * Deermara I


 * Desert piranha I (in the deserts of Arizona, New Mexico, Texas, Nevada, and California)


 * Krokah I


 * Singing gliding rat I


 * Malagasy false jumping rat I


 * False rattleback I


 * Swift toughback I


 * Dun strider I


 * European giant tree squirrel I


 * Hippopotamoid rodent I


 * Pandarat I


 * Mouse-squatch I


 * Saltodromeus I


 * Diverse rats I


 * Mouse raptor I


 * Rat mouth (aka suction-mouthed rat) I


 * Platyopithecus I


 * Tachytherium I


 * Antlertooth I


 * Theromouse I


 * Ammodromeus I


 * Trichostomus I


 * Myrmecotherion I


 * Lystrodon I


 * Pelokentron I


 * Skull Island white bat I


 * Volucerictis I


 * Terapusmordax I


 * Howler I


 * Skin-bird I


 * Pseudomarmoset I


 * Beaktooth I


 * Saberrat I


 * Muck (aka American trunked cavy or tapir-mimicing giant rodent) I


 * Trunkorat I


 * Bovrat I


 * Animal Armageddon's giant rat I from Animal Armageddon documentary to real life North America


 * Sapient mouse I


 * Sapient chipmunk I


 * Diprotodontian mega ground squirrel I


 * Ruling rats I


 * Domed mus I


 * Monkey rat I


 * Halish I


 * Tree Guinea pig I


 * Wild pwca I


 * Domestic pwca I


 * Kayick I


 * Giant wood porcupine I


 * Orguar I


 * Vultrat I


 * Glubchuck I


 * Unicorn rat I


 * Farkle I


 * Horned river grazer I


 * Tyrant's ruling rats I


 * Greater ruling rats I


 * Lesser ruling rats I


 * Ruling rodentids I


 * Black-tailed sauratpod I


 * Fast rat I


 * Saber-toothed rat (aka false gladiodon) I


 * Imperial raradon I


 * Lesser raradon I


 * Steppe jerboa I


 * Humboldt viscacha I


 * Bull hamster I


 * Plain long ear I


 * Baobab rat I


 * Squirrelare I


 * Batmouse I


 * Harinagilahari I


 * Beak-toothed beaver I


 * Sewer panther I


 * Rattatarat I


 * Raticaterat I


 * Brown-backed rattata (aka Hawaiian rattata) I


 * Buffcheek raticate (aka Hawaiian raticate) I


 * Diglett I


 * Dugtrio I


 * River rabbitmouse I


 * Sentret I


 * Electric mouse (aka false pikachu) I


 * European mawile I


 * American mawile I


 * Orloni I


 * Diverse orloni relatives I


 * Horned mara I


 * Coypocetus I


 * Armoguti I


 * Llamara I


 * Shagmot I


 * Lizard-like hamster I


 * Mole rat-like earless hamster I


 * Reptilian beaver I


 * Dinosaur-like jerboa I


 * Red reptiliomouse I


 * Green reptiliomouse I


 * Awltooth I


 * Reptilian squirrel I


 * Reptilian carnivorous porcupine (aka quill-less reptilian porcupine) I


 * Doubledip (aka dippymouse) I


 * Woody (aka woodsquire) I


 * Launchoid I (note: it is an experimental rodent species that resembles the purely-fictional time paradox-causing true launch (607), but the launchoid is actually completely harmless and doesn't cause time paradox, therefore can't effect time nor space)


 * True flying squirrel I


 * Urban mouse I


 * Sewer rat I


 * City beaver I


 * Lawn squirrel I


 * Yard porcupine I


 * Garden porcupine I


 * Shingleback I


 * Flowing nutcracker I


 * Hogsqueal I


 * Whalarat I


 * Monty mole (aka mole-like gopher) I


 * Ratman I from Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles 2014 film to real life North America (Note: There are now female ratmen so their species could live on in real life North America. Also, they had a country called Ratvania. Also, due to being a sapient, they DO NOT spread diseases.)


 * Scurrier I


 * Profogg I


 * Womp rat I


 * Pigrat I


 * Peadog I


 * Mousephant I


 * Trip gerbil I


 * Daedric rat I from Elder Scrolls franchise to real life North America


 * Skeever I from Elder Scrolls franchise to real life North America


 * Ratoid mouse I


 * Pikachu I from Pokemon series to real life North America


 * Sapient Pikachu I from Detective Pikachu 2019 film to real life North America (note: unlike their ancestors, their talking can now be heard by every sapient species/beings and dylanusids, there are also now also females, not just males, so their species could live on for generations)


 * Raichu I from a video game series, Pokémon, to real life North America


 * Pichu I from a video game series, Pokémon, to real life North America


 * Plusle I from a video game series, Pokémon, to real life North America


 * Minun I from a video game series, Pokémon, to real life North America


 * Dedenne I from a video game series, Pokémon, to real life North America


 * Togedemaru I from a video game series, Pokémon, to real life North America


 * Pachirisu I from a video game series, Pokémon, to real life North America


 * Emolga I from a video game series, Pokémon, to real life North America


 * Rattata I from a video game series, Pokémon, to real life North America (note: like all Pokémon species that now exists in real life and unlike their ancestors, they no longer evolve into newer forms [in Rattata's case, Raticate], since they are now a completely different species)


 * Raticate I from a video game series, Pokémon, to real life North America (note: like all Pokémon species that now exists in real life and unlike their ancestors, they no longer evolve from older forms [in Raticate's case, Rattata], since they are now a completely different species)


 * Bidoof I from Pokemon series to real life North America (note: unlike their ancestors, they no longer evolve into Bibarels, as they are now a completely different species)


 * Bibarel I from Pokemon series to real life North America (note: unlike their ancestors, they no longer evolve from Bidoofs, as they are now a completely different species)


 * Wererat I from the Frankenweenie film to real life North America (note: they no longer become dead rats when they get electrocuted, since they are now a completely different species, they are now considered living rather than undead, they also don't turn victims into wererats as this feature is only a myth, this is what wererats look like in real life)


 * Sapient naked mole rat I


 * Mole rat-man I


 * Beaverman I


 * Squirrelanoid I (note: unlike their ancestors, they are no longer evil nor aggressive, as the ones that were so weren't tolerated, so they're completely harmless towards sapient species/beings and dylanusids)


 * Sapient mouse I from a popular Disney franchise, Mickey Mouse, to real life North America. (Note: Because of their high intelligence, they can now have a country called Disneyaria, located in California. Also, due to being a sapient, they DO NOT spread diseases.)

Rabbits and relatives

 * Antelope jackrabbit I (in the rest of North America)


 * Chinese hare I


 * Mountain hare I


 * Indian hare I


 * Japanese hare I


 * European hare


 * European rabbit


 * Swamp rabbit I (in the rest of North America)


 * Volcano rabbit I (in the rest of North America)


 * Pygmy rabbit I (in the rest of North America)


 * Snowshoe hare I (in the rest of North America)


 * Alaskan hare I (in the rest of North America)


 * Arctic hare I (in the rest of North America)


 * Sumatran rabbit I


 * Hispid hare I


 * Amami rabbit I (note: unlike native ones of Japan, even though they are similar to their ancestors from Japan, the invasive Amami rabbits in North America are thriving due to they now tolerate predators [most likely due to genetic engineering], both native and nonnative, by evolving a faster reproductive system and can now move faster to escape from danger)


 * American pika I (in the rest of North America)


 * Turkestan red pika I


 * Nuralagus I


 * Diprotolepus I


 * Hippoleprus I


 * Brontolagus I


 * Robbit (aka dog-sized common rabbit) I


 * Flabbit I


 * Lagomammoth I


 * Spotted jack


 * Giant rabbit I


 * Rabbuck I from After Man Book and Documentary series to real life North America


 * Lutie I from After Man Book series to real life North America


 * Forest harelope I


 * Grass harelope I


 * Snow harelope I


 * Snowlopper I


 * Aurochid I


 * Spanish biped rabbit I (note: it is a fully-upright-walking, blue-skinned, hairless, intelligent rabbit species that is almost as smart as an extinct homo habilis, it is actually a herbivore that feeds on grass, flowers, and vegetables)


 * Girona gremlin I (note: just like the Spanish biped rabbit, it is a fully-upright-walking, blue-skinned, hairless, intelligent rabbit species that is almost as smart as an extinct homo habilis, it is actually a herbivore that feeds on grass, flowers, and vegetables)


 * Sapient rabbit I


 * Rabbeer I


 * Rufous sea rabbit I


 * Bowtie sea rabbit I


 * Marsh rabbit I


 * New azora tardolagus I


 * Lagotherium I


 * Harelope I


 * Rabalope I


 * Lagotherium I


 * Antarctic woolly rabbit I


 * Mammolepus I


 * Bunnson I


 * Elebbit I


 * Carnolepus I


 * Killer pika I


 * Bunny beast I


 * Jackalope I (note: it is a relative of jackrabbits that has horns similar to that found on pronghorns, and is mostly similar to its relative, other than having horns)


 * Rhosgobe rabbit I


 * Neck-stretched rabbit I


 * Dinosaur-like rabbit I


 * Singer rabbit I


 * Plusle rabbit I


 * Minum rabbit I


 * Whismur I


 * Houdini (aka houdini rabbit) I


 * City rabbit I


 * Garden pika I


 * Half-sapient-half-non-sapient rabbit I from Peter Rabbit (2018 film) to real life North America


 * Rabbit-rhino (aka Rabbinoceros) I


 * Glow bunny (aka glow rabbit) I (note: this is what glow bunnies look like in real life, also, they aren't sapient, unlike how the film they came from seems to show, since they fill the similar niche to real life rabbits and relatives, and are about as smart as wild European rabbits and domestic rabbits)


 * Looney rabbit I from a popular Warner Bros. animated franchise, Looney Tunes, to real life Eastern North America)


 * Powerpuff bunny I from a Powerpuff Girls episode, Super Zeroes. (Note: They have now male counterparts so they can thrive in the real life. However, unlike Bubbles in her Harmony Bunny costume, eye colors were now varied. even skin colors, especially having voices varied.)

Sloths, anteaters, armadillos and relatives

 * Silky anteater I (in Florida, Alabama, Georgia, Louisiana, and Mississippi)


 * Southern tamandua I (in Florida, Alabama, Georgia, Louisiana, Mississippi, Texas, California, Nevada, Arizona, New Mexico, and Oregon)


 * Northern tamandua I (in Florida, Alabama, Georgia, Louisiana, and Mississippi)


 * Giant anteater I


 * Nine-banded armadillo I (in the rest of North America)


 * Seven-banded armadillo I


 * Southern long-nosed armadillo I


 * Chacoan naked-tailed armadillo I


 * Pichi I


 * Six-banded armadillo I


 * Brazilian three-banded armadillo I


 * Southern three-banded armadillo I


 * Greater fairy armadillo I


 * Pink fairy armadillo I


 * Screaming hairy armadillo I


 * Andean hairy armadillo I


 * Big hairy armadillo I


 * Giant armadillo I


 * Three-toed sloth I


 * Two-toed sloth I


 * Poison dart sloths I


 * Kakamora I (in the rest of North America)


 * Sasquatch I (in the rest of North America)


 * Armadillo sloth I


 * Shasta ground sloth from Pleistocene North America to modern North America (reintroduced)


 * Gloss's ground sloth I from Pleistocene South America to modern North America


 * Myla's ground sloth I from Pleistocene South America to modern North America


 * Harlan's ground sloth from Pleistocene North America to modern North America (reintroduced)


 * Lestat's ground sloth I from Pleistocene South America to modern North America


 * Jefferson's ground sloth from Pleistocene North America to modern North America (reintroduced)


 * Erin's ground sloth from Pleistocene North America to modern North America (reintroduced)


 * Giant ground sloth from Pleistocene South America and North America to modern North America (reintroduced)


 * Scavenging ground sloth I


 * Anteater-colored ground sloth I


 * Armored ground sloth (aka tapir-nosed ground sloth) I


 * Greater Glyptodon from Pleistocene North America to modern North America (reintroduced)


 * Tapir-Nosed Glyptodon I


 * Glyptotherium from Pleistocene North America to modern North America (reintroduced)


 * Doedicurus from Pleistocene South America to modern North America


 * False Doedicurus I


 * Spec's Xenarthrans I


 * Quiladillo I


 * Hyeando I


 * False anteater sloth I


 * Greater Amazon ground sloth I


 * Elephantine ground sloth I


 * Big-eared tamandua I


 * Manded texugo I


 * Pterotamandua I


 * Mantatherium I


 * Herbeater I


 * Meganarmadillo I


 * Juggernaut armadillo I


 * Hippodillo I


 * Aquadillos I


 * Turtle armadillo I


 * Marine turtle armadillo I


 * Skinhi I


 * Taturex I


 * Rattlebacked pangolin I


 * Tatu burro I


 * Megadillo I


 * Ankylodillo I


 * Maxithyrea I


 * Digging armadillo I


 * Nagual I


 * Shell anteater I


 * River armadillo I


 * Hidebehind I


 * Horned dillodile I


 * Aquadillo I


 * Dragonwhal I


 * Marine glyptodont I


 * Squideater I


 * Marine tamandua I


 * Vermilingua (aka marine manatee-like herbivorous anteater) I


 * Licker I


 * Sea tamandua I


 * Barougi I


 * Reef chamarela I


 * Tahitian weed bear I


 * Giant slothwhale I


 * Common bottlenosed slothphin I


 * Log sloth I


 * Atlantic sea sloth I


 * Pacific sea sloth I


 * Sea molluskeater I


 * Manta-like sea sloth I


 * Star-sloth I


 * Troll sloth I


 * Borodillo I


 * Spearhead I


 * Plain jumper (aka Alaskan monster) I (note: unlike their ancestors, they prefer fruits, leaves, insects, fish, frogs, lizards, eggs, birds, and mammals that aren't sapient or close to sapient including humans, dylanusids, nor others, but can hunt and kill vampires due to bloody conflicts with them)


 * Algal swimming sloth I


 * Long-snouted predatory sloth I


 * Dinosaur-like predatory anteater I


 * Visceravore (aka vampire anteater) I


 * Sapient slothman I


 * Spike (aka Spikadillo) I


 * Richter (aka richtadillo) I (note: unlike their ancestors, richters no longer causes earthquakes as the ones that do so aren't tolerated by real life sapient beings, also, they are now peaceful herbivores that feed only on plants, shrubs, ferns, cycads, roots, and tubers)


 * Nosy (aka nosysloth) I


 * Shoe (aka horseshoe sloth) I


 * Warpstron (aka warpedoodle) I


 * Zawp (aka zawpabear) I


 * Stenchy (aka Mr. Stenchy or stenchby) I


 * Jangodon I


 * Rhino armadillo I


 * Impaler I


 * City armadillo I

Pangolins

 * Long-tailed pangolin I


 * Tree pangolin I


 * Indian pangolin I


 * Ground pangolin I


 * Giant pangolin I


 * Mokele-mbembe I


 * Domestic Mokele I


 * Dawn pangolin I


 * False (European) tamandua I


 * Sapient pangolin I from The Jungle Book 2016 film to real life North America (note: unlike their ancestors, they are no longer scared of humans or any other sapient species/beings and they now live with and work with any sapient species/beings, except vampires due to bloody conflicts with them, these pangolins can also talk like any sapient species/beings and can speak in many different languages like English and others, also unlike non-sapient pangolins, they can live for about 100 years, not just about 20 or under)


 * Tweak (aka tweakerlin) I

Proto-primates

 * Flying lemurs I


 * Treeshrew I


 * Giant Tree Shrew I


 * Greater Purgatorius I from Cretaceous North America to modern North America


 * Digging Purgatorius I


 * White-Cheeked Purgatorius I


 * Red Purgatorius I


 * Ring-Tailed Purgatorius I


 * Opossum-Like Purgatorius I


 * Carpolestes I from Paleocene North America to modern North America


 * Plesiadapis I from Eocene North America to modern North America


 * Megacolugo (aka flying colugo) I


 * Bonnie (aka bonnkey) I


 * Clyde (aka clydis) I

Primitive primates and relatives

 * Senegal bushbaby I


 * Mohol bushbaby I


 * Northern greater bushbaby I


 * Silvery greater bushbaby I


 * Brown greater bushbaby I


 * Philippine tarsier I


 * Slender lorises I


 * Slow lorises I


 * All known species of Plesiadapiformes I


 * All known species of Omomyids I


 * All known species of Adapiformes I


 * Capuchin-Like Godinotia I


 * Necrolemur I


 * Shoshonius I


 * Teilhardina I


 * Altanius I


 * Ekgmowechashala I


 * Clatta I from After Man Book and Documentary series to real life North America


 * Speculative Evolution's primates I


 * Glowing red-eyed bushbaby I


 * Alickwall I


 * Burrower (aka burring primate) I


 * Burglar monkey I


 * Monyepembun I


 * Heat (aka Heamur) I


 * Dupe (aka Dupkey) I


 * Scamp I


 * Poison demon I

Lemurs

 * Aye-aye I


 * Brown mouse lemur I


 * Pygmy mouse lemur I


 * AEECL'S sportive lemur I


 * All known species of sifaka I


 * All known species of indris I


 * True lemurs I


 * Bamboo lemurs I


 * Greater bamboo lemur I


 * Red ruffed lemur I


 * Black and white ruffed lemur I


 * Ring-tailed lemur I


 * Black-hooded lemur I


 * Briddle-tailed lemur I


 * Brown shaggy lemur I


 * Koala lemur I


 * Common sloth lemur I


 * Giant sloth lemur I


 * Lesser sloth lemur I


 * Tree sloth lemur I


 * Common monkey lemur I


 * Lesser monkey lemur I


 * Ursine lemur I


 * Dwarf ursine lemur I


 * Ant lemur I


 * Vazimba I


 * Common gigantolemur I


 * Greater gigantolemur I


 * Tree sloth lemur I


 * Lemuroo I


 * Baribal lemur I


 * Devil lemur (aka ground death lemur) I (note: it is one of the few carnivorous lemurs that was brought to real life North America by humans using universe travel, along with Jersey devils and lemurs of death)


 * Jersey devil (AKA Terror lemur) I (it is a large winged bipedal lemur that is the only known primate that can truly fly, it is also a carnivore that is mostly a predator. Here's what Jersey devils look like, they have hind legs and wings, but no extra arms as once thought, even though its wings are its arms)


 * Lemur of death I


 * Carnolemur I


 * Purple lemur I


 * Bipedal killer lemur I


 * Rat lemurs (aka all todays lemurs) I


 * Common sapient lemurman I


 * Giant sapient lemurman I


 * Sapient lemur I one subspecies from the theatrical film version and the other subspecies from the abandoned concept version of Disney's 2000 film, Dinosaur, to real life North America (note: unlike their ancestors, they are now fully civilized so they now have culture, religion, tech, society, etc)