List of introduced species

A complete list of introduced species for even quite small areas of the world would be dauntingly long (literally). Humans have introduced more different species from today's world, prehistory (through time travel), or fiction (through universe travel) to new environments in real/modern world than any single document can hope to record. This list is generally for established species with truly wild populations—not kept domestically, kept in zoos/safari parks, kept in bird houses, kept in pet stores, or kept on ranches—that have been seen numerous times, and have very successful breeding populations.

In this list, if the species has an I symbol, that means it's an invasive species, if the species doesn't have an I symbol, it isn't an invasive species, but they can still thrive even if it isn't an invasive species.

(Note: all deadly diseases on earth (viruses, bacteria, etc.) including ebola, malaria, zika, rabies, and others are eradicated on earth, so they aren't listed here)

Plants

 * Bridal creeper (I)


 * Patterson's curse (I)


 * Koster's curse (I)


 * Scotch thistle (I)


 * Lantana (I)


 * Blueberry (I)


 * Audrey II (from Little Shop Of Horrors 1986 film to real life Australia) (I)

Mammals

 * Opossum (I)


 * White rhinoceros (I)


 * Hippopotamus (I)


 * African elephant (I)


 * Hyrax (I)


 * Pika (I)


 * Cheetah (I)


 * Pronghorn (I)


 * Okapi (I)


 * Giraffe (I)


 * Asian lion (I)


 * Black bear (I)


 * African buffalo (I)


 * Wisent (I)


 * American bison (I)


 * Mule deer (I)


 * Wild pig (I)


 * Water buffalo (I)


 * Dromedary camel (I)


 * Fallow Deer (I)


 * Water deer (I)


 * Donkey (I)


 * Banteng


 * Ferret (I) (eradicated)


 * European hare (I) (eradicated)


 * Mountain hare (I) (eradicated)


 * European rabbit (I) (eradicated)


 * Brumby


 * Red fox (I) (eradicated)


 * Northern palm squirrel (I)


 * Eastern gray squirrel (I) (eradicated)


 * House mouse (I) (eradicated)


 * Pacific rat (I) (eradicated!


 * Black rat (I) (eradicated)


 * Brown rat (I) (eradicated)


 * North American Macaque (I)


 * Elecman.EXEs


 * Northern Vampire Bat (I)


 * Domestic Dylanus


 * Protoman


 * Maverick Hunters


 * Bass.EXEs


 * Domestic Tapir (I)


 * Chalicothere (I) from Oligocene Asia to modern Australia


 * Ancylotherium (I) from Pliocene Africa to modern Australia


 * Entelodont (I) from Oligocene Asia to modern Australia


 * Hyaenodont (I) from Oligocene Asia to modern Australia


 * Andrewsarchus (I) from Eocene Asia to modern Australia


 * Early manatee from Eocene Jamaica to modern Australia


 * Purgatorius (I) from Cretaceous North America to modern Australia


 * Vampire (I) from mythical Europe to real life Australia


 * Jiangshi (I) from mythical China to real life Australia

Birds

 * Common pheasant (I)


 * Common myna (I) (eradicated)


 * European starling (I) (eradicated)


 * Eurasian skylark (eradicated)


 * Common blackbird (I) (eradicated)


 * Eurasian tree sparrow (eradicated)


 * European greenfinch (eradicated)


 * European goldfinch (eradicated)


 * Pigeon (I)


 * Hill myna (eradicated)


 * House sparrow (I) (eradicated)


 * Mallard duck (I)


 * White-faced whistling duck (I)


 * Scaly-breasted munia (eradicated)


 * Rural Spoonbill (I)


 * Tyrant Pelican (I)


 * New World Ostrich (I)


 * Common Flamingo (I)


 * Common Ibis (I)


 * Inland Albatross (I)


 * Darwin's Coot (I)


 * American Peacock


 * North American Kiwi (I)


 * SealGrebe


 * African Giant Condor


 * Spotted dove (I)


 * Upland moa (I) from historic New Zealand to modern Australia


 * Eastern moa (I) from historic New Zealand to modern Australia


 * Bush moa (I) from historic New Zealand to modern Australia


 * Giant moa from historic New Zealand to modern Australia


 * Gastornis (I) from Eocene Europe and North America to modern Australia


 * Alexander's bird (I) from Cretaceous Mexico to modern Australia


 * Jehol bird (I) from Cretaceous China to modern Australia


 * Jixiang bird (I) from Cretaceous China to modern Australia


 * Sape bird (I) from Cretaceous China to modern Australia


 * Confucius bird (I) from Cretaceous China to modern Australia


 * Fan-tailed bird (I) from Cretaceous China to modern Australia


 * Spanish intermediate bird (I) from Cretaceous Spain to modern Australia


 * Owlman (aka English giant owl (I) from cryptozoology England to real life Australia


 * Mothman (aka American giant owl from cryptozoology North America to real life Australia


 * Rainbow crow (aka fire crow) from mythical North America to real life Australia

Fish

 * Asian carp (I)


 * Brown trout


 * Common roach


 * European perch (I)


 * Mosquitofish (I)


 * Rainbow trout (I)


 * Rosy barb


 * Rudd


 * Tilapia (I)


 * Tench


 * Weather loach


 * Diplomystus (I) from Eocene North America to modern Australia


 * Knightia from Eocene North America to modern Australia


 * Priscacara (I) from Eocene North America to modern Australia


 * White River monster (I) from cryptozoology North America to real life Australia

Reptiles

 * House gecko


 * Rhinoceros iguana


 * Tegu (I)


 * Runner Lizard (I)


 * Dryosaurus from Jurassic North America to modern Australia


 * Leaellynasaura (I) from Cretaceous Australia to modern Australia


 * Hypsilophodon (I) from Cretaceous Europe to modern Australia


 * Muttaburrasaurus from Cretaceous Australia to modern Australia


 * Australovenator from Cretaceous Australia to modern Australia


 * Forest dragon (I) from The Last Dragon film to real life Australia

Arthropods

 * Argentine ant (I)


 * Dung beetle (I)


 * Black Portuguese millipede


 * Western honeybee


 * Fire ant (I)


 * Yellow crazy ant (I)


 * European wasp (I)


 * Giant cockroach (I)


 * Manipulator (I) from Cretaceous Asia to modern Australia

Echinoderms

 * Northern Pacific seastar

Plants

 * American willoherb


 * Autumn crocus


 * Bermuda buttercup


 * Canadian pond weed


 * Common field-speedwell


 * Evening primrose


 * Floating pennywort


 * Fox and cubs


 * Giant hogweed


 * Guernsey fleabane


 * Himalayan balsam


 * Hottentot fig


 * Japanese knotweed


 * Jewelweed


 * Kudzu


 * Least duckweed


 * New Zealand willowherb


 * Oxford ragwort


 * Pigmy weed


 * Purple dewplant


 * Purple pitcher


 * Rhododendron


 * Water fern

Mammals

 * Gray squirrel (I)


 * Feral cat (I)


 * Brown rat (I)


 * Black rat (I)


 * House mouse (I)


 * Bank vole in Ireland


 * Capybara (I)


 * Giant Capybara (I)


 * Giant Paca (I)


 * Giant Agouti (I)


 * Giant Rat (I)


 * Big Rat (I)


 * Giant Mouse (I)


 * Big Mouse (I)


 * Edible dormouse


 * Tree shrew


 * White-headed marmoset


 * Common marmoset


 * Prairie dog


 * Mongoose


 * Ferret


 * Coati


 * European rabbit (I)


 * European hare


 * North African Hedgehog (I)


 * American mink (I)


 * Reeves's muntjac


 * Fallow deer


 * Sika deer


 * Water deer


 * Bennett's wallaby


 * Water buffalo


 * Skunk


 * Malayan porcupine


 * Dromedary camel


 * Northern Vampire Bat (I)


 * Elecman.EXEs


 * Feral tapir (I)


 * Domestic Dylanus


 * Protoman


 * Maverick Hunters


 * Bass.EXEs


 * Irish elk from prehistoric Eurasia to modern England


 * Vampire (I) from mythical Europe to real life England, especially in London


 * Jiangshi (I) from mythical China to real life England


 * Bass.EXE (undead version)

Birds

 * Helmeted guineafowl


 * Peafowl


 * Little owl


 * Eagle owl


 * Rose-ringed parakeet (I)


 * Rose-ringed parakeet (I)


 * Monk parakeet


 * Red-legged partridge


 * Green pheasant


 * Chinese pheasant


 * Lady Amherst's pheasant


 * Common pheasant


 * Domestic goose


 * Swan goose


 * Canada goose


 * Barnacle goose


 * Egyptian goose


 * Glossy ibis


 * African ibis


 * Wood duck


 * Mandarin duck


 * Ruddy duck


 * Inland Albatross


 * Rural Spoonbill


 * Common Flamingo


 * American Lyrebird


 * Giant elephant bird from historic Madagascar to modern England


 * Pygmy elephant bird (I) from historic Madagascar to modern England


 * Moa
 * North Island giant moa from historic New Zealand to modern England
 * South Island giant moa from historic New Zealand to modern England
 * Eastern moa from historic New Zealand to modern England
 * Broad-billed moa from historic New Zealand to modern England
 * Heavy-footed moa from historic New Zealand to modern England
 * Mantell's moa from historic New Zealand to modern England
 * Crested moa from historic New Zealand to modern England
 * Upland moa from historic New Zealand to modern England


 * Dromornis from prehistoric Australia to modern England


 * Genyornis from prehistoric Australia to modern England


 * Gastornis from Eocene Europe to modern England


 * Hippogriff from mythical Europe to real life England

Fish

 * Zander


 * Wels catfish


 * Rainbow trout (I)


 * Walleye


 * Bitterling


 * Bluegill


 * Brook trout (I)


 * Carp (I)


 * Bullhead catfish


 * Goldfish


 * Orfe


 * Pumpkinseed (I)


 * Stone moroko


 * Sunbleak (I)


 * Fathead minnow


 * Pink salmon

Amphibians

 * Alpine newt


 * Midwife toat


 * Yellow-bellied toad


 * Marsh frog


 * American bullfrog (I)


 * African clawed frog (I)


 * European tree frog


 * Koolasuchus from Cretaceous Australia to modern British Isles


 * Siderops from Jurassic Australia to modern England


 * Pelorocephalus from Triassic Argentina to modern England

Reptiles

 * Aesculapian snake


 * European pond turtle
 * Pond slider (I)


 * European wall lizard


 * Burmese python (I)


 * Runner Lizard


 * Camptosaurus (I) from Jurassic North America to modern England


 * Dakotadon (I) from Cretaceous North America to modern England


 * Iguanodon (I) from Cretaceous Europe to modern England


 * Muttaburrasaurus from Cretaceous Australia to modern England


 * Coelophysis (I) from Triassic North America to modern England


 * Troodon (I) from Cretaceous North America to modern England


 * Mountain dragon from The Last Dragon film to real life England


 * Dinosauroid (I) from the speculative world to real life England

Crustaceans

 * Signal crayfish


 * Chinese mitten crab


 * Killer shrimp

Insects

 * Asian giant hornet (eradicated)


 * Pharoah ant (eradicated)


 * Western honeybee

Plants

 * Gorse


 * Blackberry


 * Lupin


 * Ragwort


 * Scotch thistle


 * Cirsium arvense


 * Mistflower (I)


 * ginger lily


 * Japanese honeysuckle (I)


 * Old man's beard


 * Robert Cantley's pitcher plant (I)


 * Ya-te-veo from cryptozoology islands to real life New Zealand

Mammals

 * Common brushtail possum (I) (eradicated)


 * Feral cat (I) (eradicated)


 * Deer
 * Red deer
 * Sika deer
 * Javan rusa
 * Moose
 * White-tailed deer
 * Caribou
 * Barasingha
 * Tufted deer


 * Donkey


 * Feral cattle


 * Ferret (I) (eradicated)


 * European hare (I)


 * Mountain hare (I)


 * American pika


 * Collared pika (I)


 * Feral horse


 * Hedgehog (I) (eradicated)


 * Goat-Antelope-Grouped Mammals
 * Domestic goat (I) (eradicated)
 * Domestic Sheep
 * Himalayan tahr
 * Nilgiri tahr
 * Japanese serow
 * Himalayan serow
 * Chinese serow
 * Himalayan goral
 * Takin
 * Chamois


 * Feral pig (I) (eradicated)


 * Amami rabbit (I)


 * European rabbit (I) (eradicated)


 * Rats
 * Brown rat (I) (eradicated)
 * Black rat (I) (eradicated)
 * Pacific rat (I) (eradicated)


 * Stoat (I) (eradicated)


 * Coati


 * Wallabies


 * Weasel (I) (eradicated)


 * Japanese macaque (I) (eradicated)


 * Domestic Pignosed


 * Domestic Panda


 * Elecman.EXEs


 * Feral tapir


 * Domestic Dylanus


 * Protoman


 * Maverick Hunters


 * Bass.EXEs


 * Dwarf woolly mammoth (I) from Holocene Wrangle Island to modern New Zealand


 * Dire wolf from Pleistocene North America to modern New Zealand


 * Vampire (I) from mythical Europe to real life New Zealand


 * Bass.EXE (undead version)

Birds

 * Common blackbird (eradicated)


 * Dunnock (eradicated)


 * Australian magpie (I) (eradicated)


 * Mallard


 * Myna (I) (eradicated)


 * Starling (I) (eradicated)


 * Common pheasant


 * Quail


 * Wild turkey (I)


 * Moa
 * North Island giant moa from historic New Zealand to modern New Zealand (reintroduced)
 * South Island giant moa from historic New Zealand to modern New Zealand (reintroduced)
 * Eastern moa from historic New Zealand to modern New Zealand (reintroduced)
 * Broad-billed moa from historic New Zealand to modern New Zealand (reintroduced)
 * Heavy-footed moa from historic New Zealand to modern New Zealand (reintroduced)
 * Mantell's moa from historic New Zealand to modern New Zealand (reintroduced)
 * Crested moa from historic New Zealand to modern Zealand (reintroduced)
 * Upland moa from historic New Zealand to modern New Zealand (reintroduced)


 * Haast's eagle (reintroduced)

Reptiles

 * Frilled lizard (I)


 * Thorny lizard (I)


 * Runner Lizard


 * Leaellynasaura from Cretaceous Australia to modern New Zealand


 * Muttaburrasaura from Cretaceous Australia to modern New Zealand

Amphibians

 * Leopard frog (I) (eradicated)


 * Koolasuchus from Cretaceous Australia to modern New Zealand

Fish

 * Brown trout


 * Salmon


 * Catfish


 * Grass carp

Insects

 * Monarch butterfly


 * Housefly


 * Honey bee

Plants

 * Nonnative horsetails(I)


 * Common tree-like horsetails (I)


 * Greater tree-like horsetail (I)
 * Drepanophycales (I)


 * Scale tree-like moss (I)


 * Carboniferous seed ferns (I)


 * Carboniferous conifers (I)


 * Norway maple


 * Baynan fig (I)


 * Guava (I)


 * Blackberries (I)


 * Asian red raspberry (I)


 * Loganberry (I)


 * Boysenberry (I)


 * Oil palm (I)


 * Dandelion


 * Eurasian watermilfoil


 * Ice plant


 * Eucalypt


 * Eucalyotus trees (I)


 * Corymbia trees (I)


 * Angophora trees (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 caltrop


 * Water Hyacinth (I) (eradicated)


 * Water lettuce


 * Ipomoea (I)


 * Giant reed (I)


 * Poison hemlock


 * Giant salvinia


 * English ivy (I)


 * Rockweed


 * Green sea fingers


 * Diffuse knapweed


 * Scotch broom


 * Johnson grass


 * 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)


 * 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)


 * 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)


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

Mammals

 * Mustang


 * Feral cattle


 * Feral dog (I)


 * Feral cat (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 tge Great Depression closed and let these bats loose, and they now thrive in California, Oregon, Florida, and most other parts of the USA)


 * Fruit bats (I) (note: all of the well 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)


 * European red squirrel (I)


 * European mole (I)


 * Flying lemurs (I)


 * Springhares (I)


 * Jerboa (I)


 * Fawn hopping mouse (I)


 * Spinifex hopping mouse (I)


 * Mitchell's hopping mouse (I)


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


 * Southern tamandua (I)


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


 * Giant anteater (I)


 * Aardvark (I)


 * Pangolins
 * Long-tailed pangolin (I)
 * Tree pangolin (I)
 * Indian pangolin (I)
 * Ground pangolin (I)
 * Giant pangolin (I)


 * Striped hyena


 * Spotted hyena


 * Brown hyena


 * Aardwolf (I)


 * Treeshrew (I)


 * AEECL'S sportive lemur (I)


 * Indris (I)


 * True lemurs (I) (note: all of the known true lemur species were introduced to North America just from escapees from zoos and safari parks)


 * Bamboo lemurs (I)


 * Greater bamboo lemur (I)


 * Red ruffed lemur (I)


 * Black and white ruffed lemur (I)


 * Ring-tailed lemur (I)


 * Monkeys
 * Chacma baboon (I)
 * Olive baboon (I)
 * Guinea baboon (I)
 * Hamadryas baboon (I)
 * Rhesus macaque (I)
 * Japanese macaque (I)
 * Barbary macaque (I)
 * Formosan rock macaque (I)
 * Crab-eating macaque (I)
 * Vervet monkey (I)
 * White-headed capuchin (I) (note: they originated from escapees from zoos and safari parks and are now thriving in both California and Florida)
 * Tufted capuchin (I) (note: they originated from escapees from zoos and safari parks and are now thriving in both California and Florida)
 * Black-striped capuchin (I) (note: they originated from escapees from zoos and safari parks and are now thriving in both California and Florida)


 * Apes
 * Common chimpanzee (in Florida only)
 * Bonobo (in Florida, Georgia, and Alabama)
 * Sumatran orangutan (in Florida, Alabama, and Georgia only)
 * Mountain gorilla (in Florida only)


 * Siberian tiger


 * Bengal tiger


 * African leopard/Indian leopard hybrids (I)


 * Jaguar (in the rest of the USA and most of southern Canada)


 * Clouded leopard (I) (in most of USA)


 * Snow leopard (I) (in most of USA, Canada, Alaska, and Greenland)


 * Caracal (I) (in most of USA and southern Canada)


 * Serval (I) (in most of USA)


 * Cheetah


 * Wild boar (I)


 * Dugong (I) (in rivers of Utah, Wyoming, Colorada, Nevada, Arizona, Oregon, New Mexico, California, Texas, Mississippi, Louisiana, Alabama, Georgia, and Florida)


 * West Indian manatee (in rivers of Arizona, Nevada, Oregon, Colorado, Utah, California, Wyoming, New Mexico, Texas, Idaho, Washington, Montana, South Dakota, and North Dakota)


 * Rhinoceroses
 * White rhinoceros (in California, Oregon, Nevada, and Arizonia)
 * Black rhinlceros (in California only)
 * Indian rhinoceros (in California and Arizona only)
 * Javan rhinoceros (in Florida only)
 * Sumatran rhinoceros (in Florida only)
 * Woolly rhinoceros (were brought back and were introduced to the Great Plains, Canada, and Alaska)
 * Elasmotherium (were brought back and were introduced to the Great Plains)
 * Menoceras (were brought back and were reintroduced to southern North America and were introduced to California)
 * Metaynodon (were brought back and were reintroudced 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)
 * Juxia (were brought back and were introduced to western and eastern North American areas)
 * Forstercooperia (were brought back and were introduced to California)
 * Indricothere (were brought back and were introduced to California, Oregon, Arizona, and Nevada)


 * Platypus (I)


 * Short-beaked echidna (I)


 * Common brushtail possum (I)


 * Sugar glider (I)


 * Feathertail glider (I)


 * 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)


 * Short-nosed bandicoot (I)


 * Eastern barred bandicoot (I)


 * Greater biliby (I)


 * Common wombat (I)


 * Agile wallaby (I)


 * Bennett's wallaby (I)


 * Brush-tailed rock wallaby (I)


 * Yellow-footed rock wallaby (I)


 * Common wallaroo (I)


 * Western grey kangaroo (I)


 * Eastern grey kangaroo (I)


 * Red kangaroo (I)


 * Deer
 * Sika deer (I)
 * Axis deer (I)
 * Moose (in the rest of North America)
 * Roe deer (I)
 * Sambar deer (I)
 * Red deer (I)
 * Fallow deer (I)
 * Indian hog deer (I)
 * Reeve's muntjac (I)
 * Swamp deer (I)
 * Tufted deer (I)
 * Musk deer (I)
 * Water deer (I)


 * Goat-Sheep-grouped mammals
 * Takin
 * Japanese serow (I)
 * Chamois (I)
 * Markhor
 * Wild goat (I)
 * Domestic sheep (I)
 * Mouflon
 * Barbary sheep
 * Arabian tahr
 * Himalayan tahr


 * House Mouse (I) (eradicated in all of North America, except in most of California)


 * Black rat (I) (eradicated)


 * Brown rat (I) (note: even though it's an invasive species, populations brown rats in North America are now under control due to introduced cats, dogs, mongooses, vervet monkeys (which will sometimes eat the rats), and tasmainian devils, as well as native foxes, bobcats, weasels, minks, skunks, badgers, wolverines, coyotes, and raccoons)


 * 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)


 * African crested porcupine (I)


 * Nutria (I)


 * Wild water buffalo


 * African buffalo


 * Gaur


 * Yak


 * Wisent


 * Red river hog (I)


 * Warthog (I)


 * Giant otter (I)


 * Asian otter (I)


 * Amazon river dolphin (I) (in California, Oregon, Arizona, Nevada, Utah, Alabama, Georgia, and Florida)


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


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


 * European hare


 * European rabbit


 * Mongooses
 * Stripe-necked mongoose
 * Small Asian mongoose (in Hawaii only)
 * Indian brown mongoose
 * Indian gray mongoose
 * Egyptian mongoose
 * Crab-eating mongooses (I)


 * Jaguarundi (I)


 * Dromedary camel (in Nevada, Arizona, California, and New Mexico)


 * Guanaco (in California only)


 * Vicuña (in California and Oregon only)


 * Giraffe (I) (in Utah, Wyoming, Colorado, Texas, South Dakota, Nevada, Oregon, California, Arizona, and New Mexico)


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


 * Mountain tapir (in California only)


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


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


 * Antelopes
 * Blackbuck
 * Impala
 * Hartebeest
 * Wildebeest
 * Springbok
 * Thomson's gazelle
 * Mongalla gazelle
 * Red-fronted gazelle
 * Indian gazelle
 * Cuvier's gazelle
 * Mountain gazelle
 * Dama gazelle
 * Soemmerring's gazelle
 * Mongolian gazelle
 * Saiga
 * Günther's dik-dik
 * Suni
 * Royal antelope
 * Klipspringer
 * Oribi
 * Steenbok
 * Bontebok
 * Four-horned antelope
 * Bongo (in the Everglades only)
 * Greater kudu
 * Bushbuck
 * Nyala
 * Common eland
 * Yellow-backed duiker
 * Zebra duiker
 * Common duiker
 * Roan antelope
 * Sable antelope
 * Gemsbok
 * Scimitar oryx
 * Addax
 * Tibetan antelope
 * Grey rhebok
 * Waterbuck
 * Kob
 * Lechwe
 * Puku
 * Southern reedbuck
 * Mountain reedbuck
 * Bohor reedbuck
 * Nilgai


 * Asian elephant (in Utah, Colorado, Wyoming, South Dakota, Louisiana, North Dakota, Montana, California, Oregon, Nevada, Arizona, Mississippi, Texas, Alabama, and Florida)


 * African elephant (in California, Nevada, Oregon, Arizona, New Mexico, Utah, and Texas)


 * Capybara (I) (in Florida and California only)


 * Elecman.EXEs


 * Domestic Tapir (in Florida)


 * Feral meerkat


 * Domestic Dylanus (in Florida)


 * Stripeless Tiger


 * Little Rat (I)


 * Big Rat (I)


 * Giant Rat (I)


 * Big Mouse (I)


 * Giant Mouse (I)


 * Toxodon from Pleistocene South America to modern North America


 * Macrauchenia from Pleistocene South America to modern North America


 * Chalicothere from Oligocene Asia to modern North America


 * Ancylotherium (I) from Pliocene Africa to modern North America


 * Columbian mammoth from Pleistocene North America to modern North America (reintroduced)


 * American mastodon from Pleistocene North America to modern North America (reintroduced)


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


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


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


 * Short-faced bear from Pleistocene North America to modern North America (reintroduced)


 * Dire wolf from Pleistocene North America to modern North America (reintroduced)


 * American lion from Pleistocene North America to modern North America (reintroduced)


 * Scimitar cat from Pleistocene North America to modern North America (reintroduced


 * Saber-toothed cat from Pleistocene North America to modern North America (reintroduced)


 * Embulotherium from Eocene Asia to modern North America


 * Arsinoitherium from Eocene Africa to modern North America


 * Desmostylus (I) from Oligocene North America to modern North America


 * Prorastomus (I) from Eocene Jamaica to modern North America


 * 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)


 * 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)


 * Werewolf from mythical Europe to real life North America


 * Vampire (I) from mythical Europe to real life North America


 * Bass.EXE (undead version) (I)

Birds

 * Giant ibis (I)


 * Great argus (I)


 * Crested argus (I)


 * Japanese waxwing (I)


 * Grey hypocolius (I)


 * White-throated dipper (I)


 * Brown dipper (I)


 * Rufous-tailed tailorbird (I)


 * Black-headed tailorbird (I)


 * White-eared tailorbird (I)


 * Dark-necked tailorbird (I)


 * Ashy tailorbird (I)


 * Brown-headed cowbird (I) (eradicated)


 * Grey-bellied tesia (I)


 * Chestnut-headed tesia (I)


 * Bornean stubtail (I)


 * Asian stubtail (I)


 * Moustached warbler (I)


 * Aquatic warbler (I)


 * Garden warbler (I)


 * Common whitethroat (I)


 * Common rock thrush (I)


 * Blue faintail (I)


 * Blue-headed fantail (I)


 * Rufou-tailed fantail (I)


 * Black-and-cinnamon fantail (I)


 * White-throated fantail (I)


 * Yellow-bellied fantail (I)


 * Grey-headed canary flycatcher (I)


 * Citrine canary-flycatcher (I)


 * Black-naped monarch (I)


 * Pale-blue monarch (I)


 * Celestial monarch (I)


 * Red-bellied paradise flycatcher (I)


 * African paradise flycatcher (I)


 * Ashy-headed laughingthrush (I)


 * Malia (I)


 * Large scimitar babbler (I)


 * Black-headed shrike-babbler (I)


 * Bearded reedling (I)


 * Golden-bellied gerygone (I)


 * Chestnut-bellied nuthatch (I)


 * Wallcreeper (I)


 * Brown-throated sunbird (I)


 * Red-throated sunbird (I)


 * Yellow-breasted flowerpecker (I)


 * Indonesian honeyeater (I)


 * Flame-eared honeyeater (I)


 * Dark-throated oriole (I)


 * Olive-brown oriole (I)


 * Asian fairy-bluebird (I)


 * Philippine fairy-bluebird (I)


 * Bull-headed shrike (I)


 * Large woodshrike (I)


 * Tiger shrike (I)


 * Rufous-winged philentoma (I)


 * Greater racket-tailed drongo (I)


 * Lesser racket-tailed drongo (I)


 * Fork-tailed drongo (I)


 * Crow-billed drongo (I)


 * Black drongo (I)


 * Magpie-lark (I)


 * Bornean bristlehead (I)


 * Black magpie (I)


 * Helmeted myna (I)


 * Helmeted guineafowl (I)


 * Vulturine guineafowl (I)


 * Crested guineafowl (I)


 * Plumed guineafowl (I)


 * Black guineafowl (I)


 * White-breasted guineafowl (I)


 * Jungle bush quail (I) (in Florida only)


 * Chukar partridge


 * Grey peacock pheasant (I)


 * Indigo-banded kingfisher (I)


 * Banded kingfisher (I)


 * Red-bearded bee-eater (I)


 * Blue-beared bee-eater (I)


 * Purple-bearded bee-eater (I)


 * Little bee-eater (I)


 * Somali bee-eater (I)


 * White-throated bee-eater (I)


 * Green bee-eater (I)


 * Blue-throated bee-eater (I)


 * Blue-cheeked bee-eater (I)


 * Indian roller (I)


 * Eurasian hoopoe (I)


 * Hornbills (I) (note: all of the well-known hornbill species in North America are descended from ones that escaped from zoos and safari parks that closed down in 1960's and 1970's)


 * Asian koel (I)


 * Long-tailed shrike (I)


 * Fire-tufted barbet (I)


 * Great barbet (I)


 * Red-vented barbet (I)


 * Brown-headed barbet (I)


 * Lineated barbet (I)


 * White-cheeked barbet (I)


 * Green-eared barbet (I)


 * Brown-throated barbet (I)


 * Golden-whiskered barbet (I)


 * Red-crowned barbet (I)


 * Red-throated barbet (I)


 * Black-banded barbet (I)


 * Yellow-fronted barbet (I)


 * Golden-throated barbet (I)


 * Black-browed barbet (I)


 * Chinese barbet (I)


 * Malaysian honeyguide (I)


 * Yellow-rumped honeyguide (I)


 * Dusky broadbill (I)


 * Black-and-red broadbill (I)


 * Black-and-yellow broadbill (I)


 * Visayan broadbill (I)


 * Wattled broadbill (I)


 * Banded broadbill (I)


 * Long-tailed broadbill (I)


 * Silver-breasted broadbill (I)


 * Green broadbill (I)


 * Hose's broadbill (I)


 * Whitehead's broadbill (I)


 * Blue-naped pitta (I)


 * Rusty-napped pitta (I)


 * all 3 Banded pitta species (I)


 * Azure-breasted pitta (I)


 * Blue-headed pitta (I)


 * Gurney's pitta (I)


 * Hooded pitta (I)


 * Gaint pitta (I)


 * Blue pitta (I)


 * Singing bush lark (I)


 * Forest wagtail (I)


 * Black-faced cuckooshrike (I)


 * Bar-bellied cuckooshrike (I)


 * Wallacean cuckooshrike (I)


 * Javan cuckooshrike (I)


 * Large cuckooshrike (I)


 * Slaty cuckooshrike (I)


 * Rail-babbler (I)


 * Straw-headed bulbul (I)


 * Crested finchbill (I)


 * Collared finchbil (I)


 * Striated bulbul (I)


 * Black-and-white bulbul (I)


 * White-spectacled bulbul (I)


 * Brown-breasted bulbul (I)


 * Scaly-breasted bulbul (I)


 * Black-crested bulbul (I)


 * Yellow-browed bulbul (I)


 * Black-headed bulbul (I)


 * Grey-bellied bulbul (I)


 * Light-vented bulbul (I)


 * Sooty-headed bulbul (I)


 * Gray-headed bulbul (I)


 * White-eared bulbul (I)


 * Himalayan bulbul (I)


 * Styan's bulbul (I)


 * Yellow-throated leafbird (I)


 * Common firecrest (I)


 * Flamecrest (I)


 * Goldcrest (I)


 * Marshall's iora (I)


 * Common iora (I)


 * Green iora (I)


 * Great iora (I)


 * Malabar trogon (I)


 * Red-headed trogon (I)


 * Javan trogon (I)


 * Sumatran trogon (I)


 * Red-naped trogon (I)


 * Diard's trogon (I)


 * Philippine trogon (I)


 * Whitehead's trogon (I)


 * Scarlet-rumped trogon (I)


 * Orange-breasted trogon (I)


 * Ward's trogon (I)


 * Western tragopan (I)


 * Temminck's tragopan (I)


 * Satyr tragopan (I)


 * Brown shrike (I)


 * Capercaillie (I)


 * Australian brushturkey (I)


 * Maleo (I)


 * Nicobar megapode (I)


 * Nicobar pigeon (I) (in Florida, Georgia, and Alabama)


 * Victoria crowned pigeon (I)


 * Thick-billed ground pigeon (I)


 * Tooth-billed pigeon (I)


 * Pheasant pigeon (I)


 * Eurasian collared dove


 * Speckled wood pigeon (I)


 * Common wood pigeon (I)


 * White-faced cuckoo-dove (I)


 * Luzon bleeding-heart (I)


 * Little green pigeon (I)


 * Pink-bellied imperial pigeon (I)


 * Eurasian tree sparrow


 * House finch (in Hawaii only)


 * Starling (I) (eradicated)


 * Grey partridge


 * Himalayan partridge


 * Koklass pheasant (I)


 * Crested fireback (I)


 * Crestless fireback (I)


 * Blue eared pheasant (I)


 * Vampire finch (I)


 * House sparrow (I)


 * Budgie (I)


 * Rainbow lorikeet (I)


 * Ornate lorikeet (I)


 * Blue-crowned lorikeet (I)


 * Red-flanked lorikeet (I)


 * Musk lorikeet (I)


 * Yellow-billed lorikeet (I)


 * Plum-faced lorikeet (I)


 * Red-collared lorikeet (I)


 * Iris lorikeet (I)


 * Scaly-breasted lorikeet (I)


 * Collared lory (I)


 * Black-capped lory (I)


 * Dusky lory (I)


 * Black lory (I)


 * Monk parakeet (I)


 * Rose-ringed parakeet


 * White-winged parakeet


 * Turquoise parrot (I)


 * Vernal hanging parrot (I)


 * Guaiabero (I)


 * Glacous macaw (in Florida only)


 * Spix's macaw (in Florida and California only)


 * Hyacinth macaw (in California only)


 * Jacobin cuckoo (I)


 * Indian cuckoo


 * Jungle babbler (I)


 * Coral-billed ground cuckoo (I)


 * Masked lapwing (I)


 * Double-striped thick-knee (I) (in the rest of USA and most of southern Canada)


 * Senegal thick-knee (I)


 * Eurasian stone-curlew (I)


 * Indian stone-curlew (I) (in Texas and Florida only)


 * Water thick-knee (I)


 * Spotted thick-knee (I)


 * Peruvian thick-knee (I)


 * Black-winged stilt (I)


 * Great bustard (I)


 * Great Indian bustard (I)


 * Kori bustard (I)


 * Burrowing owl (I) (in the rest of the USA and most of southern Canada)


 * White-rumped falcon (I)


 * Ibisbill (I)


 * Great auk (reintroduced)


 * Muscovy duck


 * White-faced whistling duck (I)


 * Fulvous whistling duck (I) (in the rest of subtropical, temperated, and boreal parts of North America)


 * Black-bellied whistling duck (I) (in the rest of subtropical, temperated, and boreal parts of North America)


 * Wandering whistling duck (I)


 * Lesser whistling duck (I)


 * Spotted whistling duck (I)


 * Plumed whistling duck (I)


 * Black-billed whistling duck (I)


 * Swan goose


 * Mute swan (I)


 * African penguin (in Baja California, California, and Oregon shorelines)


 * Chinstrap penguin (in California and Oregon shorelines only)


 * Adélie penguin (in California, Florida, and Georgia shorelines)


 * Gentoo penguin (in Florida shorelines only)


 * Little blue penguin (in California and Florida shorelines only)


 * Royal penguin (in California shorelines only)


 * Rockhopper penguin (in California and Oregon shorelines only)


 * Macaroni penguin (in California and Florida shorelines only)


 * King penguin (in California and Baja California shorelines only)


 * Emperor penguin (in California and Oregon shorelines only)


 * Common pheasant (I)


 * Kalij pheasant (I)


 * Himalayan monal pheasant (I)


 * Chinese monal pheasant (I)


 * Pigeon (I)


 * Passenger pigeon (reintroduced)


 * Blue-gray tanager


 * Red avadavat


 * Common waxbill


 * Japanese white-eye


 * Chinese hwamei


 * Greater necklaced laughingthrush


 * Japanese bush warbler


 * Red-whiskered bulbul


 * Red-vented bulbul


 * Pin-tailed whydah


 * Java sparrow


 * Chestnut munia


 * Tricoloured munia


 * Scaly-breasted munia


 * African silverbill


 * Indian silverbill


 * White-rumped shama


 * Gouldian finch


 * Masked finch


 * Long-tailed finch


 * Zebra finch (I)


 * Orange-cheeked waxbill


 * Lavender waxbill


 * Cardinal quelea


 * Red-headed quelea


 * Red-billed quelea (I)


 * Yellow-faced grassquit


 * Red-billed leiothrix


 * Southern masked weaver (I)


 * Red-cheecked cordon-bleu


 * Blue jay (in the rest of the USA)


 * Red-crested cardinal (I)


 * Australian magpie (I)


 * Hooded crow (I)


 * Pied crow (I)


 * Jungle crow (I)


 * Hawaiian crow (I)


 * House crow (I)


 * Rook (I)


 * Largest common raven subspecies (I)


 * Thick-billed raven (I)


 * Western jackdaw (I)


 * Green peafowl (I) (in western USA only)


 * Indian peafowl (I) (in most of USA, except Maine or other northern cold states)


 * Harpy eagle (I) (in Oregon, Arizona, California, and Nevada)


 * Griffon vulture (I) (in Oregon, Arizona, California, Nevada, Utah, New Mexico, Wyoming, Colorada, South Dakota, North Dakota, Montana, Idaho, and Texas)


 * Lappet-faced vulture (I) (in Oregon, Arizona, California, Nevada, Nea Mexico, Utah, and Texas)


 * White-backed vulture (I) (in California and Nevada only)


 * Slender-billed vulture (I) (in California, Oregon, and Nevada)


 * Himalayan vulture (I) (in California, Nevada, Oregon, Washington, Idaho, Montana, Minnesota, Colorada, Utah, Wyoming, and Michigan)


 * Red-headed vulture


 * Egyptian vulture (I) (in California, Arizona, Oregon, and Nevada)


 * Palm-nut vulture (I) (in California, Nevada, Arizona, Oregon, New Mexico, and Texas)


 * Bearded vulture (I) (in California only)


 * Hooded vulture (I) (in Arizona, California, Nevada, and Oregon)


 * King vulture (I) (in Oregon, California, Arizona, and Nevada) (eradicated in Florida)


 * Andean condor (I) (in Oregon, California, Arizona, Nevada, Washington, Colorado, Wyoming, South Dakota, North Dakota, Montana, Idaho, Utah, Minnesota, Wisconson, Iowa, and Michigan)


 * American black vulture (I) (in the rest of the USA)


 * Chicken


 * Ostrich


 * Greater rhea


 * Australian Emu


 * African Emu


 * Asian Emu


 * European Emu


 * African Cassowary


 * Asian Cassowary


 * Australian Kiwi


 * Asian Kiwi


 * Northern Ostrich


 * African Giant Condor


 * Upland moa (I) from historic New Zealand to modern North America


 * Eastern moa (I) from historic New Zealand to modern North America


 * Bush moa (I) from historic New Zealand to modern North America


 * Gastornis (I) from Eocene Europe and North America to modern North America


 * Alexander's bird (I) from Cretaceous Mexico to modern North America


 * Jehol bird (I) from Cretaceous China to modern North America


 * Jixiang bird (I) from Cretaceous China to modern North America


 * Sape bird (I) from Cretaceous China to modern North America


 * Confucius bird (I) from Cretaceous China to modern North America


 * Fan-tailed bird (I) from Cretaceous China to modern North America


 * Spanish intermediate bird (I) from Cretaceous Spain to modern North America


 * Mothman (aka American giant owl (I) from cryptozoology North America to real life North America

Reptiles

 * Spectacled caiman (I) (in California, Nevada, Oregon, Arizona, New Mexico, Texas, Florida, and Carribean islands)


 * American alligator (I) (in Arizona, Nevada, Oregon, Utah, Colorada, Wyoming, California, and New Mexico)


 * Nile crocodile (I) (in Florida and California only)


 * Freshwater crocodile (I) (in Florida, Baja California, Oregon, Nevada, Arizona, Alabama, Georgia, Texas, California, and New Mexico)


 * Saltwater crocodile (I) (in California only)


 * Frilled lizard (I) (in California, Arizona, Nevada, New Mexico, Texas, and Utah)


 * Thorny lizard (I) (in Nevada, California, New Mexico, Texas, and Arizona)


 * Boa constrictor (I) (in California and Florida only)


 * Reticulated python (I) (in California only)


 * Green anaconda (I) (in California only)


 * Yellow anaconda (I) (in California only)


 * African rock python (I) (in California only) (eradicated in Florida)


 * Ball python (I) (in Oregon, California, and Arizona)


 * Malayan Blood python (I) (in California only)


 * Sumatran blood python (I) (in California only)


 * Indian python (I) (in Oregon and California only) (note: it was introduced to California and Oregon due to the popularity and success of The Jungle Book (2016 film), which featured an Indian python named Kaa, and Indian pythons were brought to California and Oregon by humans as an effect)


 * King cobra (I) (in Arizona, California, Nevada, and Oregon) (note: the invasive king cobras are descended from ones that escaped from zoos and safari parks that were closed in 1960's and 1970's)


 * Spitting cobra (I) (in Oregon and California only) (note: the invasive spitting cobras are descended from ones that escaped from zoos and safari parks that were closed in 1960's and 1970's)


 * Indian cobra (I) (in Arizona and California only) (note: the invasive Indian cobras are descended from ones that escaped from zoos and safari parks that were closed in 1960's and 1970's)


 * Eygyptian cobra (I) (in Oregon, California, Arizona, and Nevada) (note: the invasive egyptian cobras are descended from ones that escaped from zoos and safari parks that were closed in 1960's and 1970's)


 * Arabian cobra (I) (in Oregon, California, and Nevada) (note: the invasive Arabian cobras are descended from ones that escaped from zoos and safari parks that were closed in 1960's and 1970's)


 * Brown tree snake (I) (eradicated in all of nearby islands, including Hawaii, but are still present in mainland USA areas, including California, Nevada, Arizona, Oregon, Texas, New Mexico, Mississippi, Alabama, Georgia, and Florida)


 * Brown anole


 * Green anole


 * Crested anole


 * Large-headed anole


 * Bark anole


 * Knight anole


 * Giant anole


 * Green iguana (in Florida, Texas, California, and some Caribbean islands)


 * Rhinoceros iguana (I) (in California only)


 * Spinytail iguana (I) (in Florida, California, Oregon, Nevada, Arizona, New Mexica, Texas, and other southern and middle reigns of the USA)


 * Galapagos land iguana (I) (in California only)


 * Pink iguana (I) (in California only)


 * Barrington land iguana (I) (in California only)


 * Marine iguana (I) (in Florida and California only)


 * Basilisk (I) (in Florida and California)


 * Common agama


 * Oriental garden lizard


 * Butterfly lizard


 * Nonnative geckos


 * South America ground lizard


 * Rainbow whiptail


 * Italian wall lizards


 * Northern curlytail lizard


 * Hispaniolan curlytail lizard


 * Veiled chameleon (I) (in Florida and California only)


 * Common chameleon (I) (in California, Nevada, Arizona, Oregon, New Mexico, Texas, Mississipi, Alabama, Georgia, and Florida)


 * Flap-necked chameleon (I) (in Texas only)


 * Graceful chameleon (I) (in California and Oregon only)


 * Crested chameleon (I) (in California and Texas only)


 * Giant three-horned chameleon (I) (in Florida only)


 * Helmeted chameleon (I) (in California only)


 * Jackson's chameleon (I) (in both Hawaii and mainland USA areas including California, Texas, and Florida)


 * Sailfin chameleon (I) (in Florida only)


 * Nile monitor (I) (in Florida and Texas only)


 * Emerald tree monitor (I) (in Florida only)


 * Crocodile monitor (I) (in California only)


 * Perentie (I) (in California only)


 * Water monitor (I) (in California and Texas only)


 * Brahminy blind snake (I) (in California only)


 * Burmese python (I) (in California only) (eradicated in Florida)


 * Runner Lizard


 * Glacialisaurus (I)


 * Massospondylus (I)


 * Plateosaurus (I)


 * Cetiosaurus (I)


 * Shunosaurus (I)


 * Camarasaurus (I)


 * Mamenchisaurus (I)


 * Dinheirosaurus (I)


 * Lusotitan (I)


 * Barosaurus (I)


 * Supersaurus (I)


 * Apatosaurus (I)


 * Brontosaurus (I)


 * Diplodocus (I)


 * Brachiosaurus (I)


 * Borealosaurus (I)


 * Argentinosaurus (I)


 * Cedarosaurus (I)


 * Rapetosaurus (I)


 * Saltasaurus (I)


 * Ampelosaurus (I)


 * Magyarosaurus (I)


 * Pachycephalosaurus (I)


 * Stegoceras (I)


 * Prenocephale (I)


 * Homalocephale (I)


 * Psittacosaurus (I)


 * Leptoceratops (I)


 * Koreaceratops (I)


 * Protoceratops (I)


 * Montanoceratops (I)


 * Zuniceratops (I)


 * Pentaceratops (


 * Torosaurus (I)


 * Triceratops (I)


 * Styracosaurus (I)


 * Centrosaurus (I)


 * Einiosaurus (I)


 * Pachyrhinosaurus (I)


 * Ornithopod
 * Hypsilophodon (I) from Cretaceous Europe to modern North America
 * Leaellynasaura (I) from Cretaceous Australia to modern North America
 * Atlascopcosaurus (I) from Cretaceous Australia to modern North America
 * Drinker (I) from Jurassic North America to modern North America
 * Thescelosaurus (I) from Cretaceous North America to modern North Amerira
 * Parksosaurus (I) from Cretaceous North America to modern North America
 * Koreanosaurus (I) from Cretaceous Asia to modern North America
 * Zephyrosaurus (I) from Cretaceous North America to modern North America
 * Orodromeus (I) from Cretaceous North America to modern North America
 * Tenontosaurus (I) from Cretaceous North America to modern North America
 * Rhabdodon (I) from Cretaceous Europe to modern North America
 * Zalmoxes (I) from Cretaceous Europe to modern North America
 * Muttaburrasaurus (I) from Cretaceous Australia to modern North America
 * Dryosaurus (I) from Jurassic North America to modern North America
 * Draconyx (I) from Jurassic Europe to modern North America
 * Camptosaurus (I) from Jurassic North America to modern North America
 * Dakotadon (I) from Cretaceous North America to modern North America
 * Iguanodon (I) from Cretaceous Europe to modern North America
 * Ouranosaurus (I) from Cretaceous Africa to modern North America
 * Hadrosaurus (I) from Cretaceous North America to modern North America
 * Corythosaurus (I) from Cretaceous North America to modern North America
 * Hypacrosaurus (I) from Cretaceous North America to modern North America
 * Lambeosaurus (I) from Cretaceous North America to modern North America
 * Nipponosaurus (I) from Cretaceous Asia to modern North America
 * Olorotitan (I) from Cretaceous Asia to modern North America
 * Parasaurolophus (I) from Cretaceous North America to modern North America
 * Tsintaosaurus (I) from Cretaceous Asia to modern North America
 * Maiasaura (I) from Cretaceous North America to modern North America
 * Edmontosaurus (I) from Cretaceous North America to modern North America
 * Shantungosaurus (I) from Cretaceous Asia to modern North America
 * Prosaurolophus (I) from Cretaceous North America
 * Saurolophus (I) from Cretaceous Asia to modern North America


 * Therizinosaurs (I) from Cretaceous Asia and North America to modern North America


 * Oviraptorids (I) from Cretaceous Asia and North America to modern North America


 * Alvarezsaurs (I) from Cretaceous Asia, North & South America to modern North America


 * Ornithomimids (I) from Cretaceous Australia, Africa, Europe, Asia, and North America to modern North America


 * Raptors (I) from Cretaceous Asia, Europe, and North America


 * Troodonts (I) (I) from Cretaceous Asia, Europe, and North America to modern North America


 * Rahonavis (I) from Cretaceous Madagascar to modern North America


 * Scansoriopterids (I) from Jurassic Asia to modern North America


 * Ornitholestes (I) from Jurassic North America to modern North America


 * Compsognathids (I) from Jurassic & Cretaceous Europe and Asia to modern North America


 * Coelurus (I) from Jurassic North America to modern North America


 * Tyrannosaurus


 * Daspletosaurus


 * Albertosaurus


 * Gorgosaurus


 * Proceratosaurus (I) from Jurassic England to modern North America


 * Stokesosaurus (I) from Jurassic North America to modern North America


 * Dilong (I) from Cretaceous Asia to modern North America


 * Guanlong (I) from Jurassic Asia to modern North America


 * Yutyrannus (I) from Cretaceous Asia to modern North America


 * Alioramus (I) from Cretaceous Asia to modern North America


 * All five species of Majungasaurids (I) from Cretaceous Madagascar, France, and Madagascar to modern North America


 * Coelophysis (I) from Triassic North America to modern North America


 * Eoraptor (I) from Triassic South America to modern North America


 * Aetosaurs (I) from Triassic Asia, Africa, Europe, and North & South America to modern North America


 * Notosuchids (I) from Cretaceous South America to modern North America


 * Mahajangasuchus (I) from Cretaceous Madagascar to modern North America


 * Batrachomimus (I) from Jurassic South America to modern North America


 * Allodaposuchus (I) from Cretaceous Europe to modern North America


 * Stomatosuchus (I) from Cretaceous Africa to modern North America


 * Simosuchus (I) from Cretaceous Madagascar to modern North America


 * Chimaerasuchus (I) from Cretaceous Asia to modern North America


 * Forest dragon from The Last Dragon film to real life North America


 * Mountain dragon from The Last Dragon film to real life North America

Amphibians

 * American bullfrog (I) (in nonnative parts of North America)


 * Cane toad


 * Cuban tree frog


 * Green and black poison dart frog (I) (in Florida and Hawaii)


 * African clawed frog (in California, Florida, and Arizona)


 * Pygmy frog (I) (in California only)


 * Devil frog (I) from Cretaceous Madagascar to modern California, Oregon, Nevada, Florida, Georgia, Alabama, Texas, Arizona, and New Mexico


 * Triadobatrachus (I) from Triassic Madagascar to modern Florida, California, and Texas


 * Gerobatrachus (I) from Triassic North America to modern California


 * Diplocaulus from Permian Africa to modern California and Florida


 * Edops from Permian North America to modern Florida


 * Koolasuchus from Cretaceous Australia to modern Florida and California


 * Eryops from Permian North America to modern Florida


 * Prionosuchus from Permian Brazil to modern California and Florida


 * Proterogrinus from Carboniferous North America to modern Florida and California


 * Crassigrinus from Carboniferous Scotland to modern Florida and California

Fish

 * Round goby


 * Western tubenose goby


 * Asian swamp eel (I)


 * Nonnative cichlids (I)


 * Giant grouper (I) in The Great Lakes and all rivers of USA


 * Sturgeon (I) in all rivers of Mexico and the USA


 * Mudskipper (I) in rivers, lakes, and man-made waterways of USA


 * Giant sea bass (I) in rivers, lakes, and man-made waterways of USA and Canada


 * Yellowfin tuna (I) in lakes, rivers, and man-made waterways of USA


 * Southern bluefin tuna (I) in lakes, rivers, and man-made waterways of USA


 * Alewife (I)


 * Blue tilapia (I)


 * Brown trout (I)


 * Pond loach


 * Ruffe


 * Walking catfish (I)


 * Carp (I)


 * Goldfish


 * Cherry barb


 * Sea lamprey (I)


 * Pacu


 * Snakehead (I)


 * Tench (I)


 * Rudd (I)


 * Amur catfish


 * Sailfin catfish (I)


 * Red lionfish (I) (in the Atlantic oceans only)


 * Asian River Shark


 * Bulldog tarpon (I) (in the Great Lakes and shorelines of Mexico, Baja California, California, and Oregon)


 * Giant whalefish (I) (in the Great Lakes and shorelines of Central America, Mexico, Baja California, Washington, California, and Oregon)


 * Common whalefish (I) (in the Great Lakes and shorelines of Mexico, Eastern USA, Gulf of Mexico, and Western USA)


 * Lesser whalefish (I) (in the Great Lakes and shoreslines of Eastern USA)


 * Leviathan fish (I) (from mythical oceans to real life Great Lakes and shorelines of Eastern USA, it is a very large humpback whale-size fish that resembles a moray eel, but with a builker body, sailfin catfish-like dorsal fin, grouper-like tail fin, coelacanth-like lobbed fins, and shark-like teeth)

Crustaceans

 * European green crab


 * Chinese mitten crab


 * Japanese shore crab


 * Spiney waterflea


 * Fishhook waterflea


 * Mud shrimp


 * Killer shrimp


 * Signal crayfish

Insects

 * Nonnative butterflies and moths (including:)
 * Vampire moths (I)


 * Mottled water hyacinth weevil (eradicated)


 * Long-horned beetle (I) (eradicated)


 * Dung beetles (I)


 * Madagascan hissing cockroach (I)

Arachnids and relatives

 * Herbivorous mites (I)


 * Scavenging mites (I)


 * honey bee tracheal mite (I)


 * African oribatida mites (I)


 * African giant millipede (I)


 * Giant pill-millipedes (I)


 * Arthropleura (I) (note: it was genetically altered to tolerate lower oxygen and stay big)


 * Hirudisomatidae (I)


 * American giant millipede (I) (in the entire North American areas)


 * American desert millipede (I) (in the entire North American areas)


 * American forest millipede (I) (in the entire North American areas)


 * Cave millipedes (I)


 * Washington's millipede (I)


 * American dwarf millipedes (I) (in the entire North American areas)


 * Indian giant scorpion (I)


 * Emperor scorpion (I)


 * Mesothelae (I)


 * Herbivorous spider (I)


 * Intelligent spiders (I)

Cephalopods

 * Seven-arm octopus (I) (note: it is adapting to tolerate both saltwater and freshwater in its new habitat, spreading into lakes and rivers of California, Oregon, Arizona, and Nevada)


 * Pacific giant octopus (I) (note: it is adapting to tolerate both saltwater and freshwater in new habitats it is spreading into, spreading into lakes and rivers of California, Oregon, Arizona, and Nevada)


 * Humboldt squid (I) (note: it is adapting to tolerate both saltwater and freshwater in its new habitat, spreading into lakes and rivers of California, Oregon, Arizona, and Nevada)


 * Pacific squid (I) (note: it is adapting to tolerate both saltwater and freshwater in new habitats it is spreading into, spreading into lakes and rivers of California, Oregon, Arizona, and Nevada)


 * Vampire squid (I) (note: it is adapting to tolerate both saltwater and freshwater in new habitats it is spreading into, spreading into lakes and rivers of California, Oregon, Arizona, and Nevada, it is also becoming strictly nocturnal to hunt native nocturnal freshwater fish species)


 * Common cuttlefish (I) (note: it is adapting to tolerate both saltwater and freshwater in its new habitat, spreading into lakes and rivers of California, Oregon, Arizona, and Nevada)


 * Giant cuttlefish (I) (note: it is adapting to tolerate both saltwater and freshwater in its new habitat, spreading into lakes and rivers of California, Oregon, Arizona, and Nevada)


 * Flamboyant cuttlefish (I) (note: it is adapting to tolerate both saltwater and freshwater in its new habitat, spreading into lakes and rivers of California, Oregon, Arizona, and Nevada)


 * Hooded cuttlefish (I) (note: it is adapting to tolerate both saltwater and freshwater in its new habitat, spreading into lakes and rivers of California, Oregon, Arizona, and Nevada)


 * Stumpy-spinned cuttlefish (I) (note: it is adapting to tolerate both saltwater and freshwater in its new habitat, spreading into lakes and rivers of California, Oregon, Arizona, and Nevada)


 * Broadclub cuttlefish (I) (note: it is adapting to tolerate both saltwater and freshwater in its new habitat, spreading into lakes and rivers of California, Oregon, Arizona, and Nevada)


 * Pharaoh cuttlefish (I) (note: it is adapting to tolerate both saltwater and freshwater in its new habitat, spreading into lakes and rivers of California, Oregon, Arizona, and Nevada)


 * Paintpot cuttlefish (I) (note: it is adapting to tolerate both saltwater and freshwater in its new habitat, spreading into lakes and rivers of California, Oregon, Arizona, and Nevada)


 * Striped pyjama squid (I) (note: it is adapting to tolerate both saltwater and freshwater in its new habitat, spreading into lakes and rivers of California, Oregon, Arizona, and Nevada)

Worms and relatives

 * European medicinal leech (I)


 * Tiger leech (I)


 * Chain-striped leech (I)


 * Giant red leech (I)


 * Freshwater jawless leeches (I) (in the rest of North America)

Mammals

 * American beaver (I)


 * European hare (I)


 * Small Asian mongoose (I)


 * Deer
 * Chital
 * Sambar deer
 * Red deer


 * Blackbuck


 * Himalayan tahr


 * Wild boar (I)


 * Rhesus macaque (I)


 * Hippopotamus


 * Indian rhinoceros (in Brazil and Argentina)


 * Dromedary camel (in Brazil and Argentina)


 * Urban North American Tapir (I)


 * Urban Gray Wolf


 * Elecman.EXEs


 * Domestic Meerkat (I)


 * Domestic Dylanus


 * Protoman


 * Maverick Hunters


 * Bass.EXEs


 * Macrauchenia (reintroduced)


 * Toxodon (reintroduced)


 * Glyptodonts (reintroduced)


 * Ground sloths (reintroduced)


 * Smilodon (reintroduced)


 * South American short-faced bear (reintroduced)


 * South American gomphotheres (reintroduced)


 * Vampire (I)

Fish

 * Cherry barb

Mammals

 * Barbary macaque


 * Raccoon (I)


 * Raccoon dog


 * American mink (I)


 * Skunk


 * Eygyptian mongoose


 * Indian gray mongoose


 * Sika deer


 * Chital


 * White-tailed deer


 * Barbary sheep


 * Greenland muskox


 * Gray squirrel (I)


 * Chipmunk


 * Nutria


 * Muskrat


 * Brown rat (I)


 * Black rat (I)


 * House mouse (I)


 * Crested porcupine (I)


 * Cottontail rabbit (I)


 * Dromedary camel


 * Bactrian camel


 * Bennett's wallaby


 * Asian elephant


 * Sumatran rhinoceros


 * Black rhinoceros


 * Asiatic lion


 * Thomson's gazelle


 * Common eland


 * Hippopotamus


 * Urban North American Tapir


 * Northern Vampire Bat (I)


 * Elecman.EXEs


 * Domestic Meerkat


 * Domestic Dylanus


 * Protoman


 * Maverick Hunters


 * Bass.EXEs


 * Chalicothere (I)


 * Ancylotherium


 * Werewolf


 * Vampire (I)

Birds

 * Sacred ibis


 * Black swan (I)


 * Canada goose (I)


 * Swan goose (I)


 * Bar-headed goose (I)


 * Egyptian goose (I)


 * Ruddy duck


 * Common pheasant


 * California quail (I)


 * Northern bobwhite


 * Daurian partridge


 * Wild turkey


 * Rose-ringed parakeet


 * Monk parakeet


 * Common mynah


 * Common waxbill


 * avadavat Red avadavat


 * Greater rhea

Reptiles

 * Pond slider (I)


 * Common garter snake (I)


 * Common snapping turtle


 * Nile crocodile (I)


 * Saltwater crocodile (I)


 * Mugger crocodile (I)


 * American alligator (I)


 * Troodon (I)


 * Coelophysis (I)


 * Ornithomimus (I)


 * Citipati (I)


 * Oviraptor (I)


 * Gigantoraptor

Amphibians

 * American bullfrog (I)


 * African clawed frog (I)


 * Cane toad (I)

Fish

 * Carp (I)


 * Brown bullhead (I)


 * Black bullhead (I)


 * Chameleon goby


 * Chinese sleeper


 * Eastern mosquitofish (I)


 * Haarder


 * Pumpkinseed (I)


 * Stone moroko (I)


 * Giant whalefish (I) (in Mediterranean seas only)


 * Bulldog tarpon (I) (in Mediterranean seas only)

Mammals

 * Raccoon (I)


 * American mink (I)


 * Muskrat (I)


 * European rabbit (I)


 * Cottontail rabbit (I)


 * Dromedary camel


 * Burchell's zebra


 * African elephant


 * Red river hog (I)


 * Mountain tapir (I)


 * Urban North American Tapir (I)


 * Urban Gray Wolf


 * Elecman.EXEs


 * Domestic Meerkat


 * Domestic Dylanus


 * Protoman


 * Maverick Hunters


 * Bass.EXEs


 * Stegodon


 * Pa!aeoloxodon


 * Deinotherium


 * Chalicotherium


 * Ancylotherium


 * Embulotherium


 * Ambulocetus (I)


 * Werewolf


 * Vampire (I)


 * Jiangshi (I)

Birds

 * Ostrich


 * Greater rhea


 * Southern cassowary (I)


 * Emu (I)


 * Great tinamou (I)


 * California condor (I)


 * Turkey vulture (I)


 * European Emu (I)


 * North American Kiwi (I)


 * Pygmy elephant bird (I)


 * Early rhea (I)


 * Upland moa (I)


 * Bush moa (I)


 * Eastern moa (I)

Reptiles

 * Brown anole


 * American alligator (I) (note: they are displacing the endangered Chinese alligators as one of the dominant predators of Asia)


 * Saltwater crocodile (I)


 * Nile crocodile (I)


 * Freshwater crocodile (I)


 * Plateosaurus (I)


 * Massospondylus (I)


 * Shunosaurus (I)


 * Camarasaurus (I)


 * Troodon (I)


 * Coelophysis (I)

Mammals

 * Wild boar (I)


 * Wild goat (I)


 * European rabbit (I)


 * Nutria (I)


 * Fallow deer


 * Himalayan tahr


 * Gray squirrel (I) (eradicated)


 * Rusa deer


 * Sika deer


 * Feral horse


 * feral donkey


 * Feral cat (I)


 * Feral dog (I)


 * House mouse (I)


 * Brown rat (I)


 * Black rat (I)


 * Crab-eating macaque


 * Indian gray mongoose


 * Weasel (I)


 * Asian house shrew (I)


 * Tufted capuchin (I)


 * Dromedary camel


 * Asian elephant


 * Indian rhinoceros


 * Javan rhinoceros


 * Sumatran rhinoceros


 * Jaguar


 * Ocelot (I)


 * Blackbuck (I)


 * Baird's tapir


 * Mountain tapir (I)


 * Pronghorn (I)


 * Domestic Pronghorn


 * Domestic Mokele


 * Mokele-mbembe


 * Murambi


 * Domestic Murambi


 * Domestic Flatnose


 * Domestic Jack's Giant


 * Domestic Ground Squirrel


 * Urban Gray Wolf


 * Elecman.EXEs


 * Urban North American Tapir (I)


 * Domestic Meerkat


 * Domestic Dylanus


 * Protoman


 * Maverick Hunters


 * Bass.EXEs


 * Deinotherium (reintroduced)


 * Chalicothere (reintroduced)


 * Ancylotherium (reintroduced)


 * Australopithecus (reintroduced)


 * Paranthropus (reintroduced)


 * Dinofelis (reintroduced)


 * Mixotoxodon (I)


 * Toxodon (I)


 * Macrauchenia (I)


 * Brontotherium


 * Embulotherium


 * Arsinoitherium (I)


 * Indricothere


 * Entelodont (I)


 * Ambulocetus (I)


 * Andrewsarchus


 * Phenacodus (I)


 * Desmostylus (I)


 * Prorastomus (I)


 * Werewolf


 * Vampire (I)

Birds

 * Canada goose


 * Mallard


 * Common mynah


 * Domestic goose


 * Cattle egret


 * Feral pigeon


 * House crow


 * Common waxbill


 * Ruddy duck


 * English sparrow


 * Starling (eradicated)

Reptiles

 * House gecko (I)


 * Saltwater crocodile (I)


 * American alligator (I)


 * Plateosaurus (I)


 * Massospondylus (I)


 * Glacialisaurus (I)


 * Cetiosaurus (I)


 * Shunosaurus (I)


 * Camarasaurus (I)


 * Mamenchisaurus (I)


 * Dinheirosaurus (I)


 * Lusotitan (I)


 * Barosaurus (I)


 * Supersaurus (I)


 * Apatosaurus (I)


 * Diplodocus (I)


 * Brachiosaurus (I)


 * Borealosaurus (I)


 * Saltasauus (I)


 * Ampelosaurus (I)


 * Rapetosaurus (I)


 * Cedarosaurus (I)


 * Dryosaurus (I)


 * Hypsilophodon (I)


 * Thescelosaurus (I)


 * Parksosaurus (I)


 * Orodromeus (I)


 * Tenontosaurus (I)


 * Rhabdodon (I)


 * Zalmoxes (I)


 * Muttaburrasaurus (I)


 * Camptosaurus (I)


 * Dakotadon (I)


 * Iguanodon (I)


 * Ouranosaurus (I)