List of introduced species

A complete list of the 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 (even genetically-engineered ones), prehistory (through Time travel), or fiction (through Universe travel, aka Universal travel, Dimension travel, or Dimensional travel) to new environments in the real world/modern times than any single document can hope to record. This list is generally for established species with truly wild populations—not kept domestically, not kept in zoos/safari parks, not kept in pet stores, nor kept on ranches—that have been seen numerous times, and have the very successful breeding populations.

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

(Note: All deadly and non-deadly diseases on earth (the ones that are viruses, bacteria, etc.) including ebola, malaria, zika, rabies, stomach bug, 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 I (from Little Shop Of Horrors 1986 film to real life Australia)


 * Deathbottle I (from the Future Is Wild documentary to real life Australia)


 * Giant Fern Bamboo

Mammals

 * Opossum I


 * Springhare I


 * Gerbil I


 * New Guinea tree kangaroos


 * Javan rhinoceros I


 * Indian rhinoceros I


 * Black rhinoceros I


 * White rhinoceros I


 * Hippopotamus I


 * Pygmy hippopotamus I


 * African elephant I


 * Hyrax I


 * Pika I


 * Cheetah I


 * Bobcat I


 * Caracal I


 * Serval I


 * Gray wolf I


 * Pronghorn I


 * Okapi I


 * Giraffe I


 * Asian lion I


 * Black bear I


 * African buffalo I


 * Water buffalo I


 * Wisent I


 * American bison I


 * Mule deer I


 * Wild pig 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 I


 * 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 Eland I


 * Domestic Sable Antelope I


 * Domestic Pronghorn


 * Domestic Mesoron


 * Domestic Ground Squirrel


 * Domestic Dylanus


 * Protoman


 * Maverick Hunters


 * Bass.EXEs


 * Domestic Tapir I


 * Domestic Blackbuck I


 * Diprotodon (reintroduced)


 * Thylocoleo (reintroduced)


 * Procoptodon (reintroduced)


 * Thylacine (reintroduced in both mainland Australia and Tasmania)


 * 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


 * Desert Leaper I


 * Rabbuck I


 * Vampire I from mythical Europe to real life Australia


 * Jiangshi I from mythical China to real life Australia


 * Bass.EXE (undead version) I

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


 * European Emu 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


 * Genyornis (reintroduced)


 * Dromornis (reintroduced)


 * 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


 * Asian River Shark I


 * American River Shark I


 * 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 I


 * Tegu I


 * Nile crocodile I


 * American alligator 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 Tapejara I


 * Marine Tapejara I


 * Common Ornithocheirus I


 * Crested Ornithocheirus I


 * Pteranodon I


 * Nyctosaurus I


 * Anhanguera I


 * Quetzalcoatlus I


 * Hatzegopteryx I


 * Dsungaripterus I


 * Pterodactylus I


 * Germanodactylus I


 * Dimorphodon I


 * Rhamphorhynchus I


 * Common Anurognathus I


 * Symbiontic Anurognathus I


 * Peteinosaurus I


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

Amphibians

 * Cane toad I (eradicated)


 * Gastric-brooding frog (reintroduced)


 * Chinese giant salamander


 * Koolasuchus I

Arthropods

 * Argentine ant I (eradicated)


 * Dung beetle I


 * Black Portuguese millipede (eradicated)


 * Christmas Island red crab I (formerly only in Christmas Island, it was introduced to most other Pacific island, so it can now be found in almost all other Pacific islands, especially Australia)


 * Western honeybee


 * Fire ant I (eradicated)


 * Yellow crazy ant I (eradicated)


 * European wasp I (eradicated)


 * 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 (eradicated)


 * Feral cat I


 * Brown rat I


 * Black rat I


 * House mouse I


 * Bank vole in Ireland


 * Capybara I


 * Mara I


 * Paca I


 * Giant Capybara I


 * Big Chipmunk


 * 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 I


 * Fallow deer


 * White-tailed deer I


 * Sika deer I


 * Water deer I


 * Water chevrotain I


 * Indian spotted chevrotain I


 * Lesser mouse-deer I


 * Greater mouse-deer I


 * Sumatran rhinoceros


 * Bennett's wallaby


 * Water buffalo


 * Wild water buffalo


 * Cape buffalo


 * Wisent


 * Bison


 * White rhinoceros I


 * Asian elephant I


 * Tiger I


 * Leopard I


 * Pronghorn I


 * Gazelle I


 * Skunk


 * Malayan porcupine


 * Dromedary camel


 * Domestic Eland I


 * Domestic Sable Antelope I


 * Northern Vampire Bat I


 * Elecman.EXEs


 * Feral tapir I


 * Domestic Mesoron


 * Domestic Meerkat I


 * Domestic Dylanus


 * Protoman


 * Maverick Hunters


 * Bass.EXEs


 * Irish elk from prehistoric Eurasia to modern England


 * Woolly rhinoceros


 * Elasmotherium I


 * Woolly mammoth


 * Cave bear


 * Chalicothere


 * Ancylotherium


 * Entelodont I


 * 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) I

Birds

 * Helmeted guineafowl I


 * Peafowl


 * Little owl


 * Eagle owl


 * Rose-ringed parakeet I


 * Rose-ringed parakeet I


 * Monk parakeet I


 * Red-legged partridge


 * Green pheasant


 * Chinese pheasant


 * Lady Amherst's pheasant


 * Common pheasant


 * Domestic goose


 * Swan goose


 * Canada goose


 * Barnacle goose


 * Egyptian goose I


 * White-faced whistling duck I


 * Glossy ibis


 * African ibis


 * Wood duck I


 * Mandarin duck I


 * Ruddy duck I


 * Inland Albatross I


 * Common Ibis I


 * Rural Spoonbill I


 * Darwin's Coot I


 * American Common Whistling Duck I


 * Common Flamingo I


 * 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 I 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 North America and 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


 * American River Shark I

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

 * American alligator I


 * Aesculapian snake


 * European pond turtle


 * Pond slider I


 * European wall lizard


 * Burmese python I


 * Runner Lizard I


 * 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


 * Forest Tapejara I


 * Marine Tapejara I


 * Common Ornithocheirus I


 * Crested Ornithocheirus I


 * Pteranodon I


 * Nyctosaurus I


 * Anhanguera I


 * Quetzalcoatlus I


 * Hatzegopteryx I


 * Dsungaripterus I


 * Pterodactylus I


 * Germanodactylus I


 * Dimorphodon I


 * Rhamphorhynchus I


 * Common Anurognathus I


 * Symbiontic Anurognathus I


 * Peteinosaurus I


 * 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 I (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
 * Fallow 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
 * Barbary sheep


 * 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 Bonycheek


 * Domestic Jack's Giant


 * Domestic Panda


 * Domestic Corey Mc I


 * Northern Vampire Bat I


 * Elecman.EXEs


 * Feral tapir I


 * Domestic Mesoron


 * 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) I

Birds

 * Common blackbird (eradicated)


 * Dunnock (eradicated)


 * Australian magpie I (eradicated)


 * Mallard


 * Greater rhea I


 * White-faced whistling duck I


 * Myna I (eradicated)


 * Starling I (eradicated)


 * Common pheasant


 * Quail


 * Wild turkey I


 * Rural Spoonbill I


 * Common Ibis I


 * Common Flamingo I


 * Darwin's Coot I


 * Inland Albatross I


 * American Common Whistling Duck 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

 * American alligator I


 * Frilled lizard I


 * Thorny lizard I


 * Runner Lizard I


 * Leaellynasaura from Cretaceous Australia to modern New Zealand


 * Muttaburrasaura from Cretaceous Australia to modern New Zealand


 * Forest Tapejara I


 * Marine Tapejara I


 * Common Ornithocheirus I


 * Crested Ornithocheirus I


 * Pteranodon I


 * Nyctosaurus I


 * Anhanguera I


 * Quetzalcoatlus I


 * Hatzegopteryx I


 * Dsungaripterus I


 * Pterodactylus I


 * Germanodactylus I


 * Dimorphodon I


 * Rhamphorhynchus I


 * Common Anurognathus I


 * Symbiontic Anurognathus I


 * Peteinosaurus I

Amphibians

 * Leopard frog I (eradicated)


 * Chinese giant salamander I


 * 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


 * Ficus trees I


 * Norway maple I


 * Brunsvigia I


 * Panicum I


 * Baynan fig I


 * Guava I


 * Corpse flower I


 * Blackberries I


 * Asian red raspberry I


 * Loganberry I


 * Boysenberry I


 * Oil palm I


 * Dandelion


 * Eurasian watermilfoil


 * Ice plant


 * Eucalypt
 * Eucalyptus 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)


 * Giant water lilies I


 * 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


 * Garlic I


 * Onion 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)


 * Common Asian Fern Bamboo I


 * Giant Fern Bamboo I


 * Common Fern Bamboo I


 * Darwin's Fern Bamboo I


 * Fern Bamboo Of Life I


 * African Fern Bamboo I


 * European Fern Bamboo I


 * Australian Fern Bamboo I


 * Cycad Bamboo I


 * Horsetail bamboo I


 * Spitfire 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


 * Audrey II I from Little Shop Of Horrors 1986 film to real life Florida


 * Carnivorous Flower I (in southern Florida only)


 * Toot Fruit I


 * Smash Fruit I


 * Dark Fruit I


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

Mammals

 * Dylanuses
 * Domestic Dylanus I (in Florida only)
 * Indian giant dylanus I
 * Madagascar giant dylanus I
 * Madagascar trumpet-nosed dylanus I
 * European dylanus I
 * African dylanus I
 * Asian dylanus I
 * Florida running dylanus I (in Oregon, Texas, Nevada, New Mexico, Utah, Arizona, and California)


 * Pinnipeds
 * 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)
 * 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)
 * 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)
 * Water horse I (in the Great Lakes and California's Lake Tahoe)


 * Whales
 * 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)
 * Killer whale I (in the Great Lakes and California's Lake Tahoe)
 * 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)
 * Two species of pilot whales I (in the Great Lakes and California's Lake Tahoe)
 * Beluga whale I (in the Great Lakes and California's Lake Tahoe)
 * 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 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 human activities]
 * Humpback whale I (in the Great Lakes and California's Lake Tahoe)
 * Gray whale I (in the Great Lakes and California's Lake Tahoe)
 * Pygmy right whale I (in the Great Lakes and California's Lake Tahoe)
 * Ambulocetus I
 * Cetaceoid I (in the Great Lakes and California's Lake Tahoe)
 * Ground whale I


 * Horses
 * Mustang (in the Great Plains)
 * Feral donkey (in the Great Plains and scrublands and deserts of Nevada, California, Arizona, and Oregon)
 * Quagga (in the Great Plains and other grasslands and savannas of North America)
 * 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 only)
 * Dog 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)
 * 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)


 * Bovines
 * Feral cattle
 * Wild water buffalo
 * African buffalo
 * Gaur
 * Banteng
 * Yak
 * Wisent


 * Insectivores
 * Solenodons I
 * Desmans I
 * European hedgehog I
 * African pygmy hedgehog I
 * European mole I
 * Gorgoleptictis I
 * Scalerat I
 * Sabre shrew I


 * Bats
 * 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)
 * 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)
 * 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)
 * Devil Bat from The Devil Bat film to real life North America (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)


 * 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
 * Arctic ground squirrel I (in the rest of North America)
 * Abert's squirrel I (in the rest of North America)
 * 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
 * Namdapha flying squirrel I
 * Laotian giant flying squirrel I
 * Indian giant flying 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)
 * Purple squirrel I (note: it is a species of squirrel with purple fur colorations)
 * Springhares I
 * Jerboa I
 * Fawn hopping mouse I
 * Spinifex hopping mouse I
 * Mitchell's hopping mouse I
 * House Mouse I (eradicated in most of North America, except in most of California)
 * Black rat I (eradicated)
 * 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)
 * Golden hamster I
 * Short-tailed chinchilla I
 * Long-tailed chinchilla I
 * African crested porcupine I
 * Indian crested porcupine I
 * Nutria I
 * Mara 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
 * Feral guinea pig I
 * Giant Porcupine
 * Little Rat I
 * Big Rat I
 * Giant Rat I
 * Big Mouse I
 * Giant Mouse 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
 * 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
 * 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


 * Anteaters 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
 * Aardvark I


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


 * Sloths
 * Three-toed sloth I
 * Two-toed sloth I
 * 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)
 * Giant ground sloth from Pleistocene South America and North America to modern North America (reintroduced)
 * Star-sloth I


 * Hyenas
 * Striped hyena
 * Spotted hyena
 * Brown hyena
 * Aardwolf I


 * Proto-primates
 * Flying lemurs I
 * Treeshrew I
 * Purgatorius I from Cretaceous North America to modern North America


 * Primitive primates
 * Senegal bushbaby I
 * Mohol bushbaby I
 * Northern greater bushbaby I
 * Silvery greater bushbaby I
 * Brown greater bushbaby I
 * Philippine tarsier I


 * Lemurs
 * Aye-aye 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
 * 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)


 * Monkeys
 * Gelada I
 * Chacma baboon I
 * Olive baboon I
 * Guinea baboon I
 * Hamadryas baboon I
 * Drill I
 * Mandrill I
 * Rhesus macaque I
 * Japanese macaque I
 * Barbary macaque I
 * Pig-tailed macaque I
 * Formosan rock macaque I
 * Stump-tailed macaque I
 * Crab-eating macaque I
 * Lion-tailed macaque I
 * Crested macaque I
 * Bonnet macaque I
 * Toque macaque I
 * Arunachal macaque I
 * Grey-cheeked mangabey I
 * Black-crested mangabey I
 * Vervet monkey I
 * Malbrouck I
 * Grivet I
 * Tantalus monkey I
 * Green monkey I
 * Swamp monkey I
 * Patas monkey I
 * Diana monkey I
 * Blue monkey I
 * Red-tailed monkey I
 * Red-eared monkey I
 * Sclater's guenon I
 * White-tailed guenon I
 * Moustached guenon I
 * Mona guenon I
 * Angolan talapoin I
 * Gabon talapoin I
 * Golden langur I
 * Gray langur 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)
 * Geoffroy's spider monkey (note: they originated from escapees from zoos and safari parks and are now thriving in California, Nevada, Oregon, Arizona, New Mexico, Texas, Mississippi, Louisiana, Alabama, Georgia, South Carolina, and Florida)
 * White-bellied spider monkey (note: they originated from escapees from zoos and safari parks and are now thriving in California, Nevada, Oregon, Arizona, New Mexico, Texas, Mississippi, Louisiana, Alabama, Georgia, South Carolina, and Florida)
 * Woolly spider monkeys (note: they originated from escapees from zoos and safari parks and are now thriving in California, Nevada, Oregon, Arizona, New Mexico, Texas, Mississippi, Louisiana, Alabama, Georgia, South Carolina, and Florida)
 * Woolly monkeys (note: they originated from escapees from zoos and safari parks and are now thriving in California, Nevada, Oregon, Arizona, New Mexico, Texas, Mississippi, Louisiana, Alabama, Georgia, South Carolina, and Florida)
 * Brown howler (note: they originated from escapees from zoos and safari parks and are now thriving in California, Nevada, Oregon, Arizona, New Mexico, Texas, Mississippi, Louisiana, Alabama, Georgia, South Carolina, and Florida)
 * Mantled howler (note: they originated from escapees from zoos and safari parks and are now thriving in California, Nevada, Oregon, Arizona, New Mexico, Texas, Mississippi, Louisiana, Alabama, Georgia, South Carolina, and Florida)
 * Black howler (note: they originated from escapees from zoos and safari parks and are now thriving in California, Nevada, Oregon, Arizona, New Mexico, Texas, Mississippi, Louisiana, Alabama, Georgia, South Carolina, and Florida)
 * Ursine howler (note: they originated from escapees from zoos and safari parks and are now thriving in California, Nevada, Oregon, Arizona, New Mexico, Texas, Mississippi, Louisiana, Alabama, Georgia, South Carolina, and Florida)
 * Red-handed howler (note: they originated from escapees from zoos and safari parks and are now thriving in California, Nevada, Oregon, Arizona, New Mexico, Texas, Mississippi, Louisiana, Alabama, Georgia, South Carolina, and Florida)
 * Purus red howler (note: they originated from escapees from zoos and safari parks and are now thriving in California, Nevada, Oregon, Arizona, New Mexico, Texas, Mississippi, Louisiana, Alabama, Georgia, South Carolina, and Florida)
 * Tamarins (note: they originated from escapees from zoos and safari parks and are now thriving in California, Nevada, Oregon, Arizona, New Mexico, Texas, Mississippi, Louisiana, Alabama, Georgia, South Carolina, and Florida)
 * Marmosets (note: they originated from escapees from zoos and safari parks and are now thriving in California, Nevada, Oregon, Arizona, New Mexico, Texas, Mississippi, Louisiana, Alabama, Georgia, South Carolina, and Florida)
 * Titis (note: they originated from escapees from zoos and safari parks and are now thriving in California, Nevada, Oregon, Arizona, New Mexico, Texas, Mississippi, Louisiana, Alabama, Georgia, South Carolina, and Florida)
 * Saki monkeys (note: they originated from escapees from zoos and safari parks and are now thriving in California, Nevada, Oregon, Arizona, New Mexico, Texas, Mississippi, Louisiana, Alabama, Georgia, South Carolina, and Florida)
 * Bearded saki (note: they originated from escapees from zoos and safari parks and are now thriving in California, Nevada, Oregon, Arizona, New Mexico, Texas, Mississippi, Louisiana, Alabama, Georgia, South Carolina, and Florida)
 * Uakari (note: they originated from escapees from zoos and safari parks and are now thriving in California, Nevada, Oregon, Arizona, New Mexico, Texas, Mississippi, Louisiana, Alabama, Georgia, South Carolina, and Florida)
 * Night monkeys (note: they originated from escapees from zoos and safari parks and are now thriving in California, Nevada, Oregon, Arizona, New Mexico, Texas, Mississippi, Louisiana, Alabama, Georgia, South Carolina, and Florida)
 * Squirrel monkeys (note: they originated from escapees from zoos and safari parks and are now thriving in California, Nevada, Oregon, Arizona, New Mexico, Texas, Mississippi, Louisiana, Alabama, Georgia, South Carolina, and Florida)
 * Punch monkey I
 * Babookari I from the Future Is Wild documentary to real life North America
 * Raboon I from After Man Book and Documentary series to real life North America
 * Mutt Monkey I from the Hunger Games films to real life North America
 * Barbarian baboon I
 * Harmosette I


 * Apes
 * Gibbon (in Florida, Alabama, and Georgia)
 * Common chimpanzee (in Florida only)
 * Bonobo (in Florida, Georgia, Alabama, South Carolina, Lousiana, Mississippi, Texas, New Mexico, Arizona, Nevada, Oregon, Utah, and California)
 * Sumatran orangutan (in Florida, Alabama, and Georgia)
 * Bornean orangutan (in Florida, Alabama, and Georgia)
 * Mountain gorilla (in Florida only)
 * Gigantopithecus (in Florida and California only)
 * Bigfoot I
 * Florida skunk ape I (in Florida, Alabama, Georgia, Louisiana, Mississippi, and Texas)
 * Orang Pendek I (hence its name, it is actually an upright-walking relatives of orangutans which replaced the extinct homo floresiensis)
 * Mogollon ape I
 * Momo ape I
 * 2005 King Kong I
 * 2017 King Kong I (note: these apes are now much smaller than their ancestors, about the size of a bigfoot)
 * Mermaids I
 * Demon I
 * Angel I


 * Cats
 * African lion
 * 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
 * Jaguarundi I
 * Feral cat I
 * Stripeless Tiger
 * 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)
 * Vampire beast I


 * Bears
 * Giant panda I (in California and Florida only)
 * Sloth bear I (in California and Florida only)
 * Grizzly bear (introduced to California to replace the extinct California brown bear)


 * Dogs
 * Fennec fox I
 * Bat-eared fox I
 * Raccoon dog I
 * Feral dog I
 * Gray wolf (in the rest of North America)
 * Adjule I
 * Man-eating wolf I (it is a species of very large long-tailed big cat-like hypercarnivorous wild dog which is very closely related to gray wolves, but unlike gray wolves (which only hunts humans if they're too old or sick to hunt other animals they usually hunt), man-eating gray wolves (including healthy ones) like to prey on humans, not just deer, wild boars etc.)
 * Nine tails I from Naruto series to real life North America
 * Terror dog I


 * Coatis and relatives
 * South American coati I
 * White-nosed coati I
 * Red panda I (in California and Florida only)


 * Pigs and relatives
 * Wild boar I
 * Pygmy hog I
 * Red river hog I
 * Warthog I
 * Chacoan peccary (in California, Arizona, New Mexico, and Texas)
 * Collared peccary (in the entire western, southwestern, and southern USA)
 * 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)


 * Sea cows
 * 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, Minnesota, Wisconsin, Michigan, Great Lakes, South Dakota, and North Dakota)
 * Prorastomus I from Eocene Jamaica to modern North America
 * Helena manatee I (it is a species of semi-aquatic herbivorous manatees which are build more like elephant seals than any other manatees)


 * Rhinoceroses
 * White rhinoceros (in California, Oregon, Nevada, and Arizonia)
 * Black rhinoceros (in California only)
 * Indian rhinoceros (in California and Arizona only)
 * Javan rhinoceros (in Florida only)
 * Sumatran rhinoceros (in Florida only)
 * Giant-Horned Rhinoceros (in Northern USA and most of Canada)
 * Woolly rhinoceros (were brought back and were introduced to the Great Plains, Canada, and Alaska, and they're spreading to most of North America)
 * Elasmotherium (were brought back and were introduced to the Great Plains and are spreading to most of North America)
 * 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)
 * 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
 * Modified rhinoceros I
 * Elephant rhinoceros I
 * Ornacorn I


 * Monotremes
 * Platypus I
 * Long-beaked echidna I
 * Short-beaked echidna 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)
 * Hodag I (it is a species of monotreme which is a very bizarre carnivore, having a somewhat dinosaur-like appearance)
 * Electypus I


 * Marsupials
 * 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
 * Tasmanian devil 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)
 * Tiger quoll I
 * Short-nosed bandicoot I
 * Eastern barred bandicoot I
 * Northern brown bandicoot I
 * Greater biliby I
 * Common wombat I
 * Common spotted cuscus I
 * Sulawesi bear cuscus I
 * Ground cuscus I
 * Sulawesi dwarf cuscus I
 * Eastern bettong I
 * Boodie I
 * Agile wallaby I
 * Bennett's wallaby I
 * Brush-tailed rock wallaby I
 * Yellow-footed rock wallaby I
 * Common wallaroo I
 * Goodfellow's tree-kangaroo I
 * Western grey kangaroo I
 * Eastern grey kangaroo I
 * Red kangaroo I
 * Diprotodon I
 * Procoptodon I
 * Thylacine I
 * Koaleopard I


 * Deer
 * Sika deer I
 * Axis deer I
 * Reindeer (in the rest of North America)
 * Moose (in the rest of North America)
 * 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
 * Elebuck I
 * Hippopotamoose I


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


 * Giant otter I


 * Asian otter I


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


 * Rabbits
 * European hare
 * European rabbit
 * Giant rabbit I
 * Rabbuck I from After Man Book and Documentary series to real life North America
 * 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)


 * Mongooses
 * Stripe-necked mongoose I
 * Small Asian mongoose I (in Hawaii 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
 * 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
 * Meerkat I
 * Feral meerkat


 * 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 (in most of USA and Canada)


 * Domestic alpaca (in Oregon, Nevada, Washington, Utah, Colorado, Idaho, Wyoming, California, and Montana)


 * 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, California, North Dakota, New Mexico, Texas, Missisippi, Louisiana, Alabama, Gerogia, and Florida)


 * Mountain tapir (in California only)


 * 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 California, Texas, and Florida)
 * 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
 * Gigantelope I from After Man Book and Documentary series to real life North America


 * 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)


 * South American Echidna


 * Elecman.EXEs


 * Domestic Tapir (in Florida)


 * Domestic Mesoron


 * Cetofelis (reintroduced)


 * Domestic Corey Mc 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)


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


 * North American capybara I (in Florida, Georgia, Alabama, Louisiana, Mississippi, Texas, California, Arizona, New Mexico, Nevada, Wyoming, Utah, Colorado, Idaho, Oregon, South Dakota, North Dakota, Montana, Minnesota, Wisconsin, Michigan, Ohio, Indiana, Arkansas, Kansas, Connecticut, New York, Pennsylvania, Oklahoma, Missouri, Tennessee, Kentucky, Virginia, West Virginia, South Carolina, North Carolina, Nebraska, Iowa, Maryland, Illinois, Delaware, Rhode Island, Vermont, Washington, and New Jersey) (reintroduced in native locations in where they once lived in)


 * 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)


 * Stegodon I


 * Palaeoloxodon I


 * Deinotherium I


 * Embulotherium from Eocene Asia to modern North America


 * Arsinoitherium from Eocene Africa to modern North America


 * Uintatherium I from Eocene North America to modern North America


 * Desmostylus I from Oligocene North America to modern North America


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


 * Gremlin I from Gremlins film franchise to real life New York, New Jersey, and Florida


 * Mogwai I from Gremlins film franchise to real life North America


 * Bantha I


 * Womp rat I


 * 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


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


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


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


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


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


 * Mutt Dog I from the Hunger Games films to real life North America


 * Pugott I


 * Pigrat I


 * Fish Cat I


 * Macawnivore I


 * Jackrobat I


 * Mousephant I


 * Girelephant I


 * Molarbear I


 * Trip gerbil I


 * Bunny beast I


 * Bear pear I


 * Hippalo (aka Buffalippo) I


 * Winged Cheetah I


 * Pikachu I from Pokemon series to real life North America


 * Raichu I from Pokemon series to real life North America


 * Pichu I from Pokemon series to real life North America


 * Shiki I from Shiki series to real life North America


 * MacFarlane's bear I (it is a species of bear that resembles a hybrid between a polar bear and a grizzly bear, but is about the size of a Kodiak brown bear)


 * Tapire-iauara I


 * Trunko I (in the Pacific ocean, Atlantic ocean, and the Great Lakes)


 * Bray Road beast I (it is a werewolf-like species of upright-walking relative of gray wolves. Unlike werewolves of mythical Europe, they are gentle animals towards humans as studies have recently showed, also, they don't turn their victims into their own kind, even if their victim is bitten. They feed only on deer, elk, goats, rabbits, sheep, rats, beavers, and horses)
 * Wisconsin werewolf I (it is a subspecies of the Bray Road beast that is slightly smaller, about 6.5 feet tall, and is lighter in color than other Bray Roar beast subspecies, they are also the most common, adapting to human settlements and are also the most gentle of all Bray Road beast subspecies)
 * Michigan dogman I (it is a slightly larger and darker colored subspecies of the Bray Road beast which is stronger and able to hunt larger non-human animals, fortunately for us, they are also gentle towards humans)


 * Werewolves
 * Van Helsing werewolf from Van Helsing film to real life North America
 * Buffy the vampire slayer's werewolf from Buffy the vampire slayer TV series to real life North America
 * American werewolf from The American Werewolf In London to real life North America
 * Goosebumps werewolf from Goosebumps TV series to real life North America
 * Wolfman werewolf from The Wolfman 2010 film to real life North America
 * Dark Shadows werewolf from Dark Shadows 2012 film to real life North America
 * Human-like werewolf from Werewolves: The Dark Survivors series to real life North America


 * Vampires I from mythical Europe to real life North America
 * Van Helsing vampire I
 * Buffy the vampire slayer's vampire I from Buffy the vampire slayer TV series to real life North America
 * Dark Shadows vampire I
 * Twilight vampire I
 * Dracula 1931 vampire I
 * Dracula's common 1958 vampire I
 * Dracula's lesser 1958 vampire I
 * 1959 vampire I
 * 1967 vampire I
 * 1971 vampire I
 * Dracula 1977 vampire I
 * Dracula 1979 vampire I
 * Dracula 1992 vampire I
 * 1994 vampire I
 * 1997 vampire I
 * Dracula 2000 vampire I
 * Dracula 2006 vampire I
 * Dracula Untold vampire I
 * Nosferatu vampire I (currently only in Florida, but their population is spreading and could possibly spread into other states of the USA)


 * Zombies (note: unlike their ancestors, they can now breed, which helps their population to grow)
 * Boney zombie I
 * Common zombie (aka, first stage zombies) I (note: unlike their ancestors from warm bodies film, they don't have a metamorphosis into boney zombies, and they're also no longer aggressive)
 * Transition zombie I (note: unlike their ancestors, they no longer become boney zombies, making them less aggressive than their ancestors)


 * Bass.EXE (undead version) I

Non-mammal synapsids

 * Dimetrodon I


 * Edaphosaurus I


 * Moschops I


 * Tapinocaninus I


 * Struthiocephalus I


 * Tapinocephalus I


 * Styracocephalus I


 * Titanosuchus I


 * Gorgonops I


 * Inostrancevia I


 * Pristerognathus I


 * Moschorhinus I


 * Euchambersia I


 * Microgomphodon I


 * Cynognathus I


 * Thrinaxodon I


 * Pachygenelus I


 * Oligokyphus I


 * Tritylodon I


 * Diictodon I


 * Dicynodon I


 * Lystrosaurus I


 * Ischigualastia I


 * Placerias I


 * Mammuthodontosaurus I


 * Tusked Triassic foamer I


 * Pig lizard I


 * Anjing Kambing I


 * Mutant gorgonopsid I


 * Crocopup I


 * Liyote I

Birds

 * Giant ibis I (in Florida, Georgia, Alabama, Louisiana, Mississippi, Texas, Arizona, California, New Mexico, Nevada, Wyoming, Utah, Colorado, Idaho, Oregon, South Dakota, North Dakota, Montana, Minnesota, Wisconsin, Michigan, Ohio, Indiana, Arkansas, Kansas, Connecticut, New York, Pennsylvania, Oklahoma, Missouri, Tennessee, Kentucky, Virginia, West Virginia, South Carolina, North Carolina, Nebraska, Iowa, Maryland, Illinois, Hawaii, Delaware, Rhode Island, Vermont, Washington, New Jersey, and southern Canada)


 * Swallow-tailed gull I


 * Lava gull I


 * Ivory gull I (in the entire continent of North America) (note: they are now adapting to live without icebergs, adapting to lay eggs in many man-made gardens)


 * Superb lyrebird I


 * Albert's lyrebird I


 * White-winged fairywren I


 * Purple-crowned fairywren I


 * New Zealand rock wren I


 * Bushwren I


 * Stout-legged wren I


 * Flightless wren I


 * long-billed wren I


 * Marabou stork I


 * Northern giant petrel I


 * Antarctic giant petrel I


 * European great grey shrike I


 * African crowned eagle I


 * Greater honeyguide I


 * Hood mockingbird I


 * Great white pelican I


 * Australian pelican I


 * Vegetarian finch I


 * Cocos finch I


 * Large tree finch I


 * Medium tree finch I


 * Small tree finch I


 * Woodpecker finch I


 * Mangrove finch I


 * Green warbler-finch I


 * Grey warbler-finch I


 * Lesser flamingo I


 * Andean flamingo I


 * Jame's flamingo I


 * Greater flamingo I


 * Chilean flamingo I


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


 * Razorbill I (in the rest of North America)


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


 * Black guillemot I (in the rest of North America)


 * Pigeon guillemot I (in the rest of North America)


 * Spectacled guillemot I (in the entire North American continent)


 * Northern jacana I (in the rest of North America)


 * Wattle jacana I (in the entire North American continent)


 * Bronze-winged jacana I (in the entire North American continent)


 * Pheasant-tailed jacana I (in the entire North American continent)


 * African jacana I (in the entire North American continent)


 * Comb-crested jacana I (in the entire North American continent)


 * Sunbittern I (in the entire North American continent)


 * Kagu I (in the entire North American continent)


 * Tropicbird I (in the rest of North America)


 * Hammerhead stork I (in the entire North American continent)


 * Shoebill I (in the entire North American continent)


 * Darter I (in the rest of North America)


 * Great cormorant I (in the rest of North America)


 * Double-crested cormorant I (in the rest of North America)


 * Crowned cormorant I (in the entire North American continent)


 * Flightless cormorant I (in the entire North American continent)


 * Magnificent frigatebird I (in the rest of North America)


 * Great frigatebird I (in the rest of North America)


 * Lesser frigatebird i (in the entire North American continent)


 * Nazca booby I (in the rest of North America)


 * Blue-footed booby I (in the rest of North America)


 * Brown booby I (in the rest of North America)


 * Red-footed booby I (in the rest of North America)


 * Masked booby I (in the rest of North America)


 * Peruvian booby I (in the rest of North America)


 * Abbott's booby I (in the rest of North America)


 * Gannet I (in the rest of North America)


 * Laughing kookaburra I


 * Blue-winged kookaburra I


 * Spangled kookaburra I


 * Rufous-bellied kookaburra I


 * Shovel-billed kookaburra I


 * Small ground finch I (in Florida, Georgia, Alabama, Louisiana, Mississippi, Texas, Arizona, California, New Mexico, Nevada, Wyoming, Utah, Colorado, Idaho, Oregon, South Dakota, North Dakota, Montana, Minnesota, Wisconsin, Michigan, Ohio, Indiana, Arkansas, Kansas, Connecticut, New York, Pennsylvania, Oklahoma, Missouri, Tennessee, Kentucky, Virginia, West Virginia, South Carolina, North Carolina, Nebraska, Iowa, Maryland, Illinois, Delaware, Rhode Island, Vermont, Washington, and New Jersey)


 * Medium ground finch I (in Florida, Georgia, Alabama, Louisiana, Mississippi, Texas, Arizona, California, New Mexico, Nevada, Wyoming, Utah, Colorado, Idaho, Oregon, South Dakota, North Dakota, Montana, Minnesota, Wisconsin, Michigan, Ohio, Indiana, Arkansas, Kansas, Connecticut, New York, Pennsylvania, Oklahoma, Missouri, Tennessee, Kentucky, Virginia, West Virginia, South Carolina, North Carolina, Nebraska, Iowa, Maryland, Illinois, Delaware, Rhode Island, Vermont, Washington, and New Jersey)


 * Large ground finch I (in Florida, Georgia, Alabama, Louisiana, Mississippi, Texas, Arizona, California, New Mexico, Nevada, Wyoming, Utah, Colorado, Idaho, Oregon, South Dakota, North Dakota, Montana, Minnesota, Wisconsin, Michigan, Ohio, Indiana, Arkansas, Kansas, Connecticut, New York, Pennsylvania, Oklahoma, Missouri, Tennessee, Kentucky, Virginia, West Virginia, South Carolina, North Carolina, Nebraska, Iowa, Maryland, Illinois, Hawaii, Delaware, Rhode Island, Vermont, Washington, and New Jersey)


 * Common cactus finch I (in Florida, Georgia, Alabama, Louisiana, Mississippi, Texas, Arizona, California, New Mexico, Nevada, Wyoming, Utah, Colorado, Idaho, Oregon, South Dakota, North Dakota, Montana, Minnesota, Wisconsin, Michigan, Ohio, Indiana, Arkansas, Kansas, Connecticut, New York, Pennsylvania, Oklahoma, Missouri, Tennessee, Kentucky, Virginia, West Virginia, South Carolina, North Carolina, Nebraska, Iowa, Maryland, Illinois, Delaware, Rhode Island, Vermont, Washington, and New Jersey)


 * Large cactus finch I (in Florida, Georgia, Alabama, Louisiana, Mississippi, Texas, Arizona, California, New Mexico, Nevada, Wyoming, Utah, Colorado, Idaho, Oregon, South Dakota, North Dakota, Montana, Minnesota, Wisconsin, Michigan, Ohio, Indiana, Arkansas, Kansas, Connecticut, New York, Pennsylvania, Oklahoma, Missouri, Tennessee, Kentucky, Virginia, West Virginia, South Carolina, North Carolina, Nebraska, Iowa, Maryland, Illinois, Delaware, Rhode Island, Vermont, Washington, and New Jersey)


 * Sharp-beaked ground finch I (in Florida, Georgia, Alabama, Louisiana, Mississippi, Texas, Arizona, California, New Mexico, Nevada, Wyoming, Utah, Colorado, Idaho, Oregon, South Dakota, North Dakota, Montana, Minnesota, Wisconsin, Michigan, Ohio, Indiana, Arkansas, Kansas, Connecticut, New York, Pennsylvania, Oklahoma, Missouri, Tennessee, Kentucky, Virginia, West Virginia, South Carolina, North Carolina, Nebraska, Iowa, Maryland, Illinois, Delaware, Rhode Island, Vermont, Washington, and New Jersey)


 * Vampire finch I (in Florida, Georgia, Alabama, Louisiana, Mississippi, Texas, Arizona, California, New Mexico, Nevada, Wyoming, Utah, Colorado, Idaho, Oregon, South Dakota, North Dakota, Montana, Minnesota, Wisconsin, Michigan, Ohio, Indiana, Arkansas, Kansas, Connecticut, New York, Pennsylvania, Oklahoma, Missouri, Tennessee, Kentucky, Virginia, West Virginia, South Carolina, North Carolina, Nebraska, Iowa, Maryland, Illinois, Hawaii, Delaware, Rhode Island, Vermont, Washington, and New Jersey)


 * All known South American rainforest songbird species 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


 * 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


 * Wilson's bird-of-paradise I


 * Greater bird-of-paradise I


 * Paridise-crow I


 * Glossy-mantled manucode I


 * Crinkle-collared manucode I


 * Curl-crested manucode I


 * Trumpet manucode I


 * Long-tailed paradigalla I


 * Short-tailed paradigalla I


 * Arfak astrapia I


 * Splendid astrapia I


 * Ribbon-tailed astrapia I


 * Princess Stephanie's astrapia I


 * Huon astrapia I


 * Western parotia I


 * Queen Carol's parotia I


 * Lawes's parotia I


 * Wahnes's parotia I


 * King of Saxony bird-of-paradise I


 * Superb bird-of-paradise I


 * Magnificent riflebird I


 * Paradise riflebird I


 * Victoria's riflebird I


 * Black sicklebill I


 * Brown sicklebill I


 * Astrapian sicklebill I


 * Black-billed sicklebill I


 * Buff-tailed sicklebill I


 * Pale-billed sicklebill I


 * Magnificent bird-of-paradise I


 * King bird-of-paradise I


 * Standardwing I


 * Elliot's bird of paradise I


 * Twelve-wired bird-of-paradise I


 * Lesser bird-of-paradise I


 * Raggiana bird-of-paradise I


 * Goldie's bird-of-paradise I


 * Red bird-of-paradise I


 * Emperor bird-of-paradise I


 * Blue bird-of-paradise 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


 * Ivory-billed woodpecker (reintroduced, but was also introduced to Nevada, Oregon, California, and Arizona)


 * 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


 * European bee-eater I


 * Southern carmine bee-eater I


 * Northern carmine bee-eater I


 * Indian roller I


 * Eurasian hoopoe I


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


 * 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


 * New Zealand pigeon I


 * Spotted dove I


 * Brown dove I


 * Green pigeons I


 * Blue pigeons I


 * Sombre pigeon I


 * Eurasian tree sparrow


 * House finch (in Hawaii only)


 * European greenfinch


 * European goldfinch


 * Starling I (eradicated in most of North America, except in California, where the last starlings in North America are thriving)


 * Grey partridge


 * Himalayan partridge


 * Koklass pheasant I


 * Crested fireback I


 * Crestless fireback I


 * Blue eared pheasant I


 * Grey crowned crane I


 * House sparrow I


 * Weka I


 * Takahē 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 I


 * White-winged parakeet I


 * 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)


 * New Zealand kaka I


 * Kea I


 * Kakapo I


 * Black robin I


 * Tomtit I


 * North Island kōkako I


 * South Island kōkako I


 * North Island saddleback I


 * North Island robin I


 * South Island robin I


 * Laughing owl I


 * Dollarbird I


 * Rifleman I


 * 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, but was also introduced to Oregon, Washington, western Canada, western Mexico, Baja California, and California)


 * Muscovy duck


 * White-faced whistling duck I (in Florida, Georgia, Alabama, Louisiana, Mississippi, Texas, California, Arizona, New Mexico, Nevada, Wyoming, Utah, Colorado, Idaho, Oregon, South Dakota, North Dakota, Montana, Minnesota, Wisconsin, Michigan, Ohio, Indiana, Arkansas, Kansas, Connecticut, New York, Pennsylvania, Oklahoma, Missouri, Tennessee, Kentucky, Virginia, West Virginia, South Carolina, North Carolina, Nebraska, Iowa, Maryland, Illinois, Delaware, Rhode Island, Vermont, Washington, and New Jersey)


 * 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 I


 * Mute swan I


 * African penguin (in Florida, Georgia, Alabama, Louisiana, Mississippi, Texas, Arizona, California, New Mexico, Nevada, Wyoming, Utah, Colorado, Idaho, Oregon, South Dakota, North Dakota, Montana, Minnesota, Wisconsin, Michigan, Ohio, Indiana, Arkansas, Kansas, Connecticut, New York, Pennsylvania, Oklahoma, Missouri, Tennessee, Kentucky, Virginia, West Virginia, South Carolina, North Carolina, Nebraska, Iowa, Maryland, Illinois, Hawaii, Delaware, Rhode Island, Vermont, Washington, and New Jersey)


 * Chinstrap penguin (in Florida, Georgia, Alabama, Louisiana, Mississippi, Texas, California, Arizona, New Mexico, Nevada, Wyoming, Utah, Colorado, Idaho, Oregon, South Dakota, North Dakota, Montana, Minnesota, Wisconsin, Michigan, Ohio, Indiana, Arkansas, Kansas, Connecticut, New York, Pennsylvania, Oklahoma, Missouri, Tennessee, Kentucky, Virginia, West Virginia, South Carolina, North Carolina, Nebraska, Iowa, Maryland, Illinois, Hawaii, Delaware, Rhode Island, Vermont, Washington, and New Jersey)


 * Adélie penguin (in Florida, Georgia, Alabama, Louisiana, Mississippi, Texas, California, Arizona, New Mexico, Nevada, Wyoming, Utah, Colorado, Idaho, Oregon, South Dakota, North Dakota, Montana, Minnesota, Wisconsin, Michigan, Ohio, Indiana, Arkansas, Kansas, Connecticut, New York, Pennsylvania, Oklahoma, Missouri, Tennessee, Kentucky, Virginia, West Virginia, South Carolina, North Carolina, Nebraska, Iowa, Maryland, Illinois, Hawaii, Delaware, Rhode Island, Vermont, Washington, and New Jersey)


 * Gentoo penguin (in Florida, Georgia, Alabama, Louisiana, Mississippi, Texas, California, Arizona, New Mexico, Nevada, Wyoming, Utah, Colorado, Idaho, Oregon, South Dakota, North Dakota, Montana, Minnesota, Wisconsin, Michigan, Ohio, Indiana, Arkansas, Kansas, Connecticut, New York, Pennsylvania, Oklahoma, Missouri, Tennessee, Kentucky, Virginia, West Virginia, South Carolina, North Carolina, Nebraska, Iowa, Maryland, Illinois, Hawaii, Delaware, Rhode Island, Vermont, Washington, and New Jersey)


 * Little blue penguin (in Florida, Georgia, Alabama, Louisiana, Mississippi, Texas, California, Arizona, New Mexico, Nevada, Wyoming, Utah, Colorado, Idaho, Oregon, South Dakota, North Dakota, Montana, Minnesota, Wisconsin, Michigan, Ohio, Indiana, Arkansas, Kansas, Connecticut, New York, Pennsylvania, Oklahoma, Missouri, Tennessee, Kentucky, Virginia, West Virginia, South Carolina, North Carolina, Nebraska, Iowa, Maryland, Illinois, Hawaii, Delaware, Rhode Island, Vermont, Washington, and New Jersey)


 * Royal penguin (in Florida, Georgia, Alabama, Louisiana, Mississippi, Texas, California, Arizona, New Mexico, Nevada, Wyoming, Utah, Colorado, Idaho, Oregon, South Dakota, North Dakota, Montana, Minnesota, Wisconsin, Michigan, Ohio, Indiana, Arkansas, Kansas, Connecticut, New York, Pennsylvania, Oklahoma, Missouri, Tennessee, Kentucky, Virginia, West Virginia, South Carolina, North Carolina, Nebraska, Iowa, Maryland, Illinois, Hawaii, Delaware, Rhode Island, Vermont, Washington, and New Jersey)


 * Rockhopper penguin (in Florida, Georgia, Alabama, Louisiana, Mississippi, Texas, California, Arizona, New Mexico, Nevada, Wyoming, Utah, Colorado, Idaho, Oregon, South Dakota, North Dakota, Montana, Minnesota, Wisconsin, Michigan, Ohio, Indiana, Arkansas, Kansas, Connecticut, New York, Pennsylvania, Oklahoma, Missouri, Tennessee, Kentucky, Virginia, West Virginia, South Carolina, North Carolina, Nebraska, Iowa, Maryland, Illinois, Hawaii, Delaware, Rhode Island, Vermont, Washington, and New Jersey)


 * Macaroni penguin (in Florida, Georgia, Alabama, Louisiana, Mississippi, Texas, California, Arizona, New Mexico, Nevada, Wyoming, Utah, Colorado, Idaho, Oregon, South Dakota, North Dakota, Montana, Minnesota, Wisconsin, Michigan, Ohio, Indiana, Arkansas, Kansas, Connecticut, New York, Pennsylvania, Oklahoma, Missouri, Tennessee, Kentucky, Virginia, West Virginia, South Carolina, North Carolina, Nebraska, Iowa, Maryland, Illinois, Hawaii, Delaware, Rhode Island, Vermont, Washington, and New Jersey)


 * King penguin (in Florida, Georgia, Alabama, Louisiana, Mississippi, Texas, California, Arizona, New Mexico, Nevada, Wyoming, Utah, Colorado, Idaho, Oregon, South Dakota, North Dakota, Montana, Minnesota, Wisconsin, Michigan, Ohio, Indiana, Arkansas, Kansas, Connecticut, New York, Pennsylvania, Oklahoma, Missouri, Tennessee, Kentucky, Virginia, West Virginia, South Carolina, North Carolina, Nebraska, Iowa, Maryland, Illinois, Hawaii, Delaware, Rhode Island, Vermont, Washington, and New Jersey)


 * Emperor penguin (in Florida, Georgia, Alabama, Louisiana, Mississippi, Texas, California, Arizona, New Mexico, Nevada, Wyoming, Utah, Colorado, Idaho, Oregon, South Dakota, North Dakota, Montana, Minnesota, Wisconsin, Michigan, Ohio, Indiana, Arkansas, Kansas, Connecticut, New York, Pennsylvania, Oklahoma, Missouri, Tennessee, Kentucky, Virginia, West Virginia, South Carolina, North Carolina, Nebraska, Iowa, Maryland, Illinois, Hawaii, Delaware, Rhode Island, Vermont, Washington, and New Jersey)


 * Common pheasant I


 * Kalij pheasant I


 * Himalayan monal pheasant I


 * Chinese monal pheasant I


 * Pigeon I


 * Passenger pigeon (reintroduced) (in Florida, Georgia, Alabama, Louisiana, Mississippi, Texas, California, Arizona, New Mexico, Nevada, Wyoming, Utah, Colorado, Idaho, Oregon, South Dakota, North Dakota, Montana, Minnesota, Wisconsin, Michigan, Ohio, Indiana, Arkansas, Kansas, Connecticut, New York, Pennsylvania, Oklahoma, Missouri, Tennessee, Kentucky, Virginia, West Virginia, South Carolina, North Carolina, Nebraska, Iowa, Maryland, Illinois, Delaware, Rhode Island, Vermont, Washington, and New Jersey)


 * 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 I


 * Red-billed quelea I


 * Yellow-faced grassquit


 * Red-billed leiothrix


 * Southern masked weaver I


 * Red-cheecked cordon-bleu


 * Green jay I (in the entire parts of USA)


 * Plush-crested jay I


 * Azure-naped jay I


 * Gray jay (in the rest of USA and Canada)


 * Blue jay (in the rest of the USA)


 * Northern cardinal (in the rest of 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 (in the rest of North America)


 * 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 Florida, Georgia, Alabama, Louisiana, Mississippi, Texas, California, Arizona, New Mexico, Nevada, Wyoming, Utah, Colorado, Idaho, Oregon, South Dakota, North Dakota, Montana, Minnesota, Wisconsin, Michigan, Ohio, Indiana, Arkansas, Kansas, Connecticut, New York, Pennsylvania, Oklahoma, Missouri, Tennessee, Kentucky, Virginia, West Virginia, South Carolina, North Carolina, Nebraska, Iowa, Maryland, Illinois, Hawaii, Delaware, Rhode Island, Vermont, Washington, and New Jersey)


 * Griffon vulture I (in Florida, Georgia, Alabama, Louisiana, Mississippi, Texas, California, Arizona, New Mexico, Nevada, Wyoming, Utah, Colorado, Idaho, Oregon, South Dakota, North Dakota, Montana, Minnesota, Wisconsin, Michigan, Ohio, Indiana, Arkansas, Kansas, Connecticut, New York, Pennsylvania, Oklahoma, Missouri, Tennessee, Kentucky, Virginia, West Virginia, South Carolina, North Carolina, Nebraska, Iowa, Maryland, Illinois, Hawaii, Delaware, Rhode Island, Vermont, Washington, and New Jersey)


 * Lappet-faced vulture I (in Florida, Georgia, Alabama, Louisiana, Mississippi, Texas, California, Arizona, New Mexico, Nevada, Wyoming, Utah, Colorado, Idaho, Oregon, South Dakota, North Dakota, Montana, Minnesota, Wisconsin, Michigan, Ohio, Indiana, Arkansas, Kansas, Connecticut, New York, Pennsylvania, Oklahoma, Missouri, Tennessee, Kentucky, Virginia, West Virginia, South Carolina, North Carolina, Nebraska, Iowa, Maryland, Illinois, Hawaii, Delaware, Rhode Island, Vermont, Washington, and New Jersey)


 * White-backed vulture I (in Florida, Georgia, Alabama, Louisiana, Mississippi, Texas, California, Arizona, New Mexico, Nevada, Wyoming, Utah, Colorado, Idaho, Oregon, South Dakota, North Dakota, Montana, Minnesota, Wisconsin, Michigan, Ohio, Indiana, Arkansas, Kansas, Connecticut, New York, Pennsylvania, Oklahoma, Missouri, Tennessee, Kentucky, Virginia, West Virginia, South Carolina, North Carolina, Nebraska, Iowa, Maryland, Illinois, Hawaii, Delaware, Rhode Island, Vermont, Washington, and New Jersey)


 * Slender-billed vulture I (in Florida, Georgia, Alabama, Louisiana, Mississippi, Texas, California, Arizona, New Mexico, Nevada, Wyoming, Utah, Colorado, Idaho, Oregon, South Dakota, North Dakota, Montana, Minnesota, Wisconsin, Michigan, Ohio, Indiana, Arkansas, Kansas, Connecticut, New York, Pennsylvania, Oklahoma, Missouri, Tennessee, Kentucky, Virginia, West Virginia, South Carolina, North Carolina, Nebraska, Iowa, Maryland, Illinois, Hawaii, Delaware, Rhode Island, Vermont, Washington, and New Jersey)


 * Himalayan vulture I (in Florida, Georgia, Alabama, Louisiana, Mississippi, Texas, California, Arizona, New Mexico, Nevada, Wyoming, Utah, Colorado, Idaho, Oregon, South Dakota, North Dakota, Montana, Minnesota, Wisconsin, Michigan, Ohio, Indiana, Arkansas, Kansas, Connecticut, New York, Pennsylvania, Oklahoma, Missouri, Tennessee, Kentucky, Virginia, West Virginia, South Carolina, North Carolina, Nebraska, Iowa, Maryland, Illinois, Hawaii, Delaware, Rhode Island, Vermont, Washington, and New Jersey)


 * Red-headed vulture I (in Florida, Georgia, Alabama, Louisiana, Mississippi, Texas, California, Arizona, New Mexico, Nevada, Wyoming, Utah, Colorado, Idaho, Oregon, South Dakota, North Dakota, Montana, Minnesota, Wisconsin, Michigan, Ohio, Indiana, Arkansas, Kansas, Connecticut, New York, Pennsylvania, Oklahoma, Missouri, Tennessee, Kentucky, Virginia, West Virginia, South Carolina, North Carolina, Nebraska, Iowa, Maryland, Illinois, Hawaii, Delaware, Rhode Island, Vermont, Washington, and New Jersey)


 * Egyptian vulture I (in Florida, Georgia, Alabama, Louisiana, Mississippi, Texas, California, Arizona, New Mexico, Nevada, Wyoming, Utah, Colorado, Idaho, Oregon, South Dakota, North Dakota, Montana, Minnesota, Wisconsin, Michigan, Ohio, Indiana, Arkansas, Kansas, Connecticut, New York, Pennsylvania, Oklahoma, Missouri, Tennessee, Kentucky, Virginia, West Virginia, South Carolina, North Carolina, Nebraska, Iowa, Maryland, Illinois, Hawaii, Delaware, Rhode Island, Vermont, Washington, and New Jersey)


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


 * Bearded vulture I (in Florida, Georgia, Alabama, Louisiana, Mississippi, Texas, California, Arizona, New Mexico, Nevada, Wyoming, Utah, Colorado, Idaho, Oregon, South Dakota, North Dakota, Montana, Minnesota, Wisconsin, Michigan, Ohio, Indiana, Arkansas, Kansas, Connecticut, New York, Pennsylvania, Oklahoma, Missouri, Tennessee, Kentucky, Virginia, West Virginia, South Carolina, North Carolina, Nebraska, Iowa, Maryland, Illinois, Hawaii, Delaware, Rhode Island, Vermont, Washington, and New Jersey)


 * Hooded vulture I (in Florida, Georgia, Alabama, Louisiana, Mississippi, Texas, California, Arizona, New Mexico, Nevada, Wyoming, Utah, Colorado, Idaho, Oregon, South Dakota, North Dakota, Montana, Minnesota, Wisconsin, Michigan, Ohio, Indiana, Arkansas, Kansas, Connecticut, New York, Pennsylvania, Oklahoma, Missouri, Tennessee, Kentucky, Virginia, West Virginia, South Carolina, North Carolina, Nebraska, Iowa, Maryland, Illinois, Hawaii, Delaware, Rhode Island, Vermont, Washington, and New Jersey)


 * King vulture I (in Georgia, Alabama, Louisiana, Mississippi, Texas, California, Arizona, New Mexico, Nevada, Wyoming, Utah, Colorado, Idaho, Oregon, South Dakota, North Dakota, Montana, Minnesota, Wisconsin, Michigan, Ohio, Indiana, Arkansas, Kansas, Connecticut, New York, Pennsylvania, Oklahoma, Missouri, Tennessee, Kentucky, Virginia, West Virginia, South Carolina, North Carolina, Nebraska, Iowa, Maryland, Illinois, Delaware, Rhode Island, Vermont, Washington, and New Jersey) (eradicated in Florida)


 * Andean condor I (in Florida, Georgia, Alabama, Louisiana, Mississippi, Texas, California, Arizona, New Mexico, Nevada, Wyoming, Utah, Colorado, Idaho, Oregon, South Dakota, North Dakota, Montana, Minnesota, Wisconsin, Michigan, Ohio, Indiana, Arkansas, Kansas, Connecticut, New York, Pennsylvania, Oklahoma, Missouri, Tennessee, Kentucky, Virginia, West Virginia, South Carolina, North Carolina, Nebraska, Iowa, Maryland, Illinois, Hawaii, Delaware, Rhode Island, Vermont, Washington, and New Jersey)


 * California condor I (in the rest of California, Florida, Georgia, Alabama, Louisiana, Mississippi, Texas, Arizona, New Mexico, Nevada, Wyoming, Utah, Colorado, Idaho, Oregon, South Dakota, North Dakota, Montana, Minnesota, Wisconsin, Michigan, Ohio, Indiana, Arkansas, Kansas, Connecticut, New York, Pennsylvania, Oklahoma, Missouri, Tennessee, Kentucky, Virginia, West Virginia, South Carolina, North Carolina, Nebraska, Iowa, Maryland, Illinois, Delaware, Rhode Island, Vermont, Washington, and New Jersey)


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


 * Chicken


 * African ostrich


 * Greater rhea


 * Australian emu


 * All five species of New Zealand kiwis I


 * African Emu


 * Asian Emu


 * European Emu I


 * African Cassowary


 * Asian Cassowary I


 * Australian Kiwi


 * Asian Kiwi


 * Northern Ostrich


 * African Giant Condor


 * South Island giant moa I from historic New Zealand to modern North America


 * Heavy-footed moa I from historic New Zealand to modern North America


 * 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


 * Elephant bird I from historic Madagascar to modern North America


 * Genyornis I from Pleistocene Australia to modern North America


 * Dromornis I from Pleistocene Australia to modern North America


 * Bullockornis I


 * Pseudodontornis I


 * Odontopteryx I


 * Osteodontornis I


 * Pelagornis I


 * Dasornis I


 * 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


 * Hesperornids I


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


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


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


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


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


 * False Spitfire Bird from the Future Is Wild documentary to real life North America


 * Great Blue Windrunner from the Future Is Wild documentary to real life North America


 * Ramu I


 * Bear owl I


 * Turkeyfish I


 * Impalamingo I


 * Swamp tree elephant I


 * Piranhakeet I (note: in most places, they were unsuccessfully introduced due to competition with Terrible Terrors, another introduced species, but in Florida, piranhakeets are thriving due to less competition and unlike their ancestors, piranahkeets are no longer aggressive and the largest prey they now hunt are only the size of a black rat)


 * Albatroceros I


 * Mockingjay I from the Hunger Games films to real life North America


 * Jabberjay I from the Hunger Games films to real life North America


 * White crow I (it is a species of crow that has feathers that are all white, unlike most crows, which are mostly black in color, making this crow very attractive, despite having a common raven-like calls)


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


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


 * Hippogriff I

Reptiles

 * Crocodillians and relatives
 * Spectacled caiman I (in the rest of North America)
 * American alligator I (in the rest of North America)
 * Nile crocodile I (in the entire North American continent)
 * Freshwater crocodile I (in the entire North American continent)
 * Saltwater crocodile I (in the entire North American continent)
 * Mourasuchus I from Miocene South America to modern North America
 * Stomatosuchus I from Cretaceous Africa 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
 * Simosuchus I from Cretaceous Madagascar to modern North America
 * Chimaerasuchus I from Cretaceous Asia to modern North America
 * Aetosaurs I from Triassic Asia, Africa, Europe, and North & South America to modern North America
 * Paddle snapper I
 * Crocohippus I
 * Quackodile I
 * Terror crocodile I
 * Thalattosuchian I
 * Cave crocodile I


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


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


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


 * 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)


 * Burmese python I (in California, Arizona, Nevada, and Oregon) (eradicated in Florida)


 * African rock python I (in Oregon, Arizona, Nevada, New Mexico, and California) (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)


 * Cobras
 * 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)
 * Fire cobra I


 * 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)


 * Brahminy blind snake I


 * All known species of anoles


 * All of the known iguana species I (in Florida, Texas, Nevada, Arizona, Oregon, New Mexico, Louisiana, Mississippi, California, and some Caribbean islands)


 * Basilisk I (in Florida and California)


 * Common agama I


 * Oriental garden lizard


 * Butterfly lizard


 * Nonnative geckos I


 * South America ground lizard I


 * Rainbow whiptail


 * Italian wall lizards


 * Northern curlytail lizard


 * Hispaniolan curlytail lizard


 * All of the known chameleon species I (in Florida and California only)


 * Monitor lizards and relatives
 * Komodo monitor I (in Arizona, Nevada, Oregon, New Mexico, Texas, Utah, Louisiana, California, Mississippi, Alabama, Georgia, and Florida)
 * 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 and Oregon only)
 * Water monitor I (in Texas, Arizona, Nevada, Utah, Colorado, Wyoming, Oregon, and California)
 * Elephant lizard I
 * Fox lizard I
 * Cat lizard I
 * Reptopanther I
 * Vicehead I
 * Cow-lizard I
 * Strangler lizard I
 * Plague lizard I
 * Eel lizard I
 * Gila runner I
 * Runner Lizard I
 * Bird lizard I


 * Turtles, tortoises, and relatives
 * Red-eared slider I (in the rest of North America)
 * Arrau turtle I
 * Pig-nosed turtle I
 * Yangtze giant softshell turtle I (note: unlike native ones in China, invasive ones in North America are thriving very well, even with habitat loss and other human activities)
 * Chinese softshell turtle I
 * New Guinea giant softshell turtle I
 * Spiny softshell turtle I (in the rest of North America)
 * Common snapping turtle I (in the rest of North America)
 * Alligator snapping turtle I (in the rest of North America)
 * Leopard tortoise I
 * African spurred tortoise I
 * Aldabra giant tortoise I
 * Galápagos tortoise I
 * American desert tortoises I (in the rest of North America)
 * Angulate tortoise I
 * Atlas tortoise I
 * Stupendemys I
 * Dino turtle I
 * Crocosnapper I
 * Lost world giant turtle I
 * Toraton from the Future Is Wild documentary to real life North America
 * Turtle dove I
 * Scutosaurus I
 * Pareiasaurus I
 * Elginia I
 * Anthodon I


 * Sauropodomorphs
 * Panphagia I
 * Thecodontosaurus I
 * Plateosaurus I
 * Riojasaurus I
 * Jingshanosaurus I
 * Lufengosaurus I
 * Yunnanosaurus I
 * Unaysaurus I
 * Anchisaurus I
 * Glacialisaurus I
 * Massospondylus I
 * Melanorosaurus I
 * Cetiosaurus I
 * Shunosaurus I (the most widespread sauropod species in modern North America)
 * Camarasaurus I
 * Mamenchisaurus I
 * Dinheirosaurus I
 * Lusotitan I
 * Barosaurus I
 * Supersaurus I
 * Apatosaurus I
 * Real Brontosaurus I
 * Diplodocus I
 * Brachiosaurus I
 * Borealosaurus I
 * Argentinosaurus I
 * Cedarosaurus I
 * Rapetosaurus I
 * Saltasaurus I
 * Ampelosaurus I
 * Magyarosaurus I
 * Skull Island 2005 Brontosaurus I (like all sauropods in today, it's a herbivore)


 * Pachycephalosaurids
 * Pachycephalosaurus I
 * Stegoceras I
 * Prenocephale I
 * Homalocephale I
 * Bull styg I


 * Psittacosaurus I


 * Leptoceratops I


 * Koreaceratops I


 * Protoceratops I


 * Montanoceratops I


 * Zuniceratops I


 * Pentaceratops I


 * 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
 * Slender-Snouted Muttaburrasaurus I from Cretaceous Australia to modern North America
 * Trumpet-Nosed Muttaburrasaurus I
 * 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
 * WWD Anatotitan I
 * Thundercrest I
 * Bluebeak I
 * Maned beaktooth I


 * Miragaia I


 * Wuerhosaurus I


 * Dacentrurus I


 * Hesperosaurus I


 * Huayangosaurus I


 * Kentrosaurus I


 * Tuojiangosaurus I


 * Stegosaurus I


 * Gargoyleosaurus I


 * Polacanthus I


 * Gastonia I


 * Nodosaurus I


 * Edmontia I


 * Minmi I


 * Saichania I


 * Tarchia I


 * Euoplocephalus I


 * Ankylosaurus I


 * 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
 * Real Dromaeosauridae raptors I from Cretaceous Asia, Europe, and North America
 * Fossoraptor I
 * Eagle raptor I
 * Blue-winged raptor I


 * Troodnts
 * Real Troodonts I from Cretaceous Asia, Europe, and North America to modern North America
 * Unstrich I


 * Rahonavis I from Cretaceous Madagascar to modern North America


 * Scansoriopterids I from Jurassic Asia to modern North America


 * Common Ornitholestes I from Jurassic North America to modern North America


 * Horned Ornitholestes I


 * Compsognathids
 * Real Compsognathids I from Jurassic & Cretaceous Europe and Asia to modern North America
 * Viperagnathus I


 * 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


 * Common Allosaurus I from Jurassic North America and Europe to modern North America


 * Dwarf Allosaurus I


 * Quadrupedal Spinosaurus


 * Bipdeal Spinosaurus


 * Eustreptospondylus I


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


 * Coelophysis I from Triassic North America to modern North America


 * Eoraptor I from Triassic South America to modern North America


 * Sharovipteryx I


 * Ancestral Pterosaurs I


 * Forest Tapejara I


 * Marine Tapejara I


 * Common Ornithocheirus I


 * Crested Ornithocheirus I


 * Pteranodon I


 * Nyctosaurus I


 * Anhanguera I


 * Quetzalcoatlus I


 * Hatzegopteryx I


 * Dsungaripterus I


 * Pterodactylus I


 * Germanodactylus I


 * Dimorphodon I


 * Rhamphorhynchus I


 * Common Anurognathus I


 * Symbiontic Anurognathus I


 * Peteinosaurus I


 * Utatsusaurus I (in coastlines of California, Oregon, Baja California, and Mexico only)


 * Cymbospondylus I (in coastlines of California, Oregon, Baja California, and Mexico only)


 * Shastasaurus I (in coastlines of California, Oregon, Baja California, and Mexico only)


 * Shonisaurus I (in coastlines of California, Oregon, Baja California, and Mexico only)


 * Mixosaurus I (in coastlines of California, Oregon, Baja California, and Mexico only)


 * Contectopalatus I (in coastlines of California, Oregon, Baja California, and Mexico only)


 * Eurhinosaurus I (in coastlines of California, Oregon, Baja California, and Mexico only)


 * Temnodontosaurus I (in coastlines of California, Oregon, Baja California, and Mexico only)


 * Ichthyosaurus I (in coastlines of California, Oregon, Baja California, and Mexico only)


 * Platypterygius I (in coastlines of California, Oregon, Baja California, and Mexico only)


 * Stenopterygius I (in coastlines of California, Oregon, Baja California, and Mexico only)


 * Ophthalmosaurus I (in coastlines of California, Oregon, Baja California, and Mexico only)


 * Placodus I


 * Henodus I (in coastlines of California, Oregon, Baja California, and Mexico only)


 * Cyamodus I (in coastlines of California, Oregon, Baja California, and Mexico only)


 * Placochelys I (in coastlines of California, Oregon, Baja California, and Mexico only)


 * Psephoderma I (in coastlines of California, Oregon, Baja California, and Mexico only)


 * Lariosaurus I (in coastlines of California, Oregon, Baja California, and Mexico only)


 * Nothosaurus I (in coastlines of California, Oregon, Baja California, and Mexico only)


 * Simosaurus I (in coastlines of California, Oregon, Baja California, and Mexico only)


 * Pistosaurus I (in coastlines of California, Oregon, Baja California, and Mexico only)


 * Augustasaurus I (in coastlines of California, Oregon, Baja California, and Mexico only)


 * Cryptoclidus I (in coastlines of California, Oregon, Baja California, and Mexico only)


 * Elasmosaurus I (in coastlines of California, Oregon, Baja California, and Mexico only)


 * Styxosaurus I (in coastlines of California, Oregon, Baja California, and Mexico only)


 * Thalassomedon I (in coastlines of California, Oregon, Baja California, and Mexico only)


 * Dolichorhynchops I (in coastlines of California, Oregon, Baja California, and Mexico only)


 * Trinacromerum I (in coastlines of California, Oregon, Baja California, and Mexico only)


 * Macroplata I (in coastlines of California, Oregon, Baja California, and Mexico only)


 * Rhomaleosaurus I (in coastlines of California, Oregon, Baja California, and Mexico only)


 * Common Liopleurodon I (in coastlines of California, Oregon, Baja California, and Mexico only)


 * Giant Liopleurodon I (in coastlines of Baja California and Mexico only)


 * Common dinosauroid I


 * Flatwoods dinosauroid I (note: it is a species of dinosauroid that lives inside its machine parts for the rest of its life, they are peaceful herbivores which will only attack or let out foul smell for defense only if it's threatened or scared, their population is actually increasing and spreading to many other parts of USA, Mexico, and Canada)


 * Tauntaun I


 * Dewback I


 * Varactyl I


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


 * Jurassic Park Tyrannosaurus


 * Jurassic Park raptor I (note: they were brought from Jurassic World film and became invasive after some people who were the fans of Jurassic World and their raptors brought them into real life, after some were brought to real life North America, they became invasive and caused some negative impact to some native real life North American species, including some populations of the American Killer Dylanus, some population of gray wolves, and some black bear populations, especially some population of black bears in Florida)


 * Venatosaurus I


 * Vastatosaurus Rex I


 * Indominus (note: unlike their ancestors, they have no negative impact to native species since they no longer hunt for sports, instead they now only hunt if they're hungry)


 * Lizardman I (this reptile is closely related to iguanamen, but is sapient and is more aggressive)


 * Iguanaman I (it is a large species of reptile closely related to real life iguanas, but is humanoid in body build. It is also on omnivore that is mostly a carnivore, feeding mainly on deer, goats, sheep, and sometimes Dylanus species including the American Common Dylanus)


 * Lizard rat I (this reptilian animal is similar to lizard mice, but with smaller ears and has a slightly larger body size)


 * Lizard mouse I


 * Mutt Lizard I from The Hunger Games films to real life North America


 * Yakemeleon I


 * Lizvult I


 * Night Fury I


 * Deadly Nadder I


 * Gronckle I


 * Monstrous Nightmare I


 * Hideous Zippleback I


 * Terrible Terror I


 * Scauldron I


 * Thunderdrum I


 * Whispering Death I


 * Snaptrapper I


 * Timberjack I


 * Changewing I


 * Boneknapper I


 * Skrill I


 * Night Terror I


 * Speed Stinger I


 * Death Song I


 * Snow Wraith I


 * Woolly Howl I


 * Flightmare I


 * Catastrophic Quaken I


 * Screaming Death I


 * Giant Deaths
 * Red Death I (in Alaska only)
 * Green Death I (it is a less aggressive subspecies of a red death)


 * Bewilderbeast I


 * Gobsucker I


 * Stinger I


 * Egg Biter I


 * Stormcutter I


 * Hotburple I


 * Hobblegrunt I


 * Windgnasher I


 * Snafflefang I


 * Windstriker I


 * Rumblehorn I


 * Thornridge I


 * Threadtail I


 * Thunderclaw I


 * Raincutter I


 * Scuttleclaw I


 * Snifflehunch I


 * Shovelhelm I


 * Garden dragon I (note: unlike their ancestors, they are no longer sapient and they now growl, hiss, and snarl instead of speaking in any language, thus this makes garden dragons just urban animals that lives in parks, gardens, fields, school playgrounds, etc.)


 * Brown dragon I (note: they are now completely herbivorous, thus making them peaceful plant eaters)


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


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


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

Amphibians

 * Fire salamander I


 * Hellbender I (in most of USA, Mexico, and parts of Canada)


 * Spotted salamander I (in the rest of North America)


 * Greater siren I (in the rest of North America)


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


 * African bullfrog I


 * Common coquí I


 * Cane toad I


 * Goliath frog I


 * Fire-bellied toad I


 * Common toad I


 * Common frog I


 * Edible frog I


 * Green frog I (in the rest of North America)


 * Common Suriname toad I


 * Horned frogs I


 * Rain frog I


 * Purple frog I


 * Plains spadefoot toad I


 * Giant burrowing frog I


 * Ornate burrowing frog I


 * Northern burrowing frog I


 * Spencer's burrowing frog I


 * Striped burrowing frog I


 * Short-footed frog I


 * Flying frog I


 * Gray frog I (in the rest of USA)


 * Rock frog I


 * Mexican burrowing caecilian I (in the entire North American continent)


 * Japanese giant salamander I


 * Chinese giant salamander I (in Florida, Georgia, Alabama, Louisiana, Mississippi, California, Texas, Arizona, New Mexico, Nevada, Wyoming, Utah, Colorado, Idaho, Oregon, South Dakota, North Dakota, Montana, Minnesota, Wisconsin, Michigan, Ohio, Indiana, Arkansas, Kansas,


 * Cuban tree frog I


 * Green and black poison dart frogs I (in Florida, Hawaii, and California) (note: in California, these frogs are no longer poisonous, making these frogs in California relatively harmless)


 * Dyeing dart frog I (in California only) (note: just like many species of poisonous dart frogs that were accidentally introduced to California, it became nonvenomous since their insect prey that made it poisonous after being eaten are not present in California)


 * Yellow-banded poison dart frog I (in California only) (note: like all poison dart frogs in California, they lost their poison due to lack of their poisonous prey in California)


 * Yellow-striped poison dart frog I (in California only) (note: like all poison dart frogs in California, they lost their poison due to lack of their poisonous prey in California)


 * Golden poison dart frog I (in California only) (note: like all poison dart frogs in California, they lost their poison due to lack of their poisonous prey in California)


 * Strawberry poison dart frog I (in California only) (note: like all poison dart frogs in California, all species of strawberry poison dart frogs that were introduced to California by accident lost their poison due to lack of their poisonous prey in California)


 * Reticulated poison dart frogs I (in California only) (note: like all poison dart frogs in California, they lost their poison due to lack of their poisonous prey in California)


 * Brazil-nut poison dart frogs I (in California only) (note: like all poison dart frogs in California, they lost their poison due to lack of their poisonous prey in California, they are also adapting to a land without Brazil nut trees, since there are no native nut trees in California that are similar to Brazil nut trees)


 * Splash-backed poison dart frog I (in California only) (note: like all poison dart frogs in California, they lost their poison due to lack of their poisonous prey in California)


 * Cauca poison dart frog I (in California only) (note: like all poison dart frogs in California, they lost their poison due to lack of their poisonous prey in California)


 * Marañón poison dart frog I (in California only) (note: like all poison dart frogs in California, they lost their poison due to lack of their poisonous prey in California)


 * Alta del Buey poison dart frog I (in California only) (note: like all poison dart frogs in California, they lost their poison due to lack of their poisonous prey in California)


 * Yellow-bellied poison dart frog I (in California only) (note: like all poison dart frogs in California, they lost their poison due to lack of their poisonous prey in California)


 * Kokoe poison dart frog I (in California only) (note: like all poison dart frogs in California, they lost their poison due to lack of their poisonous prey in California)


 * Black-legged poison dart frog I (in California only) (note: like all poison dart frogs in California, they lost their poison due to lack of their poisonous prey in California)


 * Summer's poison dart frog I (in California only) (note: like all poison dart frogs in California, they lost their poison due to lack of their poisonous prey in California)


 * Red-headed poison dart frog I (in California only) (note: like all poison dart frogs in California, they lost their poison due to lack of their poisonous prey in California)


 * Mimic poison dart frog I (in California only) (note: like all poison dart frogs in California, they lost their poison due to lack of their poisonous prey in California)


 * Red-backed poison dart frog I (in California only) (note: like all poison dart frogs in California, they lost their poison due to lack of their poisonous prey in California)


 * Sira poison dart frog I (in California only) (note: like all poison dart frogs in California, they lost their poison due to lack of their poisonous prey in California)


 * Spotted poison dart frog I (in California only) (note: like all poison dart frogs in California, they lost their poison due to lack of their poisonous prey in California)


 * Blue poison dart frog I (in California only) (note: like all poison dart frogs in California, they lost their poison due to lack of their poisonous prey in California)


 * Cream-backed poison dart frog I (in California only) (note: like all poison dart frogs in California, they lost their poison due to lack of their poisonous prey in California)


 * Three-striped poison dart frog I (in California only) (note: like all poison dart frogs in California, they lost their poison due to lack of their poisonous prey in California)


 * Phantasmal poison dart frog I (in California only) (note: like all poison dart frogs in California, they lost their poison due to lack of their poisonous prey in California)


 * Anthony's poison dart frog I (in California only) (note: like all poison dart frogs in California, they lost their poison due to lack of their poisonous prey in California)


 * Common rocket poison dart frog I (in California only) (note: like all poison dart frogs in California, they lost their poison due to lack of their poisonous prey in California)


 * Rainforest rocket poison dart frog I (in California only) (note: like all poison dart frogs in California, they lost their poison due to lack of their poisonous prey in California)


 * Brilliant-thighed poison dart frog I (in California only) (note: like all poison dart frogs in California, they lost their poison due to lack of their poisonous prey in California)


 * Golden rocket frog I


 * Zimmermann's poison dart frog I (in California only) (note: like all poison dart frogs in California, they lost their poison due to lack of their poisonous prey in California)


 * Stephen's rocket frog I


 * Toad-like rocket frog I


 * Degranville's rocket frog I


 * Palm rocket frog I


 * Skunk frogs I


 * Trinidad stream frog I


 * Talamanca rocket frog I


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


 * Pygmy frog I


 * Devil frog I


 * Triadobatrachus I


 * Gerobatrachus I


 * Diplocaulus I


 * Edops I


 * Koolasuchus I


 * Eryops I


 * Prionosuchus I


 * Proterogrinus I


 * Crassigrinus I


 * Armotoad I


 * Wartfrog I


 * Trinity Alps giant salamander I

Fish

 * Round goby


 * Western tubenose goby


 * Asian swamp eel I


 * Nonnative cichlids I


 * Oilfish I (from Lake Baikal to the Great Lakes and California's Lake Tahoe)


 * 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 all parts of Mexico, USA, and Canada, except Tundra where it's too cold for mudskippers to live in


 * West Indian Ocean coelacanth I in the Great Lakes as well as off the coast of California, Oregon, and Baja California


 * Indonesian coelacanth I in the Great Lakes as well as off the coast of Texas, Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama, Georgia, Florida, and South Carolina


 * Marbled African lungfish I in rivers, lakes, and man-made waterways of all parts of Mexico, USA, and Canada, except Tundra where it's too cold for lungfishes to live in


 * Gilled African lungfish I in rivers, lakes, and man-made waterways of all parts of Mexico, USA, and Canada, except Tundra where it's too cold for lungfishes to live in


 * West African lungfish I in rivers, lakes, and man-made waterways of all parts of Mexico, USA, and Canada, except Tundra where it's too cold for lungfishes to live in


 * Spotted African lungfish I in rivers, lakes, and man-made waterways of all parts of Mexico, USA, and Canada, except Tundra where it's too cold for lungfishes to live in


 * Australian lungfish I in rivers, lakes, and man-made waterways of all parts of Mexico, USA, and Canada, except Tundra where it's too cold for lungfishes to live in


 * South American lungfish I in rivers, lakes, and man-made waterways of all parts of Mexico, USA, and Canada, except Tundra where it's too cold for lungfishes to live in


 * Bull shark I in the rest of lakes, rivers, and man-made waterways of North America, except in tundra lakes and rivers of North America


 * Cookiecutter shark I in lakes, rivers, and man-made waterways in most of North America, except tundra lakes and rivers of North America (note: unlike their ancestors, they can now tolerate both freshwater and saltwater, as well as both cold and heat, which explains why there are now cookiecutter sharks in most of North America's waterways, both natural and man-made)


 * 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 (eradicated)


 * Tench I


 * Rudd I


 * Amur catfish I


 * Candiru I


 * Sorubin I


 * All species of plecos and other sailfin catfishes I


 * Many species of flashlight fishes I in the Great Lakes, as well as lakes, rivers, and man-made waterways in all of Mexico, USA, and Canada (note: they are now found in freshwater places because they became tolerant to freshwater and brackish water [not just saltwater], they are now also both heat-tolerant and cold-tolerant, as well as being flood-resistant and drought-resistant, all of these new features could explain why there are flashlight fishes all over lakes, rivers, etc. of North America)


 * Peter's Elephantnose fish I


 * Angola elephantnose fish I


 * Blunt-jawed elephantnose fish I


 * Common electric knifefishes I


 * Longnose stonebasher I


 * Black ghost knifefish I


 * Electric glass knifefish I


 * Common glass knifefish I


 * African knifefish I


 * Electric eel I


 * Paradoxoglanis electric catfishes I


 * Malapterurus electric catfishes I


 * Most species of Torpedo electric rays I


 * Most species of Narcinidae electric rays 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)


 * Giant orcafish I


 * Pygmy orcafish I


 * Dwarf newtfish I


 * Greater newtfish I


 * Predatory giant armored fish I


 * Whale-like giant armored fish I


 * Common armored fish I


 * Jawless armored fish I


 * Chickuna I


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


 * Ocean Flish from the Future Is Wild documentary to real life North American shorelines, marshes, swamps, and bogs


 * Forest Flish from the Future Is Wild documentary to real life North American grasslands, meadows, swamps, bogs, forests, subtropical rainforests, and tropical rainforests


 * 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)


 * White River monster from cryptozoology North America to real life North American areas (they now live in rivers and lakes of USA including ones from Florida, Georgia, Alabama, Louisiana, Mississippi, Texas, California, Arizona, New Mexico, Nevada, Wyoming, Utah, Colorado, Idaho, Oregon, South Dakota, North Dakota, Montana, Minnesota, Wisconsin, Michigan, Ohio, Indiana, Arkansas, Kansas, Connecticut, New York, Pennsylvania, Oklahoma, Missouri, Tennessee, Kentucky, Virginia, West Virginia, South Carolina, North Carolina, Nebraska, Iowa, Maryland, Illinois, Delaware, Rhode Island, Vermont, Washington, and New Jersey)

Crustaceans and relatives

 * Cleaner shrimp I (in the Great Lakes, western USA shorelines, and eastern USA shorelines)


 * Red cherry shrimp I (in the Great Lakes, western USA shorelines, and the rest of eastern USA shorelines)


 * Patterson's cleaner shrimp I (in the Great Lakes, eastern USA shorelines, and western USA shorelines)


 * Japanese skeleton shrimp I (in the Great Lakes only)


 * Mediterranean skeleton shrimp I (in the western USA shorelines only)


 * Columbian skeleton shrimp I (in the rest of the freshwater lakes and rivers of North America)


 * Common burrowing shrimps I (in the Great Lakes, the western USA shorelines, and the eastern USA shorelines)


 * Greater burrowing shrimps I (in the Great Lakes and the rest of the western and eastern USA shorelines)


 * Common ditch shrimp I (in the Great Lakes, the western USA shorelines, and the eastern USA shorelines)


 * Eastern grass shrimp I (in the rest of North American freshwater lakes and rivers)


 * Daggerblade grass shrimp I (in the freshwater lakes of rivers of USA and Canada, the western USA shorelines, and the rest of the eastern USA shorelines)


 * American prawn I (in the Great Lakes, the western USA shorelines, and the rest of the eastern USA shorelines)


 * Rock grass shrimp I (in the entire USA's and Canada's freshwater lakes and rivers, as well as shorelines)


 * Common prawn I (in the entire shorelines around USA and Canada)


 * Mantis shrimps I (in the Great Lakes, western USA shorelines, and eastern USA shorelines)


 * Pistol shrimps I (in the Great Lakes, western USA shorelines, and eastern USA shorelines)


 * Emperor shrimp I (in the Great Lakes, western USA shorelines, and eastern USA shorelines)


 * Banded coral shrimp I (in the Great Lakes and the rest of the oceans around USA and Canada)


 * Pink shrimp I (in the Great Lakes and the rest of the oceans around USA and Canada)


 * European green crab I


 * Chinese mitten crab I


 * Japanese shore crab I


 * Christmas Island red crab I (in the entire continent of North America) (note: unlike their ancestors from Christmas Island, they now have developed a terrestrial crustacean's lungs (not just gills) to survive completely on land, can now tolerate freshwater and brackish water (not just saltwater), can now tolerate low and high humidity, can now tolerate colder and warmer tempuratures, and can now tolerate human activities and are now adapting to both wild parts of North America and human settlements of North America, allowing them to live in the entire North American continent)


 * Spiny waterflea I (eradicated)


 * Fishhook waterflea I (eradicated)


 * Mud shrimp I


 * Killer shrimp I


 * Signal crayfish I (in the rest of North America)


 * African giant millipede 'I


 * Giant pill-millipedes I


 * 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)


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


 * Terror shrimp I

Insects

 * Nonnative butterflies and moths (examples:)
 * Vampire moths I
 * Madrilenial butterflies I
 * Asian tropical rainforest butterflies I
 * South American tropical rainforest butterflies I
 * African tropical rainforest butterflies I
 * Australian tropical rainforest butterflies I
 * Monarch butterfly I in the rest of USA and Canada
 * Common brimstone I
 * Gypsy moth I
 * Domestic silk moth I
 * Wild silk moth I
 * Atlas moth I
 * Hercules moth I
 * Queen Alexandra's birdwing I


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


 * All known glowworm species I (in the enitre North American continent)


 * Wallace's giant bee I


 * Asian giant hornet I (in Arizona, California, Oregon, Nevada, New Mexico, Texas, Louisiana, Mississippi, Georgia, Alabama, and Florida) [unlike their native populations in Asia, they are becoming non-venomous and becoming far less aggressive and much more friendlier to humans and other species in order to tolerate human activities and survive in human settlements, they are also becoming herbivorous as an effect]


 * Wasps
 * New Mexican tarantula wasp I (in Florida only)
 * Argentine tarantula wasp I (in Florida only)
 * Terror wasp I
 * Tracker jacker I from The Hunger Games films to real life North America (note: their stingers are no longer deadly, despite causing hallucinations, as they are losing all of their venom except the ones that only cause hallucinations, making them very safe to people, despite stinging people and causing hallucinations)


 * Madagascan hissing cockroach I


 * Beetles and relatives
 * European rhinoceros beetle I
 * Elephant beetle I
 * Atlas beetle I
 * Common rhinoceros beetle I
 * Actaeon beetle I
 * Golden stag beetle I
 * Japanese stag beetle I
 * Greater stag beetle I
 * Giraffe stag beetle I
 * European stag beetle I
 * Mottled water hyacinth weevil (eradicated)
 * Goliath beetle I
 * Long-horned beetle I (eradicated)
 * Dung beetles I
 * All known species of bombardier beetles I (in the rest of North America)
 * Tank beetle I
 * Big bombardier I


 * Madagascan hissing cockroach I


 * Rhinoceros cockroach I


 * Combative termite I


 * Ecosystem-making termite I


 * Fighting termites I


 * Harvester termites I


 * Formosan subterranean termite I


 * Mydas fly I


 * Empress cicada I


 * Giant water bugs I (in the rest of North America)


 * Chinese mantis I


 * Forest giant damselfly I


 * Blue eyes lacewing I


 * Giant weta I


 * Australian giant grasshopper I


 * Giant South American grasshopper I


 * Chan's megastick I


 * Singapore stick insect I


 * Mountain beaver flea I (note: they now live in the rest of North America because they adapted to drink blood of other mammals, not just mountain beavers, so these giant fleas now live in not just woodlands, but also grasslands, human settlements, and swamps of North America)


 * Malayan wood nymph I


 * Giant prickly stick insect I


 * Red fire ant I (eradicated)


 * Leaf cutter ant I


 * South American Army ant I


 * Stick insect species I


 * Bullet ant I


 * Bull ant I


 * South American giant ant I


 * Weaver ant I


 * Oceanian spider ants I


 * North American honeypot ants I (in the rest of North America)


 * Australian honeypot ant I


 * South African acid ant I


 * African desert ants I


 * Indian jumping ant I


 * Jack jumper ant I (in southern Florida only)


 * Meganeura dragonfly I (note: they were genetically engineered so they can always remain huge, even in a world with much less oxygen)


 * Rhinoceros locust I


 * Berserker bug I


 * Green assassin I


 * Stinging mantis I


 * Bee-tle I


 * Gnatfly I


 * Butterhummer I


 * Mosquitoad I

Arachnids and relatives

 * Herbivorous mites I


 * Scavenging mites I


 * honey bee tracheal mite I (eradicated)


 * African oribatida mites I


 * Indian giant scorpion I


 * Emperor scorpion I


 * Mesothelae I


 * Herbivorous spider I


 * Intelligent spiders I


 * Silver Spider I from the Future Is Wild documentary universe to real life North America


 * Spiderant I

Aquatic

 * 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 Arizona, Oregon, California, and Nevada)


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


 * Nautilus I (note: it is adapting to tolerate both saltwater and freshwater in its new habitat, spreading into lakes, rivers, and man-made waterways of Nevada, Arizona, Oregon, Utah, and California)


 * Kraken I

Terrestrial

 * Pacific Northwest tree octopus I from the internet hoax to real life North America


 * Swampus I from the Future Is Wild documentary to real life North America (note: they are becoming non-venomous in their new environment due to less competition in their new habitats in swamps, marshes, etc. in real life North America)


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


 * Squibbon from the Future Is Wild documentary to real life North America (note: the squibbons were brought by humans in pet trade due to the squibbon's intelligence, curiousity, etc. which made them popular pets and are still kept domestically today, although there are now descendants of released pet squibbons in California, Oregon, Arizona, Nevada, Utah, Texas, Lousiana, Mississippi, Florida, and other states of USA)


 * Squidleech I


 * Chameleon squid I


 * Ravenous landsquid I


 * Giant slug squid I

Airborn

 * Skyfish I (it is a completely airborne airbreathing relative of squid which is now a very common sight and can now be found in not just videos, but also with our own eyes, etc.)

Marine

 * Common periwinkle I
 * Veined rapa whelk I
 * Textile cone I
 * Spanish dancers I

Freshwater

 * Chinese mystery snail I
 * Zebra muscle I (note: they are mostly eradicated, except in California, were the last zebra muscles in North America thrive)
 * Quagga muscle I (note: they are mostly eradicated, except in California, were the last quagga muscles in North America thrive)
 * New Zealand mud snail I
 * European fingernailclam I
 * Asian clam I
 * mud bithynia I
 * Red-rimmed melania I
 * New Zealand limpet I

Terrestrial

 * Grove snail I
 * White-lipped snail I
 * Common garden snail I
 * White garden snail I
 * Leopard slug I
 * Banana slug I (in the rest of North America)
 * Giant tiger land snail I
 * Giant East African land snail I
 * Giant West African snail I
 * Glowing land snail I
 * Desert Hopper I from the Future Is Wild documentary to real life North America
 * Farting snail I
 * Hopping deathsnail I
 * Giant ground slug I
 * Electric snail I

Echinoderms

 * Northern Pacific seastar
 * Terraster I

Worms and relatives

 * Bloodworm I (from oceans to inland lakes, rivers, and man-made waterways of all parts of USA, Mexico, Canada, due to they're now adapting to freshwater habitats, not just saltwater habitats)


 * Kinabalu giant earthworm I


 * Giant Gippsland earthworm I


 * Giant European earthworm I


 * African giant earthworm I


 * Glossoscolecidae grouped giant earthworms I


 * 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)


 * Mongolian death worm

Others

 * Plantman.EXE clones (from Megaman Battle Network universe to real life North America)

Mammals

 * American beaver I


 * European hare I


 * Small Asian mongoose I


 * Deer
 * Chital
 * Sika deer
 * Sambar deer
 * Red deer


 * Blackbuck


 * Himalayan tahr


 * Wild boar I


 * Rhesus macaque I


 * Hippopotamus I


 * Indian rhinoceros (in Brazil and Argentina)


 * Sumatran rhinoceros (in Brazil and Argentina)


 * Dromedary camel (in Brazil and Argentina)


 * Domestic Eland


 * Domestic Sable Antelope


 * Domestic Pronghorn


 * Urban North American Tapir I


 * Urban Gray Wolf I


 * Northern Vampire Bat I


 * Elecman.EXEs


 * Domestic Mesoron


 * 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

Birds

 * Indian Peacock I


 * American Peacock I


 * Rural Spoonbill I


 * Tyrant Pelican I


 * Inland Albatross I


 * Common Flamingo I


 * Common Ibis I


 * American Common Whistling Duck I


 * American Swan-Goose I

Reptiles

 * American alligator I


 * Nile crocodile I


 * Runner Lizard I


 * Forest Tapejara I


 * Marine Tapejara I


 * Common Ornithocheirus I


 * Crested Ornithocheirus I


 * Pteranodon I


 * Nyctosaurus I


 * Anhanguera I


 * Quetzalcoatlus I


 * Hatzegopteryx I


 * Dsungaripterus I


 * Pterodactylus I


 * Germanodactylus I


 * Dimorphodon I


 * Rhamphorhynchus I


 * Common Anurognathus I


 * Symbiontic Anurognathus I


 * Peteinosaurus I

Amphibians

 * Chinese giant salamander I

Fish

 * Cherry barb


 * Asian River Shark I


 * American River Shark I

Mammals

 * Monkeys
 * Mandrill
 * Olive baboon
 * Chacma baboon
 * Rhesus macaque
 * Barbary macaque (possibly reintroduced into its Pleistocene region)


 * Apes
 * Mountain gorilla
 * Western lowland gorilla
 * Chimpanzee I


 * Raccoon I


 * Raccoon dog


 * American mink I


 * Skunk


 * Eygyptian mongoose


 * Indian gray mongoose


 * Sika deer


 * Chital


 * White-tailed deer


 * Collared peccary I


 * 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 Mesoron


 * Domestic Meerkat


 * Domestic Dylanus


 * Protoman


 * Maverick Hunters


 * Bass.EXEs


 * Chalicothere I


 * Ancylotherium


 * Werewolf


 * Vampire I


 * Bass.EXE (undead version) I

Birds

 * Sacred ibis


 * Black swan I


 * Canada goose I


 * Swan goose I


 * Bar-headed goose I


 * Egyptian goose I


 * Ruddy duck


 * White-faced whistling duck I


 * Common pheasant


 * California quail I


 * Northern bobwhite


 * Daurian partridge


 * Wild turkey


 * Rose-ringed parakeet


 * Monk parakeet


 * Common mynah


 * Common waxbill


 * Red avadavat


 * Greater rhea


 * Tyrant Pelican I


 * American Common Whistling Duck I


 * Darwin's Coot I


 * Rural Spoonbill I


 * Common Flamingo I


 * Common Ibis I


 * Inland Albatross I


 * American Lyrebird I


 * North American Kiwi I


 * African Giant Condor


 * Gastornis I


 * Alexander's bird I


 * Jehol bird I


 * Jixiang bird I


 * Sape bird I


 * Confucius bird I


 * Fan-tailed bird I


 * Spanish intermediate bird I


 * Griffin I


 * Hippogriff I


 * Cockatrice I


 * Devil bird I (note: it is a species of bird of prey which is closely related to falcons, but is nocturnal and resembles a hybrid between a peregrine falcon and a barn owl)

Reptiles

 * Pond slider I


 * Common garter snake I


 * Common snapping turtle


 * Nile crocodile I


 * Freshwater crocodile I


 * Saltwater crocodile I


 * Mugger crocodile I


 * American alligator I


 * Runner Lizard I


 * Troodon I


 * Coelophysis I


 * Ornithomimus I


 * Citipati I


 * Oviraptor I


 * Gigantoraptor I


 * Forest Tapejara I


 * Marine Tapejara I


 * Common Ornithocheirus I


 * Crested Ornithocheirus I


 * Pteranodon I


 * Nyctosaurus I


 * Anhanguera I


 * Quetzalcoatlus I


 * Hatzegopteryx I


 * Dsungaripterus I


 * Pterodactylus I


 * Germanodactylus I


 * Dimorphodon I


 * Rhamphorhynchus I


 * Common Anurognathus I


 * Symbiontic Anurognathus I


 * Peteinosaurus I

Amphibians

 * American bullfrog I


 * African clawed frog I


 * Cane toad I


 * Western toad I


 * Chinese giant salamander I

Fish

 * Carp I


 * Brown bullhead I


 * Black bullhead I


 * Chameleon goby


 * Chinese sleeper


 * Eastern mosquitofish I


 * Haarder


 * Pumpkinseed I


 * Stone moroko I


 * Asian River Shark I


 * American River Shark I


 * Giant whalefish I (in Mediterranean seas only)


 * Bulldog tarpon I (in Mediterranean seas only)

Mammals

 * Monkeys
 * Chacma baboon
 * Rhesus macaque (in the rest of Asia)


 * Apes
 * Mountain gorilla I
 * Chimpanzee I
 * Sumatran orangutan I (in mainland Asian areas including India, Tailand, North Korea, South Korea, China, and other parts of mainland Southeastern Asian areas)
 * Bornean orangutan I (in mainland Asian areas including India, Taiwan, China, and other parts of mainland Southern and Southeastern Asian areas)
 * Gigantopithecus (reintroduced)


 * Raccoon I


 * American mink I


 * Muskrat I


 * European rabbit


 * Cottontail rabbit


 * Dromedary camel


 * Burchell's zebra


 * African elephant


 * Red river hog I


 * Mountain tapir I


 * Urban North American Tapir I


 * Indian Giant Dylanus (reintroduced)


 * Urban Gray Wolf


 * Elecman.EXEs


 * Domestic Mesoron (in the rest of Asia)


 * Domestic Meerkat


 * Domestic Dylanus


 * Protoman


 * Maverick Hunters


 * Bass.EXEs


 * Stegodon (reintroduced)


 * Palaeoloxodon (reintroduced)


 * Deinotherium


 * Chalicotherium


 * Ancylotherium


 * Embulotherium


 * Ambulocetus I


 * Pikachu I from Pokemon series to real life Japan and China


 * Raichu I from Pokemon series to real life Japan


 * Pichu I from Pokemon series to real life Japan


 * Werewolf


 * Vampire I


 * Jiangshi I


 * Nine tails I from Naruto series to real life Japan


 * Bass.EXE (undead version) I

Birds

 * Ostrich


 * Greater rhea


 * Southern cassowary I


 * Emu I


 * Great tinamou I


 * California condor I


 * Turkey vulture I


 * Tyrant Pelican I


 * Rural Spoonbill I


 * Common Ibis I


 * Common Flamingo I


 * Inland Albatross I


 * American Common Whistling Duck I


 * Darwin's Coot I


 * American Swan-Goose I


 * American Lyrebird I


 * European Emu I


 * North American Kiwi I


 * Pygmy elephant bird I


 * Early rhea I


 * Cassowary-like emu I


 * Upland moa I


 * Bush moa I


 * Eastern moa I

Reptiles

 * Brown anole


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


 * Saltwater crocodile I


 * Nile crocodile I


 * Freshwater crocodile I


 * Runner Lizard I


 * Plateosaurus I


 * Massospondylus I


 * Shunosaurus I


 * Camarasaurus I


 * Troodon I


 * Coelophysis I


 * Forest Tapejara I


 * Marine Tapejara I


 * Common Ornithocheirus I


 * Crested Ornithocheirus I


 * Pteranodon I


 * Nyctosaurus I


 * Anhanguera I


 * Quetzalcoatlus I


 * Hatzegopteryx I


 * Dsungaripterus I


 * Pterodactylus I


 * Germanodactylus I


 * Dimorphodon I


 * Rhamphorhynchus I


 * Common Anurognathus I


 * Symbiontic Anurognathus I


 * Peteinosaurus I

Amphibians

 * Chinese giant salamander I in the rest of Asia

Fish

 * American River Shark I

Mammals

 * Wild boar I (native to certain parts of North Africa; introduced populations uncommon, but not rare, and concentrated in the southern part and the eastern part of the continent)


 * Wild goat I


 * European rabbit


 * 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


 * Old World monkeys
 * Crab-eating macaque
 * Rhesus macaque
 * Formosan rock macaque


 * Indian gray mongoose


 * Weasel I


 * Asian house shrew I


 * New World monkeys
 * Tufted capuchin I
 * Spider monkey I
 * Howler monkeys I


 * Apes
 * Sumatran orangutan I
 * Gibbon I
 * 2005 King Kong I


 * Eurasian brown bear (reintroduced to replaced the extinct Atlas bear, but has also spread to forests, rainforests, grasslands, and savannas of Africa)


 * American/Asian black bear hybrid


 * Dromedary camel I (native to certain parts of North Africa; introduced populations uncommon, but not rare, and concentrated in the southern part and the eastern part of the continent)


 * Asian elephant I


 * Indian rhinoceros


 * Javan rhinoceros


 * Sumatran rhinoceros


 * Bengal tiger


 * Sumatran tiger


 * 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 Mesoron


 * Domestic Meerkat


 * Domestic Dylanus


 * Protoman


 * Maverick Hunters


 * Bass.EXEs


 * Quagga (reintroduced)


 * 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


 * Bass.EXE (undead version) I

Birds

 * Canada goose


 * White-faced whistling duck I (in the rest of Africa)


 * Mallard I


 * Common mynah


 * Domestic goose


 * Cattle egret


 * Feral pigeon


 * House crow


 * Common waxbill


 * Ruddy duck


 * English sparrow


 * Starling (eradicated)


 * Tyrant Pelican I


 * Inland Albatross I


 * Common Ibis I


 * Rural Spoonbill I


 * Darwin's Coot I


 * Common Flamingo I


 * American Common Whistling Duck I


 * American Swan-Goose I

Reptiles

 * House gecko I


 * Saltwater crocodile I


 * Freshwater crocodile I


 * Mugger 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


 * Forest Tapejara I


 * Marine Tapejara I


 * Common Ornithocheirus I


 * Crested Ornithocheirus I


 * Pteranodon I


 * Nyctosaurus I


 * Anhanguera I


 * Quetzalcoatlus I


 * Hatzegopteryx I


 * Dsungaripterus I


 * Pterodactylus I


 * Germanodactylus I


 * Dimorphodon I


 * Rhamphorhynchus I


 * Common Anurognathus I


 * Symbiontic Anurognathus I


 * Peteinosaurus I

Amphibians

 * Chinese giant salamander I

Fish

 * American River Shark