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Future Marysville California

This forest is where Marysville, California, once stood.

After the Late Holocene had finally ended, humans (homo sapiens) were now extinct forever, while all other sapient species and beings went into space to find planets to inhabit in, but it was already too late for some of the species that are native and/or nonnative to North America, either been driven to extinction by humans due to overhunting, habitat loss, diseases, invasive species, or something else. For the survivors, however, they have diversified into many different species, replacing the species that went extinct by the hands of humans. Alaska is now connected to Siberia, allowing animals like spotted hyenas and others to make it into North America. Because of the new melting pot of biodiversity of animals, North American forests, swamps, grasslands, etc are now very much like the American version of the African Serengeti and jungles. This future takes place in North America 15 million years from now.

List Of Species In Future North America[]

Future Animals[]

Animals That Are Still Alive[]

  • Mule Deer
  • Whitetail Deer
  • Fallow Deer (originally nonnative, but is now native)
  • Sika Deer (originally nonnative, but is now native)
  • Black Bear
  • Pinnipeds
  • Cetaceans
  • Red Fox
  • Gray Fox
  • Fennec Fox (originally nonnative, but is now native to much of the deserts of North America after escaping from zoos)
  • Spotted Hyena (originally nonnative, but is now native to much of North America after crossing the landbridge between Alaska and Siberia)
  • Raccoon
  • Ring-Tailed Cat (not a cat, but a Procyonid, despite its name)
  • Coati (now native and widespread throughout North America after being introduced to Florida by the extinct humans)
  • Native Bats
  • Fruit Bats (originally nonnative, but is now native to much of North America after escaping from zoos)
  • Vampire Bats (originally nonnative, but is now native to much of North America after escaping from zoos)
  • Weasels
  • Feral Ferret (originally nonnative, but is now native to much of North America after escaping from pet stores)
  • Black-Footed Ferret
  • Minks
  • Skunks
  • Otters
  • Moles
  • Shrews
  • Hedgehogs (originally nonnative, but is now native to much of North America after escaping from zoos and/or pet stores)
  • Pikas
  • Hares
  • Rabbits
  • Native Rodents
  • House Mouse
  • Brown Rat
  • Black Rat
  • Crested Porcupine (originally nonnative, but is now native to much of North America after escaping from zoos/safari parks)
  • Jerboa (originally nonnative, but is now native to much of North America after crossing the landbridge between Alaska and Siberia)
  • Rhesus Macaque (now widespread across North America as different subspecies)
  • Vervet Monkey (now widespread across North America as different subspecies)
  • Squirrel Monkey (now widespread across North America as different subspecies)
  • Nine-Banded Armadillo (now native to much of North America through both natural expansion and introductions by the extinct humans)
  • Northern Tamandua (originally nonnative, but is now native to much of North America after escaping from zoos)
  • Three-Toed Sloth (originally nonnative, but is now native to much of North America after escaping from zoos)
  • Two-Toed Sloth (originally nonnative, but is now native to much of North America after escaping from zoos)
  • Virginia Opossum
  • Common Opossum (originally nonnative, but is now native to much of the western North America after escaping from zoos/safari parks)
  • Brush-Tailled Possum (originally nonnative, but is now native to much of North America after escaping from zoos)
  • Ring-Tailed Possum (originally nonnative, but is now native to much of North America after escaping from zoos)
  • Sugar Glider (originally nonnative, but is now native to much of North America after escaping from zoos and/or pet stores)
  • Barn Owl
  • Turkey Vulture
  • Black Vulture
  • King Vulture (originally nonnative, but is now native to much of North America after escaping from zoos/safari parks)
  • California Condor
  • Griffon Vulture (originally nonnative, but is now native to much of North America after escaping from zoos/safari parks)
  • Peregrine Falcon
  • Red-Tailed Hawk
  • Osprey
  • Golden Eagle
  • Bald Eagle
  • African Penguin (originally nonnative, but is now native to much of North American shorelines after escaping from zoos/safari parks/aquarium parks)
  • Shorebirds
  • Seabirds
  • Wading Birds
  • Waterfowls (all natives and some originally nonnatives like white-faced whistling ducks, muscovy ducks, mandarin ducks, swan geese, bar-headed geese, Eygyptian geese, mute swans, black swans, etc, which are now native across North America after escaping from zoos/safari parks and/or through introduction by humans, depending on a species)
  • Wild Turkey
  • Grouse
  • Greater Prairie Chicken
  • Guineafowls (originally nonnative, but is now native to much of North America after escaping from zoos and farms)
  • Indian Peafowl (originally nonnative, but is now native to much of North America through introduction by humans and escaping from zoos/farms)
  • Mourning Dove
  • Band-Tailed Pigeon
  • Passenger Pigeon (was once extinct, but was brought back through De-Extinction and is now back in its native range, but they now also exist in western North America after spreading from their native range)
  • Eurasian Collared Dove (originally nonnative as an invasive species, but is now native through much of mainland North America)
  • Native Kingfishers
  • Laughing Kookaburra (originally nonnative, but is now native to much of North America after escaping from zoos)
  • Toucans (originally nonnative, but is now native to much of North America after escaping from zoos)
  • Hornbills (originally nonnative, but is now native to much of North America after escaping from zoos)
  • Woodpeckers
  • Amazon Parrots (originally nonnative, but is now native to much of North America after escaping from zoos and/or through introduction by humans, depending on a species)
  • Conures (originally nonnative, but is now native to much of North America after escaping from zoos and pet stores and/or through introduction by humans, depending on a species)
  • Macaws (originally nonnative, but is now native to much of North America after escaping from zoos and pet stores and/or through introduction by humans, depending on a species)
  • Cockatoos (originally nonnative, but is now native to much of North America after escaping from zoos and pet stores)
  • Cockatiel (originally nonnative, but is now native to much of North America after escaping from zoos and pet stores)
  • African Grey Parrot (originally nonnative, but is now native to much of North America after escaping from zoos)
  • Common Cuckoo (originally nonnative, but is now native to much of North America after spreading from Siberia to North America through a landbridge between Siberia and Alaska)
  • Bee Eaters (originally nonnative, but is now native to much of North America after escaping from zoos)
  • Screaming Piha (originally nonnative, but is now native to much of North America after escaping from zoos)
  • American Crow
  • Common Raven
  • Blue Jay (now also present in California due to zoo escapees)
  • Scrub Jay
  • Songbirds
  • American Alligator (now also present in California due to zoo escapees)
  • American Crocodile
  • Lizards
  • Snakes
  • Turtles
  • Tortoises
  • Native Amphibians
  • African Bullfrog (originally nonnative, but is now native to much of North America after escaping from zoos and pet stores)
  • Horned Frogs (originally nonnative, but is now native to much of North America after escaping from zoos and pet stores)
  • Native Fish
  • Carp (originally nonnative, but is now native to much of North America after the extinct humans introduced them to North America)
  • Sea Lamprey (now native to much of North American waterways after spreading from Atlantic oceans into the Great Lakes and into much of the lakes and rivers across the continent)
  • Bull Shark (now native to much of North American waterways after spreading from the oceans into lakes and rivers across North America)
  • Native Invertebrates
  • Native Plants
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