Among the animals in this exhibit are Malayan tigers, oriental small-clawed otters, orangutans, siamangs, Northern white-cheeked gibbons, Malayan tapirs, binturongs, rhinoceros hornbills, fairy-bluebirds, azure-winged magpies, and chestnut-breasted malkoha.
Rhinoceros | rhinoceros | Walden's Hornbill | Visayan Hornbill | Rhinoceros Hornbill | Dürer's Rhinoceros | Yellow-casqued Hornbill | White Rhinoceros | Rhinoceros (band) | Hornbill | Sulu Hornbill | hornbill | Hemprich's Hornbill | Writhed Hornbill | "The “Rhinoceros" woodcut (34 × 20.5 cm or 11.8×8.0 inches) by David Kandel, published in Sebastian Münster's “Cosmographia” of 1598. The obvious resemblance with Dürer's Rhinoceros | ''Secrétair Deuxième Rhinoceros'' (1966), Musée des Arts Décoratifs | Samar Hornbill | Rhinoceros (play) | Rhinoceros (film) | Javan Rhinoceros | Japanese rhinoceros beetle | Indian Grey Hornbill ''Ocyceros birostris | black rhinoceros | Abyssinian Ground Hornbill |
Elephants, whales, manatees, sacred ibis, cranes, eagles, gyrfalcons, Rhinoceros Hornbills, cheetahs, leopards, African wild dogs (Lycaon pictus), caracals, baboons, eland, meerkats, gibbons, orangutans, penguins, pandas, polar bears, lions, giant Pacific manta rays, and saltwater crocodiles are among the animals he has filmed and photographed.