NEW ZEALAND LONG-TAILED BAT
ITEM ID: #2270
Rarity: Rare
Breed times: 24h, Growth Formula: 18h
How to get: Purchase from Shop (Limited Time Only)
Giftable: No
Facts:
Breed times: 24h, Growth Formula: 18h
How to get: Purchase from Shop (Limited Time Only)
Giftable: No
Facts:
- The New Zealand Long-Tailed Bat is also known as the "long-tailed wattled bat."
- The ancestors of the New Zealand Long-Tailed Bats arrived on the island 1-2 million years ago.
- A female New Zealand Long-Tailed Bat only gives birth to 1 pup a year.
KEA
ITEM ID: #2271
Rarity: Rare
Breed times: 23h, Growth Formula: 17.25h
How to get: Purchase from Shop (Limited Time Only)
Giftable: No
Facts:
Breed times: 23h, Growth Formula: 17.25h
How to get: Purchase from Shop (Limited Time Only)
Giftable: No
Facts:
- The Kea is a predatory parrot that is known to hunt other birds, and even sheep!
- The Kea is known as "the clown of the mountains" because of its curious nature: it will fearlessly investigate purses and backpacks so see what is inside!
- Keas are native to the South Island of New Zealand.
WETA
ITEM ID: #2272
Rarity: Rare
Breed times: 16h, Growth Formula: 12h
How to get: Purchase from Shop (Limited Time Only)
Giftable: No
Facts:
Breed times: 16h, Growth Formula: 12h
How to get: Purchase from Shop (Limited Time Only)
Giftable: No
Facts:
- The Weta is a flightless, nocturnal insect, which occupies the niche in New Zealand's ecosystem most comparable to that of mice and other rodents around the world.
- The heaviest documented insect in the world was a captive giant Weta filled with eggs. It weighed around 70g!
- The Weta primarily eats lichens, leaves, flowers, seed-heads, and fruit.
ARCHEY'S FROG
ITEM ID: #2273
Rarity: Rare
Breed times: 24h, Growth Formula: 18h
How to get: Purchase from Shop (Limited Time Only)
Giftable: No
Facts:
Breed times: 24h, Growth Formula: 18h
How to get: Purchase from Shop (Limited Time Only)
Giftable: No
Facts:
- Archey's Frog lays 4-10 eggs in a clutch. Once they hatch, tailed froglets crawl upon the father's back and are carried around for several weeks.
- Archey's Frog is named after Sir Gilbert Archey, former Director of the Auckland Institute.
- Archey's Frog is fully terrestrial, living and reproducing under damp vegetation in forests around New Zealand.
SOOTY SHEARWATER
ITEM ID: #2274
Rarity: Rare
Breed times: 24h, Growth Formula: 18h
How to get: Purchase from Shop (Limited Time Only)
Giftable: No
Facts:
Breed times: 24h, Growth Formula: 18h
How to get: Purchase from Shop (Limited Time Only)
Giftable: No
Facts:
- The Sooty Shearwater is an impressive migratory bird: it breeds in New Zealand and Chile and travels to North America for the summer.
- Sooty Shearwater parents feed their young by regurgitating oils from the fish they catch during the day.
- A Sooty Shearwater chick lives on an irregular diet. Sometimes, its parents will be gone from the nest for as many as ten days!
HECTOR'S DOLPHIN
ITEM ID: #2275
Rarity: Rare
Breed times: 72h, Growth Formula: 54h
How to get: Purchase from Shop (Limited Time Only)
Giftable: No
Facts:
Breed times: 72h, Growth Formula: 54h
How to get: Purchase from Shop (Limited Time Only)
Giftable: No
Facts:
- Hector's Dolphins are amongst the tiniest in the world: you can fit one right inside a typical bathtub!
- Hector's Dolphins are named for the man who first identified them in 1869: the New Zealand zoologist Sir James Hector.
- Hector's Dolphins are amongst the world's rarest dolphins because they only life off the coast of New Zealand.
KAKAPO
ITEM ID: #2269
Rarity: Ultra Rare
Breed times: 24h, Growth Formula: 18h
How to get: Purchase from Shop (Limited Time Only)
Giftable: No
Facts:
Breed times: 24h, Growth Formula: 18h
How to get: Purchase from Shop (Limited Time Only)
Giftable: No
Facts:
- The Kakapo, also known as the "owl parrot", is the only flightless parrot in the world.
- The Kakapo has a well-developed sense of smell that allows it to distinguish between smells while foraging, a trait it shares with only one other parrot species.
- The Kakapo is the only flightless bird in the world with a "lek" or display-based breeding system. The female Kakapo chooses her mate by the quality of his display, and they do not form a lasting bond.
GREAT SPOTTED KIWI
ITEM ID: #2276
Rarity: Ultra Rare
Breed times: 24h, Growth Formula: 18h
How to get: Purchase from Shop (Limited Time Only)
Giftable: No
Facts:
Breed times: 24h, Growth Formula: 18h
How to get: Purchase from Shop (Limited Time Only)
Giftable: No
Facts:
- The Great Spotted Kiwi has nostrils at the end of its beak.
- The Great Spotted Kiwi is about the size of a chicken, but it lays eggs that are 10 times the size of normal chicken eggs.
- The Maoi call the Great Spotted Kiwi by the name of "Roaroa."
HAAST'S EAGLE
ITEM ID: #2277
Rarity: Ultra Rare
Breed times: 24h, Growth Formula: 18h
How to get: Purchase from Shop (Limited Time Only)
Giftable: No
Facts:
Breed times: 24h, Growth Formula: 18h
How to get: Purchase from Shop (Limited Time Only)
Giftable: No
Facts:
- Haast's Eagle is now extinct, but was the largest species of eagle known to have existed.
- The speed of Haast's Eagle was known to reach up to 50 mph.
- The tail of Haast's Eagle was very broad and very long, reaching up to 20 inches in length, and provided it with additional lift to help launch itself from the ground, despite its great weight.
TUATARA
ITEM ID: #2278
Rarity: Ultra Rare
Breed times: 72h, Growth Formula: 54h
How to get: Purchase from Shop (Limited Time Only)
Giftable: No
Facts:
Breed times: 72h, Growth Formula: 54h
How to get: Purchase from Shop (Limited Time Only)
Giftable: No
Facts:
- Despite its resemblance to lizards, the Tuatara is not, in fact, a lizard. It belongs to a distinct lineage of reptiles, order Sphenodontia.
- The Tuatara has a photoreceptive "third eye" atop its head, which is believed to help it absorb ultraviolet rays to produce vitamin D, determine light/dark cycles, and help with thermoregulation.
- The Tuatara is one of the slowest-reproducing reptiles known. The female Tuatara mates and lays eggs once every four years; the eggs then take up to 7 months to form the shell, and hatches 12-15 months after copulation.
BABY BELLBIRD
ITEM ID: #2266
Rarity: Ultra Rare
How to get: Purchase from Shop (Limited Time Only)
Giftable: No
Facts:
How to get: Purchase from Shop (Limited Time Only)
Giftable: No
Facts:
- The Baby Bellbird has not one, but two Maori common names: Korimako or Makomako.
- Baby Bellbirds are well known for having beautiful singing voices. They like to sing just after dawn.
- Baby Bellbirds have brown eyes, but grow up to have red eyes as adults.
BABY TAKAHE
ITEM ID: #2267
Rarity: Ultra Rare
How to get: Purchase from Shop (Limited Time Only)
Giftable: No
Facts:
How to get: Purchase from Shop (Limited Time Only)
Giftable: No
Facts:
- The Baby Takahe came to New Zealand from Australia millions of years ago.
- Baby Takahe cannot fly. Scientists believe the Baby Takahe's ancestors came to their home in New Zealand because they were blown in on a storm.
- The Baby Takahe is incubated in a nest on the ground under bushes, and will grow up to live in alpine grasslands and eat a wide range of plants.
BABY MOA
ITEM ID: #2268
Rarity: Ultra Rare
How to get: Purchase from Shop (Limited Time Only)
Giftable: No
Facts:
How to get: Purchase from Shop (Limited Time Only)
Giftable: No
Facts:
- Baby Moas are land birds and have no wings at all.
- The Baby Moa's closest living bird relatives are the Australian emu and the cassowary.
- According to Maori legend, the Baby Moa's ancient name was Te Kura or "the red bird."