Release Date: October 1st, 2007 (Ramadan) Boasting 20 new animals, many new
plant species, and an entire new Arabian theme, your zoo will flourish
with life from the Middle East!
Features:
Incredible Animals Adopt and care for 20 new animals from the Middle
East including the valiant Arabian horse and the ferocious mugger
crocodile. Coming from many locations and biomes, many have new models
and behaviors.

Creative Tours Build and manage tours with new stations, vehicles, and scenery for the ultimate Arabian experience.

Arabian Theming Create
themed areas of your zoo with the all new Arabian theme. Featuring many
objects including benches, lamps, tables and dessert carts, these will
add the perfect supplement to the Arabian wildlife.

Beautiful Foliage Enhance
your exhibits with the multitudes of new foliage from matching
locations. Make your exhibits natural and realistic with the various
plants to choose from.

Magnificent Statues Imported from Civilization IV, these 10 statues will add the perfect touch to enhance and exemplify the animals you contain.

Screenshots:
Here are some in-game screenshots of some of the amazing new Arabian content!







| Animals:
Featuring 20 animals with new models,
sounds and skins, your zoo will be filled with life from the varied
biomes of the Arabian region. Look below for a look at some of the
friends you will be able to adopt with this addition.
 Blanford's Fox Vulpes cana The Blanford's fox lives in hot mountains where its large ears help dissipate heat. They often inhabit cultivated areas where the steal food such as melons and grapes, however they also eat insects such as locusts and small mammals. They are solitary hunters, but are more frugivorous than other fox species.
 Sindh Ibex C. aegagrus blythi The sindh ibex is a subspecies of the wild goat which inhabits the Baluchistan Mountains of Pakistan. They are herbivores and their horns are larger and taller than many other ibex species. They live in groups which can grow as large as five hundred individuals.
 Rock Hyrax Procavia capensis Rock hyraxes live in scrubby rock crevices and abandoned burrows where they eat mainly grasses. Herds can have up to 80 individuals and they spend most of their time resting in huddles or basking in the sun to regulate body temperature. Two to three young are born each year from March to May.
 Caspian Turtle Mauremys caspica The caspian turtle is native to countries east of the Mediterranean Sea including Southern Europe down into the Arabian Peninsula and across into Iraq, Iran and Russia. They prefer freshwater ecosystems, but are sometimes seen in more brackish waters.
 Baluchistan Bear Ursus thibetanus gedrosianus The baluchistan black bear is a subspecies of the Asiatic black bear and lives in the high Baluchistan Mountains of Pakistan and other ranges in the surrounding countries. It is slightly smaller than the Asian Black Bear, and sometimes has coarser, browner fur. In addition, it is critically endangered and efforts are in effect to save it.
 Arabian Horse Equus caballus The Arabian horse is a breed of horse with incredible stamina, intelligence and spirit. Originating in the Middle East, the species has since traveled around the globe through war and trade; it is commonly bred with other horses due to its strong reputation. In the Middle East, it was adapted to a desert climate and was frequently used by the Bedouin people.
 Mugger Crocodile Crocodylus palustris The mugger crocodile, also known as the marsh crocodile, lives in the wetlands of India and the surrounding nations. The babies are born a tan color, and turn to a darker black shade as they mature. Their diet consists mainly of reptiles, amphibians and fish, but large ones have been known to prey on buffalo and deer.
 Sand Cat Felis margarita The sand cat is a small feline living in deserts of North Africa and Arabia. These cats spend much of their time digging in the sand, but their claws are quite dull due to the lack of material to sharpen them on. Primarily nocturnal, these cats eat small rodents and lizards they find buried in the sand.
 Caspian Seal Pusa caspica The Caspian seal is a pinniped which lives solely in the land-locked Caspian Sea which is located 100ft below sea level. Primarily they feast upon the various fish species of the Sea, but sometimes eat asp, shrimp or crab as well. Normally solitary, during the breeding season they form large groups and travel to the north of the sea to give birth to pups. The baby pups have a coat called lanugo to keep them warm until they have blubber. In the wild, these babies usually live to around 35 years.
 Small Indian Gray Mongoose Herpestes edwardsi The Indian gray mongoose, as its name suggests, lives in India and the surrounding countries. They inhabit scrubs and grasslands where they mainly feed upon small rodents, bugs and snakes, however they sometimes eat fruits, eggs and birds. Mongooses are famed for their fights with snakes during which they carefully jump away from the cobra's strikes until the opportunity arrives when the mongoose can strike and crack the cobra's skull. These mongooses are most active in the early morning and early evening when they actively search for reptiles to eat.
 Smooth Otter Lutrogale perspicillata Smooth-coated otters live in the wetlands of much of Southern Asia including India and some isolated populations in Iraq, however it is likely that their range is shrinking due to trapping and habitat loss. To communicate they use scent glands and smell as well as varying body positions, touch and sound. These otters frequently hunt in groups in order to make an easy catch of a whole school of fish, but they also eat insects, crustaceans, some birds, reptiles and amphibians.
 Arabian Wolf Canis lupus arabs This dog is the smallest subspecies of the gray wolf and lives in desert pockets on the Arabian Peninsula. This wolf is critically endangered, most importantly due to farmers shooting them so they can't attack and eat their livestock. However, in Oman hunting has been banned and there are efforts to keep this species alive. In addition to livestock, the Arabian wolf will also eat small mammals, ungulates and carrion that they find. Their coats very thin due to the heat of the area and consist of whites, browns and grays.
 Lesser Indian Civet Vivverricula indica The lesser Indian civet lives in non-forested temperate regions from India east to South East Asia. Civets will eat various small animals such as rodents, birds, reptiles and insects, as well as fruit. These nocturnal viverrids give birth to 3-4 babies in a burrow that the mother digs. As do many viverrids, these civets have scent glans in their rear, and some are kept in captivity so as to collect the liquid and make perfumes from it, despite its fowl-smelling origins.
 Persian Fallow Deer Dama dama mesopotamica The Persian fallow deer is the largest fallow deer species and was once abundant from North Africa east into Persia, but now is isolated mainly in the forests of Iran due to over-hunting. Grasses consist of 60% of their diet with fruits, nuts and leaves making up the rest of it. These fallow deer live in herds until the breeding season when males establish territories.
 Desert Monitor Varanus griseus The desert monitor is a reptile from the deserts of Arabia and the Middle East where it spends most of its time in burrows dug into the sandy ground. The monitor changes slightly in size and color in each of its three subspecies, but still has a brownish color with spots and bands across its back. They consume a wide variety of animals from turtles, other lizards, and scorpions to eggs, birds and small mammals.
 Hamadryas Baboon Papio hamadryas The hamadryas baboon is found in North Africa and the Arabian Peninsula where it lives in the deserts and dry plains. These baboons eat a wide variety of fruits, grass, insects and roots which they manage to find even in the drier regions. They spend most of their time on the ground where they are very social and have a very complex social structure. The baboons live in groups headed by one male, the leader. He controls a group of females, their off-spring, and occasionally a "follower" male thought to be related to the leader. Then these groups may come together to form a clan and a few clans can come together to create a band, and finally a few bands can create a troop making a lot of baboons together in one area.
 Indus River Dolphin Platanista minor The Indus river dolphin is only found in the Indus River, located in the country Pakistan. It used to live throughout the river, but due mainly to human construction, their range has been severely limited. Their eyes are hard to see and almost useless, leading to the name of the "blind river dolphin". Due to the murky waters, echolocation is the most efficient way for the dolphins to navigate, not sight. Using this echolocation, they find and eat various fish such as herring, catfish, and carp as well as prawns and clams.
 Arabian Partridge Alectoris melanocephala The Arabian partridge lives in the desert regions of the Arabian peninsula -- primarily in Oman, Saudi Arabia, and Yemen. Due to the areas in which they live, the partridge is not well studied, but it is believed to be local common and of little concern. They are a member of the pheasant family and eat fruits, seeds, berries and other vegetation. They are relatively plump birds and spend most of their time on the ground.
 Black Stork Ciconia nigra The black stork is a widely spread bird, living from Northern Africa across the Arabian Peninsula and the Middle East into central Asia. They are very shy and solitary in their environments of wooded areas always near water. They eat fish and other small aquatic wildlife which they find in and near rivers and lakes. Humans are the only known predator of these birds, which mainly occurs during habitat destruction as structures are built. However, these beautiful birds are still considered Least Concern by the IUCN.
 Beluga Sturgeon Huso huso The beluga sturgeon is endemic to the Caspian Sea where the delicacy beluga caviar is harvested from its eggs. This has lead to their endangerment and conservation efforts have been put in place to keep this rare sturgeon alive. Generally these fish are solitary, only congregating during spawning times, during which they travel into freshwater streams. They eat a wide variety of fish as well as a few ground-dwelling invertebrates.
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