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You can pretty much play how you like.
I mostly try to make it true to their real habitats, but sometimes it is also fun to have more "creative" freedom. So it depends. It is also time consuming to build a habitat, that has to look and have the same setting, plants, etc as the animal. I did once (I will link the workshop)
It took my days to complete, because I had to research about the animal and where it lives, how the enviroment looks like, etc etc..
Then it is easier to "just" be abit more creative and then put in what "looks" good and often also "blends well" many times you can still put in "the required" plants that the animal needs and then the extra ones.
And even with that, I am certain that it has plenty of mistakes.
https://steamcommunity.com/sharedfiles/filedetails/?id=2360260930
A: Perhaps if they eat them. The problem often is in most real zoos is that plants not native to that environment simply will not grow. The animals get on quite well living within habitats full of plants native to the zoo they are living in.
A: the game more or less tells you which plants to use. Unsuitable ones when used are listed angry red. allowing you to delete them.
That was not the point. I can put plants that the game suggest, but that the animal has no interaction with in the wild (in real life) but due to being part of the right category it will be "green listed" again. it does not really matter much however, it is all about what "you" want and what "you" think your zoo and habitats should look like.