Tigers 101 — thefundforthetiger (2024)

Tigers (panthera tigris) are found only in Asia, originally ranging in a vast triangle from Iran to Siberia and down to Indonesia. There has never been an indigenous wild tiger in Africa! Of the 8 original sub-species, the Caspian, Javan, and Balinese became extinct between 1940 and 1980. The Chinese tiger is now virtually extinct as well. That leaves the Siberian (Amur), Sumatran, Indo-Chinese and Bengal tiger, with the largest population, about 1,800, with a habitat that includes India, Nepal, Bhutan, Bangladesh, and Burma to the Irrawaddy River. Only about 3,000 remain in the wild. [Recent molecular analysis has found a division in the Indo-Chinese population thereby technically creating another sub-species known as the Malayan tiger.]

There have never been tigers in Africa but there are lions in Asia. The last remaining ones are confined to the Gir Forest in Gujarat.

Tigers have a normal lifespan of 10-15 years.

Tigers are not normally aggressive to humans unless startled at close quarters, a mother with cubs, chance encounters on a kill, or old and/or injured and thereby forced to hunt outside their normal prey and habitat. Those often become the ‘maneaters’.

Female Bengal tigers (panthera tigris tigris) will average 300 pounds and males 450. There is debate over whether, on average, the Siberian tigers are bigger than the Bengal tigers. Siberian tigers have the potential for being the largest, and captive ones are larger than captive Bengals. But in the wild, the prey base in Russia is not abundant enough for those tigers to realize their full potential. Prey is more scattered and the Russian tigers need huge territories to capture sufficient food, so much more energy is expended in the food quest. And the harsh Siberian winters makes it difficult for the prey species to find food and the tigers to hunt. Several in Nepal have been recorded between 550 and 700 pounds. The largest Siberian on record is 845 pounds. The Guinness Book of Records has one tiger in India at 857 pounds, shot by a chap from Philadelphia in 1967, near what is now Corbett Tiger Reserve.

Females become reproductive around the age of 3. The gestation period is about 105 days. Most litters are 2-4 cubs. Cubs stay with their mother for about 2 years until they have learned to hunt and survive on their own. This process is critical. No captive bred tigers have ever survived introduction into the wild. Being a solitary animal, after 2-3 years they must either displace other adult tigers or disperse to carve out their own territory. A healthy tigress can have a litter about every 2-3 years. Upon becoming pregnant again, the mother will physically force her current young to leave her alone.

Tigers are known to walk vast distances usually between dusk an early morning. Their nocturnal meanderings are preoccupied with the search for food and patrolling their territory. Territorial markings are a form of communication with other tigers and include: piles of scat along established trails, scratch marks nearby, spraying bushes and trees with their anal gland scent, and rolling around to flatten vegetation. There is some debate about whether standing up and scratching trees is marking territory or merely removing residue on their claws from recent kills. It’s probably a bit of both. A male can have a range of 25-40 sq. miles and females about 10 sq. miles.

Tigers communicate with each other: a long range roaring between males and females; male to male to declare territory; or short range moaning of a mother to her cubs, by a deep, loud sound best spelled AAR-ROOOM!

Tigers have strong homing instincts. A male tiger was moved from Pench Tiger Reserve to Panna Tiger Reserve on November 14, 2009. Then, on November 25, in an instinctual act of tiger behavior, he headed home. Tracked by his radio collar, he was finally caught and tranquilized by the Forest Department on December 25th, 150 km. from Panna, crossing hills, villages, rivers, and fields, heading home to Pench.

Tiger are normally solitary animals but will socialize from time to time and have been known to share a meal.

Males who take over a new territory will often attempt to kill their predecessor’s young to establish dominance and strengthen their own gene pool. There is concern for genetic diversity in smaller tiger populations as males will breed with their mothers and daughters.

Tigers will make a kill every 4-7 days, more frequently if a mother has cubs. Preferred food includes wild boar, chital (spotted deer), sambar, barking deer, hog deer, and young rhinos or gaur- the largest wild ox in the world. Tigers usually attack from behind, first getting control with their claws, then holding on with massive forearms until they can finish the kill with a bite to the neck or throat. Tigers may even attack monkeys, snakes, peaco*cks, and jungle fowl if hungry.

Tigers have excellent eyesight and an even better sense of hearing.

The presence of a tiger will be announced throughout the forest by alarm calls. Tiger prey species work together both in gathering food and warning each other of the presence of a predator. Monkeys roam high in the trees and deer forage the forest floor eating what is knocked out of the trees. Monkeys will be the first to sound the alarm of a predator by their agitated screeching. The chital and sambar have their own form of loud, sharp bleeping sounds to alert each other and the forest.

Tigers love the water and are excellent swimmers.

Tigers rarely climb trees but if properly motivated can reach heights of 16-18 ft. A Nepali researcher was pulled out of a tree from that height by an enraged tigress in 1978. She had been darted with a tranquilizer and fitted with a radio collar. When she awoke in a mood most foul the researcher was watching from a nearby tree. Her cubs were nearby and she wanted to make sure they were safe. Enraged, she got a running start, pulled him out of the tree, tore a good part off his upper leg, stunned him out as they landed on top of each other, then sauntered off into the forest with her cubs.

Tigers have distinct stripe patterns on their face and sides. Camera trap photography has become the method of choice in tiger identification and census taking. Pugmark (footprints) identification is also used. Pugmarks? From an Anglo-Indian term pug, meaning footprints. Originally from the Hindi and Urdu work pag.

There is a great deal of misunderstanding regarding white tigers. There are no sub-species of white tigers running around the wilds of Asia. White tigers are the result of a recessive mutation requiring both parents to have that gene to produce white offspring. The last known white tiger in the wild was captured in 1950 by the Maharaja of Rewa in the forests near Bandhavgarh. [The current Maharaja of Rewa still owns the land atop the plateau at Bandhavgarh]. The Maharaja named him Mohan. Mohan mated with one of his daughters and the result was white cubs. It is believed that all white tigers in captivity are descended from Mohan.

Tigers 101 — thefundforthetiger (2024)

FAQs

Where do 75% of the world's tigers live? ›

One of the world's largest, and most uniquely-adapted, tiger populations are found in the Sundarbans—a large mangrove forest area shared by India and Bangladesh on the coast of the Indian Ocean.

Where do tigers live in National Geographic? ›

Some tigers live where it gets very cold—in India and parts of southeast Asia. The whole species is endangered throughout its range. Tigers have been overhunted for their fur as well as for other body parts that many people use in traditional medicines.

What is the wild tiger? ›

Panthera tigris ssp.

Among the largest species of cats in the world, tigers are powerful hunters with sharp teeth, strong jaws and agile bodies. They range across Asia from Russia all the way to Sumatra and mainland Southeast Asia. Scientists still have much to learn about these beautiful, endangered cats.

How does a tiger move? ›

Tigers have soft toe pads which help them walk silently through their habitat. A tiger will typically travel 6-12 miles during a night's hunting. During the day, a tiger's stripes can act as camouflage, allowing it to blend in with its surroundings for stalking and ambushing its prey.

How many tigers are left in 2024? ›

With fewer than 4,000 tigers left in the wild, these iconic cats are fighting for survival and face threats from poaching, habitat loss, and climate change. The Zoo is home to the Malayan subspecies of tiger.

Where did tigers live 100 years ago? ›

Over 100 years ago tigers could be found in places such as the Korean Peninsula, Southern China and the island of Java in Indonesia.

What is a tiger's favorite food? ›

The average weight of a tiger is about 700 lbs. They consume about an average of 35-110 pounds of meat at a given time. Their favorite food is deer and wild boar. Some of their favorite deer species are sambar, chital, swamp deer, hog deer, and sikar deer.

What is the rarest tiger in the world? ›

Sumatran tigers are the rarest subspecies of tiger, classified as Critically Endangered, with only 400 individuals left in the wild.

Is a Siberian tiger bigger than a lion? ›

Lions are the second largest of the five big cats in the genus panthera. The Siberian, or Amur, tiger (P. tigris altaica) is the largest, measuring up to 4 metres (13 feet) in total length and weighing up to 300 kg (660 pounds).

What do tigers drink? ›

Answer and Explanation: Tigers are mammals, and one of the major traits of mammals is that they nurse their young. That means that baby tigers drink milk. However, after they move from milk to solid food, tigers drink water.

What is the largest tiger ever recorded? ›

An outsized male Bengal tiger (P. t. tigris) shot in northern Uttar Pradesh, India, in November 1967, measured 3.22 m (10 ft 7 in) between pegs – or 3.37 m (11 ft 1 in) over the curves – and weighed approximately 389 kg (857 lb).

What do tigers do all night? ›

3. TIGERS PREFER TO HUNT AT NIGHT. Tigers mostly hunt at night because they are nocturnal animals. This means they sleep during the day, and are out and about at night - unlike our Tiger who does all his cupboard raiding at lunchtime!

What color can tigers see? ›

These animals, like most mammals, are dichromats. They have just two types of functioning color receptors in the eye, meaning they are red-green blind. They struggle to distinguish between green tones and red-orange tones. For them, tigers will match the surrounding forest pretty well.

How high can a tiger jump? ›

They can jump up to 16 feet into the air, which means they can easily jump on top of an elephant's head! They can run at speeds of 35 to 40 mph for short distances. The tigers have amazing abilities to survive in their environments, so check out the other lesson plans to learn more about them!

Where do most tigers live in the world? ›

Now, the remaining tigers call only the following 13 countries home: India, Nepal, Bhutan, Bangladesh, Myanmar, Russia, China, Thailand, Malaysia, Indonesia, Cambodia, Laos, and Vietnam. Over 70% of the global wild tiger population lives in India alone.

Where are the most number of tigers in the world? ›

Currently, India has the largest tiger population in the world. It is the home for nearly 3000 tigers. Further Reading: National Tiger Conservation Authority.

What place has the most tigers in the world? ›

Distribution and habitat

As of 2020, India had the largest extent of global tiger habitat with 300,508 km2 (116,027 sq mi), followed by Russia with 195,819 km2 (75,606 sq mi). The tiger mainly lives in forest habitats and is highly adaptable.

Where is the largest population of tigers in the world? ›

India has 3,167 tigers and the country is home to 75% of the global tiger population and has seen a 25% increase in the number of tigers since 2014.

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