Tiger

Author: www.NiNa.Az
Feb 26, 2025 / 23:45

The tiger Panthera tigris is a large cat and a member of the genus Panthera native to Asia It has a powerful muscular bo

Tiger
Tiger
Tiger

The tiger (Panthera tigris) is a large cat and a member of the genus Panthera native to Asia. It has a powerful, muscular body with a large head and paws, a long tail and orange fur with black, mostly vertical stripes. It is traditionally classified into nine recent subspecies, though some recognise only two subspecies, mainland Asian tigers and the island tigers of the Sunda Islands.

Tiger
Temporal range: Early Pleistocene – Present
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A Bengal tigress in Kanha Tiger Reserve, India
Conservation status
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Endangered  (IUCN 3.1)
CITES Appendix I (CITES)
Scientific classification image
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Mammalia
Order: Carnivora
Suborder: Feliformia
Family: Felidae
Subfamily: Pantherinae
Genus: Panthera
Species:
P. tigris
Binomial name
Panthera tigris
(Linnaeus, 1758)
Subspecies
  • P. t. tigris
  • P. t. sondaica
  • P. t. acutidens
  • P. t. soloensis
  • P. t. trinilensis
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Tiger distribution as of 2022
Synonyms
  • Felis tigris Linnaeus, 1758
  • Tigris striatus Severtzov, 1858
  • Tigris regalis Gray, 1867

Throughout the tiger's range, it inhabits mainly forests, from coniferous and temperate broadleaf and mixed forests in the Russian Far East and Northeast China to tropical and subtropical moist broadleaf forests on the Indian subcontinent and Southeast Asia. The tiger is an apex predator and preys mainly on ungulates, which it takes by ambush. It lives a mostly solitary life and occupies home ranges, defending these from individuals of the same sex. The range of a male tiger overlaps with that of multiple females with whom he mates. Females give birth to usually two or three cubs that stay with their mother for about two years. When becoming independent, they leave their mother's home range and establish their own.

Since the early 20th century, tiger populations have lost at least 93% of their historic range and are locally extinct in West and Central Asia, in large areas of China and on the islands of Java and Bali. Today, the tiger's range is severely fragmented. It is listed as Endangered on the IUCN Red List of Threatened Species, as its range is thought to have declined by 53% to 68% since the late 1990s. Major threats to tigers are habitat destruction and fragmentation due to deforestation, poaching for fur and the illegal trade of body parts for medicinal purposes. Tigers are also victims of human–wildlife conflict as they attack and prey on livestock in areas where natural prey is scarce. The tiger is legally protected in all range countries. National conservation measures consist of action plans, anti-poaching patrols and schemes for monitoring tiger populations. In several range countries, wildlife corridors have been established and tiger reintroduction is planned.

The tiger is among the most popular of the world's charismatic megafauna. It has been kept in captivity since ancient times and has been trained to perform in circuses and other entertainment shows. The tiger featured prominently in the ancient mythology and folklore of cultures throughout its historic range and has continued to appear in culture worldwide.

Etymology

The Old English tigras derives from Old French tigre, from Latin tigris, which was a borrowing from tigris (Ancient Greek: τίγρις). Since ancient times, the word tigris has been suggested to originate from the Armenian or Persian word for 'arrow', which may also be the origin of the name for the river Tigris. However, today, the names are thought to be homonyms, and the connection between the tiger and the river is doubted.

Taxonomy

In 1758, Carl Linnaeus described the tiger in his work Systema Naturae and gave it the scientific name Felis tigris, as the genus Felis was being used for all cats at the time. His scientific description was based on descriptions by earlier naturalists such as Conrad Gessner and Ulisse Aldrovandi. In 1929, Reginald Innes Pocock placed the species in the genus Panthera using the scientific name Panthera tigris.

Subspecies

Nine recent tiger subspecies have been proposed between the early 19th and early 21st centuries, namely the Bengal, Malayan, Indochinese, South China, Siberian, Caspian, Javan, Bali and Sumatran tigers. The validity of several tiger subspecies was questioned in 1999 as most putative subspecies were distinguished on the basis of fur length and colouration, striping patterns and body size of specimens in natural history museum collections that are not necessarily representative for the entire population. It was proposed to recognise only two tiger subspecies as valid, namely P. t. tigris in mainland Asia and the smaller P. t. sondaica in the Greater Sunda Islands.

This two-subspecies proposal was reaffirmed in 2015 through a comprehensive analysis of morphological, ecological and mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) traits of all putative tiger subspecies. In 2017, the Cat Classification Task Force of the IUCN Cat Specialist Group revised felid taxonomy in accordance with the 2015 two-subspecies proposal and recognised only P. t. tigris and P. t. sondaica. Results of a 2018 whole-genome sequencing study of 32 samples from the six living putative subspecies—the Bengal, Malayan, Indochinese, South China, Siberian and Sumatran tiger—found them to be distinct and separate clades. These results were corroborated in 2021 and 2023. The Cat Specialist Group states that "Given the varied interpretations of data, the [subspecific] taxonomy of this species is currently under review by the IUCN SSC Cat Specialist Group."

The following tables are based on the classification of the tiger as of 2005, and also reflect the classification recognised by the Cat Classification Task Force in 2017.

Panthera tigris tigris (Linnaeus, 1758)
Population Description Image
Bengal tiger formerly P. t. tigris (Linnaeus, 1758) This population inhabits the Indian subcontinent. The Bengal tiger has shorter fur than tigers further north, with a light tawny to orange-red colouration, and relatively long and narrow nostrils. image
Caspian tiger formerly P. t. virgata (Illiger, 1815) This population occurred from Turkey to around the Caspian Sea. It had bright rusty-red fur with thin and closely spaced brownish stripes, and a broad occipital bone. Genetic analysis revealed that it was closely related to the Siberian tiger. It has been extinct since the 1970s. image
Siberian tiger formerly P. t. altaica (Temminck, 1844) This population lives in the Russian Far East, Northeast China and possibly North Korea. The Siberian tiger has long hair and dense fur. Its ground colour varies widely from ochre-yellow in winter to more reddish and vibrant after moulting. The skull is shorter and broader than the skulls of tigers further south. image
South China tiger formerly P. t. amoyensis (Hilzheimer, 1905) This tiger historically lived in south-central China. The skulls of the five type specimens had shorter carnassials and molars than tigers from India, a smaller cranium, orbits set closer together and larger postorbital processes; skins were yellowish with rhombus-like stripes. It has a unique mtDNA haplotype due to interbreeding with ancient tiger lineages. It is extinct in the wild as there has not been a confirmed sighting since the 1970s, and survives only in captivity. image
Indochinese tiger formerly P. t. corbetti (Mazák, 1968) This tiger population occurs on the Indochinese Peninsula. Indochinese tiger specimens have smaller craniums than Bengal tigers and appear to have darker fur with somewhat thin stripes. image
Malayan tiger formerly P. t. jacksoni (Luo et al., 2004) The Malayan tiger was proposed as a distinct subspecies on the basis of mtDNA and micro-satellite sequences that differ from the Indochinese tiger. It does not differ significantly in fur colour or skull size from Indochinese tigers. There is no clear geographical barrier between tiger populations in northern Malaysia and southern Thailand. image
Panthera tigris sondaica (Temminck, 1844)
Population Description Image
Javan tiger formerly P. t. sondaica (Temminck, 1944) This tiger was described based on an unspecified number of skins with short and smooth hair. Tigers from Java were small compared to tigers of the Asian mainland, had relatively elongated skulls compared to the Sumatran tiger and longer, thinner and more numerous stripes. The Javan tiger is thought to have gone extinct by the 1980s. image
Bali tiger formerly P. t. balica (Schwarz, 1912) This tiger occurred on Bali and had brighter fur and a smaller skull than the Javan tiger. A typical feature of Bali tiger skulls is the narrow occipital bone, which is similar to the Javan tiger's skull. The tiger went extinct in the 1940s. image
Sumatran tiger formerly P. t. sumatrae (Pocock, 1929) The type specimen from Sumatra had dark fur. The Sumatran tiger has particularly long hair around the face, thick body stripes and a broader and smaller nasal bone than other island tigers. image

Evolution

Panthera

Snow leopard image

Tiger image

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Phylogeny of the genus Panthera based on a 2016 nuclear DNA study

The tiger shares the genus Panthera with the lion, leopard, jaguar and snow leopard. Results of genetic analyses indicate that the tiger and snow leopard are sister species whose lineages split from each other between 2.70 and 3.70 million years ago. The tiger's whole genome sequencing shows repeated sequences that parallel those in other cat genomes.

The fossil species Panthera palaeosinensis of early Pleistocene northern China was described as a possible tiger ancestor when it was discovered in 1924, but modern cladistics places it as basal to modern Panthera.Panthera zdanskyi lived around the same time and place, and was suggested to be a sister species of the modern tiger when it was examined in 2014. However, as of 2023, at least two subsequent studies considered P. zdanskyi likely to be a synonym of P. palaeosinensis, noting that its proposed differences from that species fell within the range of individual variation. The earliest appearance of the modern tiger species in the fossil record are jaw fragments from Lantion in China that are dated to the early Pleistocene.

Middle- to late-Pleistocene tiger fossils have been found throughout China, Sumatra and Java. Prehistoric subspecies include Panthera tigris trinilensis and P. t. soloensis of Java and Sumatra and P. t. acutidens of China; late Pleistocene and early Holocene fossils of tigers have also been found in Borneo and Palawan, Philippines. Fossil specimens of tigers have also been reported from the Middle-Late Pleistocene of Japan. Results of a phylogeographic study indicate that all living tigers have a common ancestor that lived between 108,000 and 72,000 years ago. Genetic studies suggest that the tiger population contracted around 115,000 years ago due to glaciation. Modern tiger populations originated from a refugium in Indochina and spread across Asia after the Last Glacial Maximum. As they colonised northeastern China, the ancestors of the South China tiger intermixed with a relict tiger population.

Hybrids

Tigers can interbreed with other Panthera cats and have done so in captivity. The liger is the offspring of a female tiger and a male lion and the tigon the offspring of a male tiger and a female lion. The lion sire passes on a growth-promoting gene, but the corresponding growth-inhibiting gene from the female tiger is absent, so that ligers grow far larger than either parent species. By contrast, the male tiger does not pass on a growth-promoting gene while the lioness passes on a growth inhibiting gene; hence, tigons are around the same size as their parents. Since they often develop life-threatening birth defects and can easily become obese, breeding these hybrids is regarded as unethical.

Characteristics

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Tiger skeleton from Royal Natural History Volume 1 (1839)

The tiger has a typical felid morphology, with a muscular body, shortened legs, strong forelimbs with wide front paws, a large head and a tail that is about half the length of the rest of its body. It has five digits, including a dewclaw, on the front feet and four on the back, all of which have retractile claws that are compact and curved, and can reach 10 cm (3.9 in) long. The ears are rounded and the eyes have a round pupil. The snout ends in a triangular, pink tip with small black dots, the number of which increase with age. The tiger's skull is robust, with a constricted front region, proportionally small, elliptical orbits, long nasal bones and a lengthened cranium with a large sagittal crest. It resembles a lion's skull, but differs from it in the concave or flattened underside of the lower jaw and in its longer nasals. The tiger has 30 fairly robust teeth and its somewhat curved canines are the longest in the cat family at 6.4–7.6 cm (2.5–3.0 in).

The tiger has a head-body length of 1.4–2.8 m (4 ft 7 in – 9 ft 2 in) with a 0.6–1.1 m (2 ft 0 in – 3 ft 7 in) tail and stands 0.8–1.1 m (2 ft 7 in – 3 ft 7 in) at the shoulder. The Siberian and Bengal tigers are the largest. Male Bengal tigers weigh 200–260 kg (440–570 lb), and females weigh 100–160 kg (220–350 lb); island tigers are the smallest, likely due to insular dwarfism. Male Sumatran tigers weigh 100–140 kg (220–310 lb), and females weigh 75–110 kg (165–243 lb). The tiger is popularly thought to be the largest living felid species; but since tigers of the different subspecies and populations vary greatly in size and weight, the tiger's average size may be less than the lion's, while the largest tigers are bigger than their lion counterparts.

Coat

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Siberian tiger coat on flank (side)

The tiger's coat usually has short hairs, reaching up to 35 mm (1.4 in), though the hairs of the northern-living Siberian tiger can reach 105 mm (4.1 in). Belly hairs tend to be longer than back hairs. The density of their fur is usually thin, though the Siberian tiger develops a particularly thick winter coat. The tiger has lines of fur around the face and long whiskers, especially in males. It has an orange colouration that varies from yellowish to reddish. White fur covers the underside, from head to tail, along with the inner surface of the legs and parts of the face. On the back of the ears, it has a prominent white spot, which is surrounded by black. The tiger is marked with distinctive black or dark brown stripes, which are uniquely patterned in each individual. The stripes are mostly vertical, but those on the limbs and forehead are horizontal. They are more concentrated towards the backside and those on the trunk may reach under the belly. The tips of stripes are generally sharp and some may split up or split and fuse again. Tail stripes are thick bands and a black tip marks the end.

The tiger is one of only a few striped cat species. Stripes are advantageous for camouflage in vegetation with vertical patterns of light and shade, such as trees, reeds and tall grass. This is supported by a Fourier analysis study showing that the striping patterns line up with their environment. The orange colour may also aid in concealment, as the tiger's prey is colour blind and possibly perceives the tiger as green and blended in with the vegetation.

Colour variations

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Pseudo-melanistic white tiger

The three colour variants of Bengal tigers – nearly stripeless snow-white, white and golden – are now virtually non-existent in the wild due to the reduction of wild tiger populations but continue in captive populations. The white tiger has a white background colour with sepia-brown stripes. The golden tiger is pale golden with reddish-brown stripes. The snow-white tiger is a morph with extremely faint stripes and a pale sepia-brown ringed tail. White and golden morphs are the result of an autosomal recessive trait with a white locus and a wideband locus, respectively. The snow-white variation is caused by polygenes with both white and wideband loci. The breeding of white tigers is controversial, as they have no use for conservation. Only 0.001% of wild tigers have the genes for this colour morph and the overrepresentation of white tigers in captivity is the result of inbreeding. Hence, their continued breeding will risk both inbreeding depression and loss of genetic variability in captive tigers.

Pseudo-melanistic tigers with thick, merged stripes have been recorded in Simlipal National Park and three Indian zoos; a population genetic analysis of Indian tiger samples revealed that this phenotype is caused by a mutation of a transmembrane aminopeptidase gene. Around 37% of the Simlipal tiger population has this feature, which has been linked to genetic isolation.

Distribution and habitat

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Camera trap of a Siberian tiger in Russia

The tiger historically ranged from eastern Turkey, northern Iran and Afghanistan to Central Asia and from northern Pakistan through the Indian subcontinent and Indochina to southeastern Siberia, Sumatra, Java and Bali. As of 2022, it inhabits less than 7% of its historical distribution and has a scattered range in the Indian subcontinent, the Indochinese Peninsula, Sumatra, northeastern China and the Russian Far East. 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. Records in Central Asia indicate that it primarily inhabited Tugay riverine forests and hilly and lowland forests in the Caucasus. In the Amur-Ussuri region of Russia and China, it inhabits Korean pine and temperate broadleaf and mixed forests; riparian forests serve as dispersal corridors, providing food and water for both tigers and ungulates. On the Indian subcontinent, it inhabits mainly tropical and subtropical moist broadleaf forests, temperate broadleaf and mixed forests, tropical moist evergreen forests, tropical dry forests, alluvial plains and the mangrove forests of the Sundarbans. In the Eastern Himalayas, it was documented in temperate forest up to an elevation of 4,200 m (13,800 ft) in Bhutan, of 3,630 m (11,910 ft) in the Mishmi Hills and of 3,139 m (10,299 ft) in Mêdog County, southeastern Tibet. In Thailand, it lives in deciduous and evergreen forests. In Sumatra, it inhabits lowland peat swamp forests and rugged montane forests.

Population density

Camera trapping during 2010–2015 in the deciduous and subtropical pine forest of Jim Corbett National Park, northern India revealed a stable tiger population density of 12–17 individuals per 100 km2 (39 sq mi) in an area of 521 km2 (201 sq mi). In northern Myanmar, the population density in a sampled area of roughly 3,250 km2 (1,250 sq mi) in a mosaic of tropical broadleaf forest and grassland was estimated to be 0.21–0.44 tigers per 100 km2 (39 sq mi) as of 2009. Population density in mixed deciduous and semi-evergreen forests of Thailand's Huai Kha Khaeng Wildlife Sanctuary was estimated at 2.01 tigers per 100 km2 (39 sq mi); during the 1970s and 1980s, logging and poaching had occurred in the adjacent Mae Wong and Khlong Lan National Parks, where population density was much lower, estimated at only 0.359 tigers per 100 km2 (39 sq mi) as of 2016. Population density in dipterocarp and montane forests in northern Malaysia was estimated at 1.47–2.43 adult tigers per 100 km2 (39 sq mi) in Royal Belum State Park, but 0.3–0.92 adult tigers per 100 km2 (39 sq mi) in the unprotected selectively logged Temengor Forest Reserve.

Behaviour and ecology

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Tiger bathing

Camera trap data show that tigers in Chitwan National Park avoided locations frequented by people and were more active at night than during day. In Sundarbans National Park, six radio-collared tigers were most active from dawn to early morning and reached their zenith around 7:00 o'clock in the morning. A three-year-long camera trap survey in Shuklaphanta National Park revealed that tigers were most active from dusk until midnight. In northeastern China, tigers were crepuscular and active at night with activity peaking at dawn and dusk; they were largely active at the same time as their prey.

The tiger is a powerful swimmer and easily transverses rivers as wide as 8 km (5.0 mi); it immerses in water, particularly on hot days. In general, it is less capable of climbing trees than many other cats due to its size, but cubs under 16 months old may routinely do so. An adult was recorded climbing 10 m (33 ft) up a smooth pipal tree.

Social spacing

Adult tigers lead largely solitary lives within home ranges or territories, the size of which mainly depends on prey abundance, geographic area and sex of the individual. Males and females defend their home ranges from those of the same sex and the home range of a male encompasses that of multiple females. Two females in the Sundarbans had home ranges of 10.6 and 14.1 km2 (4.1 and 5.4 sq mi). In Panna Tiger Reserve, the home ranges of five reintroduced females varied from 53–67 km2 (20–26 sq mi) in winter to 55–60 km2 (21–23 sq mi) in summer and to 46–94 km2 (18–36 sq mi) during the monsoon; three males had 84–147 km2 (32–57 sq mi) large home ranges in winter, 82–98 km2 (32–38 sq mi) in summer and 81–118 km2 (31–46 sq mi) during monsoon seasons. In Sikhote-Alin Biosphere Reserve, 14 females had home ranges 248–520 km2 (96–201 sq mi) and five resident males of 847–1,923 km2 (327–742 sq mi) that overlapped with those of up to five females. When tigresses in the same reserve had cubs of up to four months of age, they reduced their home ranges to stay near their young and steadily enlarged them until their offspring were 13–18 months old.

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Bengal tigers spraying urine (above) and rubbing against a tree to mark territory

The tiger is a long-ranging species and individuals disperse over distances of up to 650 km (400 mi) to reach tiger populations in other areas. Young tigresses establish their first home ranges close to their mothers' while males migrate further than their female counterparts. Four radio-collared females in Chitwan dispersed between 0 and 43.2 km (0.0 and 26.8 mi) and 10 males between 9.5 and 65.7 km (5.9 and 40.8 mi). A subadult male lives as a transient in another male's home range until he is older and strong enough to challenge the resident male. Tigers mark their home ranges by spraying urine on vegetation and rocks, clawing or scent rubbing trees and marking trails with faeces, anal gland secretions and ground scrapings. Scent markings also allow an individual to pick up information on another's identity. Unclaimed home ranges, particularly those that belonged to a deceased individual, can be taken over in days or weeks.

Male tigers are generally less tolerant of other males within their home ranges than females are of other females. Disputes are usually solved by intimidation rather than fighting. Once dominance has been established, a male may tolerate a subordinate within his range, as long as they do not come near him. The most serious disputes tend to occur between two males competing for a female in oestrus. Though tigers mostly live alone, relationships between individuals can be complex. Tigers are particularly social at kills and a male tiger will sometimes share a carcass with the females and cubs within this home range and unlike male lions, will allow them to feed on the kill before he is finished with it. However, a female is more tense when encountering another female at a kill.

Communication

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Siberian tiger baring teeth as a sign of aggression
Captive Sumatran tiger roaring

During friendly encounters and bonding, tigers rub against each other's bodies. Facial expressions include the "defence threat", which involves a wrinkled face, bared teeth, pulled-back ears and widened pupils. Both males and females show a flehmen response, a characteristic curled-lip grimace, when smelling urine markings. Males also use the flehmen to detect the markings made by tigresses in oestrus. Tigers will move their ears around to display the white spots, particularly during aggressive encounters and between mothers and cubs. They also use their tails to signal their mood. To show cordiality, the tail sticks up and sways slowly, while an apprehensive tiger lowers its tail or wags it side-to-side. When calm, the tail hangs low.

Tigers are normally silent but can produce numerous vocalisations. They roar to signal their presence to other individuals over long distances. This vocalisation is forced through an open mouth as it closes and can be heard 3 km (1.9 mi) away. They roar multiple times in a row and others respond in kind. Tigers also roar during mating and a mother will roar to call her cubs to her. When tense, tigers moan, a sound similar to a roar but softer and made when the mouth is at least partially closed. Moaning can be heard 400 m (1,300 ft) away. Aggressive encounters involve growling, snarling and hissing. An explosive "coughing roar" or "coughing snarl" is emitted through an open mouth and exposed teeth. In friendlier situations, tigers prusten, a soft, low-frequency snorting sound similar to purring in smaller cats. Tiger mothers communicate with their cubs by grunting, while cubs call back with miaows. When startled, they "woof". They produce a deer-like "pok" sound for unknown reasons, but most often at kills.

Hunting and diet

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Bengal tiger attacking a sambar deer in Ranthambore Tiger Reserve

The tiger is a carnivore and an apex predator feeding mainly on large and medium-sized ungulates, with a preference for sambar deer, Manchurian wapiti, barasingha, gaur and wild boar.Abundance and body weight of prey species are assumed to be the main criteria for the tiger's prey selection, both inside and outside protected areas. It also preys opportunistically on smaller species like monkeys, peafowl and other ground-based birds, porcupines and fish. Occasional attacks on Asian elephants and Indian rhinoceroses have also been reported. More often, tigers take the more vulnerable calves. They sometimes prey on livestock and dogs in close proximity to settlements. Tigers occasionally consume vegetation, fruit and minerals for dietary fibre and supplements.

Tigers learn to hunt from their mothers, though the ability to hunt may be partially inborn. Depending on the size of the prey, they typically kill weekly though mothers must kill more often. Families hunt together when cubs are old enough. They search for prey using vision and hearing. A tiger will also wait at a watering hole for prey to come by, particularly during hot summer days. It is an ambush predator and when approaching potential prey, it crouches with the head lowered and hides in foliage. It switches between creeping forward and staying still. A tiger may even doze off and can stay in the same spot for as long as a day, waiting for prey and launch an attack when the prey is close enough, usually within 30 m (98 ft). If the prey spots it before then, the cat does not pursue further. A tiger can sprint 56 km/h (35 mph) and leap 10 m (33 ft); it is not a long-distance runner and gives up a chase if prey outpaces it over a certain distance.

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Two Bengal tigers attacking a wild boar in Kanha Tiger Reserve

The tiger attacks from behind or at the sides and tries to knock the target off balance. It latches onto prey with its forelimbs, twisting and turning during the struggle and tries to pull it to the ground. The tiger generally applies a bite to the throat until its victim dies of strangulation. It has an average bite force at the canine tips of 1234.3 newtons. Holding onto the throat puts the cat out of reach of horns, antlers, tusks and hooves. Tigers are adaptable killers and may use other methods, including ripping the throat or breaking the neck. Large prey may be disabled by a bite to the back of the hock, severing the tendon. Swipes from the large paws are capable of stunning or breaking the skull of a water buffalo. They kill small prey with a bite to the back of the neck or head. Estimates of the success rate for hunting tigers range from a low of 5% to a high of 50%. They are sometimes killed or injured by large or dangerous prey like gaur, buffalo and boar.

Tigers typically move kills to a private, usually vegetated spot no further than 183 m (600 ft), though they have been recorded dragging them 549 m (1,801 ft). They are strong enough to drag the carcass of a fully grown buffalo for some distance. They rest for a while before eating and can consume as much as 50 kg (110 lb) of meat in one session, but feed on a carcass for several days, leaving little for scavengers.

Competitors

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An 1807 illustration of dholes attacking a tiger

In much of their range, tigers share habitat with leopards and dholes. They typically dominate both of them, though with dholes it depends on their pack size. Interactions between the three predators involve chasing, stealing kills and direct killing. Large dhole packs may kill tigers. Tigers, leopards and dholes coexist by hunting different sized prey. In Nagarhole National Park, the average weight for tiger kills was found to be 91.5 kg (202 lb), compared to 37.6 kg (83 lb) for leopards and 43.4 kg (96 lb) for dholes. In Kui Buri National Park, following a reduction in prey numbers, tigers continued to kill favoured prey while leopards and dholes increased their consumption of small prey.

Both leopards and dholes can live successfully in tiger habitat when there is abundant food and vegetation cover. Otherwise, they appear to be less common where tigers are numerous. The recovery of the tiger population in Rajaji National Park during the 2000s led to a reduction in leopard population densities. Similarly, at two sites in central India the size of dhole packs was negatively correlated with tiger densities. Leopard and dhole distribution in Kui Buri correlated with both prey access and tiger scarcity. In Jigme Dorji National Park, tigers were found to inhabit the deeper parts of forests while the smaller predators were pushed closer to the fringes.

Reproduction and life cycle

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A Bengal tiger family in Kanha Tiger Reserve

The tiger generally mates all year round, particularly between November and April. A tigress is in oestrus for three to six days at a time, separated by three to nine week intervals. A resident male mates with all the females within his home range, who signal their receptiveness by roaring and marking. Younger, transient males are also attracted, leading to a fight in which the more dominant, resident male drives the usurper off. During courtship, the male is cautious with the female as he waits for her to show signs she is ready to mate. She signals to him by positioning herself in lordosis with her tail to the side. Copulation typically lasts no more than 20 seconds, with the male biting the female by the scruff of her neck. After it is finished, the male quickly pulls away as the female may turn and slap him. Tiger pairs may stay together for up to four days and mate multiple times.Gestation lasts around or over three months.

A tigress gives birth in a secluded location, be it in dense vegetation, in a cave or under a rocky shelter.Litters consist of as many as seven cubs, but two or three are more typical. Newborn cubs weigh 785–1,610 g (27.7–56.8 oz) and are blind and altricial. The mother licks and cleans her cubs, suckles them and viciously defends them from any potential threat. Cubs open their eyes at the age of three to 14 days and their vision becomes clear after a few more weeks. They can leave the denning site after two months and around the same time they start eating meat. The mother only leaves them alone to hunt and even then she does not travel far. When she suspects an area is no longer safe, she moves her cubs to a new spot, transporting them one by one by grabbing them by the scruff of the neck with her mouth. A tigress in Sikhote-Alin Biosphere Reserve maximised the time spent with her cubs by reducing her home range, killing larger prey and returning to her den more rapidly than without cubs; when the cubs started to eat meat, she took them to kill sites, thereby optimising their protection and access to food. In the same reserve, one of 21 cubs died in over eight years of monitoring and mortality did not differ between male and female juveniles. Tiger monitoring over six years in Ranthambore Tiger Reserve indicated an average annual survival rate of around 85 percent for 74 male and female cubs; survival rate increased to 97 percent for both males and female juveniles of one to two years of age. Causes of cub mortality include predators, floods, fires, death of the mother and fatal injuries.

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A Siberian tigress with her cub at Buffalo Zoo

After around two months, the cubs are able to follow their mother. They still hide in vegetation when she goes hunting. Young bond through play fighting and practice stalking. A hierarchy develops in the litter, with the biggest cub, often a male, being the most dominant and the first to eat its fill at a kill. Around the age of six months, cubs are fully weaned and have more freedom to explore their environment. Between eight and ten months, they accompany their mother on hunts. A cub can make a kill as early as 11 months and reach independence as a juvenile of 18 to 24 months of age; males become independent earlier than females. Radio-collared tigers in Chitwan started leaving their natal areas at the age of 19 months. Young females are sexually mature at three to four years, whereas males are at four to five years.Generation length of the tiger is about 7–10 years. Wild Bengal tigers live 12–15 years. Data from the International Tiger Studbook 1938–2018 indicate that captive tigers lived up to 19 years.

The father does not play a role in raising the young, but he encounters and interacts with them. The resident male appears to visit the female–cub families within his home range. They socialise and even share kills. One male was recorded looking after cubs whose mother had died. By defending his home range, the male protects the females and cubs from other males. When a new male takes over, dependent cubs are at risk of infanticide as the male attempts to sire his own young with the females. A seven-year long study in Chitwan National Park revealed that 12 of 56 detected cubs and juveniles were killed by new males taking over home ranges.

Health and diseases

Tigers are recorded as hosts for various parasites including tapeworms like Diphyllobothrium erinacei, Taenia pisiformis in India and nematodes like Toxocara species in India and Physaloptera preputialis, Dirofilaria ursi and species in Siberia.Canine distemper is known to occur in Siberian tigers. A morbillivirus infection was the likely cause of death of a tigress in the Russian Far East that was also tested positive for feline panleukopenia and feline coronavirus. Blood samples from 11 adult tigers in Nepal showed antibodies for canine parvovirus-2, feline herpesvirus, feline coronavirus, leptospirosis and Toxoplasma gondii.

Threats

The tiger has been listed as Endangered on the IUCN Red List since 1986 and the global tiger population is thought to have continuously declined from an estimated population of 5,000–8,262 tigers in the late 1990s to 3,726–5,578 individuals estimated as of 2022. During 2001–2020, landscapes where tigers live declined from 1,025,488 km2 (395,943 sq mi) to 911,901 km2 (352,087 sq mi).Habitat destruction, habitat fragmentation and poaching for fur and body parts are the major threats that contributed to the decrease of tiger populations in all range countries.

Protected areas in central India are highly fragmented due to linear infrastructure like roads, railway lines, transmission lines, irrigation channels and mining activities in their vicinity. In the Tanintharyi Region of southern Myanmar, deforestation coupled with mining activities and high hunting pressure threatens the tiger population. In Thailand, nine of 15 protected areas hosting tigers are isolated and fragmented, offering a low probability for dispersal between them; four of these have not harboured tigers since about 2013. In Peninsular Malaysia, 8,315.7 km2 (3,210.7 sq mi) of tiger habitat was cleared during 1988–2012, most of it for industrial plantations. Large-scale land acquisitions of about 23,000 km2 (8,900 sq mi) for commercial agriculture and timber extraction in Cambodia contributed to the fragmentation of potential tiger habitat, especially in the Eastern Plains.Inbreeding depression coupled with habitat destruction, insufficient prey resources and poaching is a threat to the small and isolated tiger population in the Changbai Mountains along the China–Russia border. In China, tigers became the target of large-scale 'anti-pest' campaigns in the early 1950s, where suitable habitats were fragmented following deforestation and resettlement of people to rural areas, who hunted tigers and prey species. Though tiger hunting was prohibited in 1977, the population continued to decline and is considered extinct in South China since 2001.

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A Javan tiger skin, 1915

Tiger populations in India have been targeted by poachers since the 1990s and were extirpated in two tiger reserves in 2005 and 2009. Between March 2017 and January 2020, 630 activities of hunters using snares, drift nets, hunting platforms and hunting dogs were discovered in a reserve forest of about 1,000 km2 (390 sq mi) in southern Myanmar.Nam Et-Phou Louey National Park was considered the last important site for the tiger in Laos, but it has not been recorded there at least since 2013; this population likely fell victim to indiscriminate snaring.Anti-poaching units in Sumatra's Kerinci Seblat landscape removed 362 tiger snare traps and seized 91 tiger skins during 2005–2016; annual poaching rates increased with rising skin prices. Poaching is also the main threat to the tiger population in far eastern Russia, where logging roads facilitate access for poachers and people harvesting forest products that are important for prey species to survive in winter.

Body parts of 207 tigers were detected during 21 surveys in 1991–2014 in two wildlife markets in Myanmar catering to customers in Thailand and China. During the years 2000–2022, at least 3,377 tigers were confiscated in 2,205 seizures in 28 countries; seizures encompassed 665 live and 654 dead individuals, 1,313 whole tiger skins, 16,214 body parts like bones, teeth, paws, claws, whiskers and 1.1 t (1.1 long tons; 1.2 short tons) of meat; 759 seizures in India encompassed body parts of 893 tigers; and 403 seizures in Thailand involved mostly captive-bred tigers. Seizures in Nepal between January 2011 and December 2015 obtained 585 pieces of tiger body parts and two whole carcasses in 19 districts. Seizure data from India during 2001–2021 indicate that tiger skins were the most often traded body parts, followed by claws, bones and teeth; trafficking routes mainly passed through the states of Maharashtra, Karnataka, Tamil Nadu and Assam. A total of 292 illegal tiger parts were confiscated at US ports of entry from personal baggage, air cargo and mail between 2003 and 2012.

Demand for tiger parts for use in traditional Chinese medicine has also been cited as a major threat to tiger populations. Interviews with local people in the Bangladeshi Sundarbans revealed that they kill tigers for local consumption and trade of skins, bones and meat, in retaliation for attacks by tigers and for excitement. Tiger body parts like skins, bones, teeth and hair are consumed locally by wealthy Bangladeshis and are illegally trafficked from Bangladesh to 15 countries including India, China, Malaysia, Korea, Vietnam, Cambodia, Japan and the United Kingdom via land borders, airports and seaports. Tiger bone glue is the prevailing tiger product purchased for medicinal purposes in Hanoi and Ho Chi Minh City. "Tiger farm" facilities in China and Southeast Asia breed tigers for their parts, but these appear to make the threat to wild populations worse by increasing the demand for tiger products.

Local people killing tigers in retaliation for attacking and preying on livestock is a threat in several tiger range countries, as this consequence of human–wildlife conflict also contributes to the decline of the population.

Conservation

Global wild tiger population
Country Year Estimate
image India 2022 3,167–3,682
image Russia 2022 573–600
image Indonesia 2022 393
image Nepal 2022 316–355
image Thailand 2022 148–189
image Malaysia 2022 <150
image Bhutan 2022 131
image Bangladesh 2022 118–122
image China 2022 >60
image Myanmar 2022 28
Total 5,638–5,899

Internationally, the tiger is protected under CITES Appendix I, banning trade of live tigers and their body parts. In Russia, hunting the tiger has been banned since 1952. In Bhutan, it has been protected since 1969 and enlisted as totally protected since 1995. Since 1972, it has been afforded the highest protection level under India's Wild Life (Protection) Act, 1972. In Nepal and Bangladesh, it has been protected since 1973. Since 1976, it has been totally protected under Malaysia's Protection of Wild Life Act, and the country's Wildlife Conservation Act enacted in 2010 increased punishments for wildlife-related crimes. In Indonesia, it has been protected since 1990. In China, the trade in tiger body parts was banned in 1993. The Thai Wildlife Preservation and Protection Act was enacted in 2019 to combat poaching and trading of body parts.

In 1973, the National Tiger Conservation Authority and Project Tiger were founded in India to gain public support for tiger conservation. Since then, 53 tiger reserves covering an area of 75,796 km2 (29,265 sq mi) have been established in the country up to 2022. These efforts contributed to the recovery of India's tiger population between 2006 and 2018 so that it occurs in an area of about 138,200 km2 (53,400 sq mi).

Myanmar's national tiger conservation strategy developed in 2003 comprises management tasks such as restoration of degraded habitats, increasing the extent of protected areas and wildlife corridors, protecting tiger prey species, thwarting tiger killing and illegal trade of its body parts and promoting public awareness through wildlife education programmes. Bhutan's first Tiger Action Plan implemented during 2006–2015 revolved around habitat conservation, human–wildlife conflict management, education and awareness; the second Action Plan aimed at increasing the country's tiger population by 20% until 2023 compared to 2015. In 2009, the Bangladesh Tiger Action Plan was initiated to stabilise the country's tiger population, maintain habitat and a sufficient prey base, improve law enforcement and foster cooperation between governmental agencies responsible for tiger conservation. The Thailand Tiger Action Plan ratified in 2010 envisioned increasing the country's tiger populations by 50% in the Western Forest Complex and Dong Phayayen–Khao Yai Forest Complex and reestablish populations in three potential landscapes until 2022. The Indonesian National Tiger Recovery Program ratified in 2010 aimed at increasing the Sumatran tiger population by 2022. The third strategic and action plan for the conservation of the Sumatran tiger for the years 2020–2030 revolves around strengthening management of small tiger population units of less than 20 mature individuals and connectivity between 13 forest patches in North Sumatra and West Sumatra provinces.

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Wild Sumatran tiger caught by camera trap

Increases in anti-poaching patrol efforts in four Russian protected areas during 2011–2014 contributed to reducing poaching, stabilising the tiger population and improving protection of ungulate populations. Poaching and trafficking were declared to be moderate and serious crimes in 2019. Anti-poaching operations were also established in Nepal in 2010, with increased cooperation and intelligence sharing between agencies. These policies have led to many years of "zero poaching" and the country's tiger population has doubled in a decade. Anti-poaching patrols in the 1,200 km2 (460 sq mi) large core area of Taman Negara lead to a decrease of poaching frequency from 34 detected incidents in 2015–2016 to 20 incidents during 2018–2019; the arrest of seven poaching teams and removal of snares facilitated the survival of three resident female tigers and at least 11 cubs. Army and police officers are deployed for patrolling together with staff of protected areas in Malaysia.

Wildlife corridors are important conservation measures as they facilitate tiger populations to connect between protected areas; tigers use at least nine corridors that were established in the Terai Arc Landscape and Sivalik Hills in both Nepal and India. Corridors in forested areas with low human encroachment are highly suitable. In West Sumatra, 12 wildlife corridors were identified as high priority for mitigating human–wildlife conflicts. In 2019, China and Russia signed a memorandum of understanding for transboundary cooperation between two protected areas, Northeast China Tiger and Leopard National Park and Land of the Leopard National Park, that includes the creation of wildlife corridors and bilateral monitoring and patrolling along the Sino-Russian border.

Rescued and rehabilitated problem tigers and orphaned tiger cubs have been released into the wild and monitored in India, Sumatra and Russia. In Kazakhstan, habitat restoration and reintroduction of prey species in Ile-Balkash Nature Reserve have progressed and tiger reintroduction is planned for 2025. Reintroduction of tigers is considered possible in eastern Cambodia, once management of protected areas is improved and forest loss stabilized. South China tigers are kept and bred in Chinese zoos, with plans to reintroduce their offspring into remote protected areas. Coordinated breeding programs among zoos have led to enough genetic diversity in tigers to act as "insurance against extinction in the wild".

Relationship with humans

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Tiger hunting on elephant-back in India, 1808

Hunting

Tigers have been hunted by humans for millennia, as indicated by a painting on the Bhimbetka rock shelters in India that is dated to 5,000–6,000 years ago. They were hunted throughout their range in Asia, chased on horseback, elephant-back or even with sled dogs and killed with spears and later firearms. Such hunts were conducted both by Asian governments and empires like the Mughal Empire, as well as European colonists. Tigers were often hunted as trophies and because of their perceived danger. An estimated 80,000 tigers were killed between 1875 and 1925.

Attacks

image
A Bengal tiger in the Sundarbans

In most areas, tigers avoid humans, but attacks are a risk wherever people coexist with them. Dangerous encounters are more likely to occur in edge habitats between wild and agricultural areas. Most attacks on humans are defensive, including protection of young; however, tigers do sometimes see people as prey.Man-eating tigers tend to be old and disabled. Tigers driven from their home ranges are also at risk of turning to man-eating.

At the beginning of the 20th century, the Champawat Tiger was responsible for over 430 human deaths in Nepal and India before she was shot by Jim Corbett. This tigress suffered from broken teeth and was unable to kill normal prey. Modern authors speculate that sustaining on meagre human flesh forced the cat to kill more and more. Tiger attacks were particularly high in Singapore during the mid-19th century, when plantations expanded into the tiger's habitat. In the 1840s, the number of deaths in the area ranged from 200 to 300 annually.Tiger attacks in the Sundarbans caused 1,396 human deaths in the period 1935–2006 according to official records of the Bangladesh Forest Department. Victims of these attacks are local villagers who enter the tiger's domain to collect resources like wood and honey. Fishermen have been particularly common targets. Methods to counter tiger attacks have included face masks worn backwards, protective clothes, sticks and carefully stationed electric dummies.

Captivity

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Tiger at Big Cat Rescue in 2014
image
Publicity photo of animal trainer Gunther Gebel-Williams with several of his trained tigers, c. 1969

Tigers have been kept in captivity since ancient times. In ancient Rome, tigers were displayed in amphitheatres; they were slaughtered in venatio hunts and used to kill criminals. The Mongol ruler Kublai Khan is reported to have kept tigers in the 13th century. Starting in the Middle Ages, tigers were being kept in European menageries. Tigers and other exotic animals were mainly used for the entertainment of elites but from the 19th century onward, they were exhibited more to the public. Tigers were particularly big attractions and their captive population soared. In 2020, there were over 8,000 captive tigers in Asia, over 5,000 in the US and no less than 850 in Europe. There are more tigers in captivity than in the wild. Captive tigers may display stereotypical behaviours such as pacing or inactivity. Modern zoos are able to reduce such behaviours with exhibits designed so the animals can move between separate but connected enclosures. Enrichment items are also important for the cat's welfare and the stimulation of its natural behaviours.

Tigers have played prominent roles in circuses and other live performances. Ringling Bros included many tiger tamers in the 20th century including Mabel Stark, who became a big draw and had a long career. She was well known for being able to control the tigers despite being a small woman; using "manly" tools like whips and guns. Another trainer was Clyde Beatty, who used chairs, whips and guns to provoke tigers and other beasts into acting fierce and allowed him to appear courageous. He would perform with as many as 40 tigers and lions in one act. From the 1960s onward, trainers like Gunther Gebel-Williams would use gentler methods to control their animals. Sara Houcke was dubbed "the Tiger Whisperer" as she trained the cats to obey her by whispering to them.Siegfried & Roy became famous for performing with white tigers in Las Vegas. The act ended in 2003 when a tiger attacked Roy during a performance. In 2009, tigers were the most traded circus animals. The use of tigers and other animals in shows eventually declined in many countries due to pressure from animal rights groups and greater desires from the public to see them in more natural settings. Several countries restrict or ban such acts.

Tigers have become popular in the exotic pet trade, particularly in the United States where only 6% of the captive tiger population in 2020 were being housed in zoos and other facilities approved by the Association of Zoos and Aquariums. Private collectors are thought to be ill-equipped to provide proper care for tigers, which compromises their welfare. They can also threaten public safety by allowing people to interact with them. The keeping of tigers and other big cats by private people was banned in the US in 2022. Most countries in the European Union have banned breeding and keeping tigers outside of licensed zoos and rescue centres, but some still allow private holdings.

Cultural significance

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Tiger-shaped jie (badge of authority) with gold inlays, from the tomb of Zhao Mo

The tiger is among the most famous of the charismatic megafauna. Kailash Sankhala has called it "a rare combination of courage, ferocity and brilliant colour", while Candy d'Sa calls it "fierce and commanding on the outside, but noble and discerning on the inside". In a 2004 online poll involving more than 50,000 people from 73 countries, the tiger was voted the world's favourite animal with 21% of the vote, narrowly beating the dog. Similarly, a 2018 study found the tiger to be the most popular wild animal based on surveys, as well as appearances on websites of major zoos and posters of some animated movies.

While the lion represented royalty and power in Western culture, the tiger played such a role in various Asian cultures. In ancient China, the tiger was seen as the "king of the forest" and symbolised the power of the emperor. In Chinese astrology, the tiger is the third out of 12 symbols in the Chinese zodiac and controls the period between 15:00 and 17:00 o'clock in the afternoon. The Year of the Tiger is thought to bring "dramatic and extreme events". The White Tiger is one of the Four Symbols of the Chinese constellations, representing the west along with the yin and the season of autumn. It is the counterpart to the Azure Dragon, which conversely symbolises the east, yang and springtime. The tiger is one of the animals displayed on the Pashupati seal of the Indus Valley Civilisation. The big cat was depicted on seals and coins during the Chola dynasty of southern India, as it was the official emblem.

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The Hindu goddess Durga riding a tiger. Guler school, early 18th century

Tigers have had religious and folkloric significance. In Buddhism, the tiger, monkey and deer are the Three Senseless Creatures, with the tiger symbolising anger. In Hinduism, the tiger is the vehicle of Durga, the goddess of feminine power and peace, whom the gods created to fight demons. Similarly, in the Greco-Roman world, the tiger was depicted being ridden by the god Dionysus. In Korean mythology, tigers are messengers of the Mountain Gods. In both Chinese and Korean culture, tigers are seen as protectors against evil spirits and their image was used to decorate homes, tombs and articles of clothing. In the folklore of Malaysia and Indonesia, "tiger shamans" heal the sick by invoking the big cat. People turning into tigers and the inverse has also been widespread; in particular weretigers are people who could change into tigers and back again. The Mnong people of Indochina believed that tigers could shapeshift into humans. Among some indigenous peoples of Siberia, it was believed that men would seduce women by transforming into tigers.

William Blake's 1794 poem "The Tyger" portrays the animal as the duality of beauty and ferocity. It is the sister poem to "The Lamb" in Blake's Songs of Innocence and of Experience and he ponders how God could create such different creatures. The tiger is featured in the mediaeval Chinese novel Water Margin, where the cat battles and is slain by the bandit Wu Song, while the tiger Shere Khan in Rudyard Kipling's The Jungle Book (1894) is the mortal enemy of the human protagonist Mowgli. Friendly tame tigers have also existed in culture, notably Tigger, the Winnie-the-Pooh character and Tony the Tiger, the Kellogg's cereal mascot.

See also

  • List of largest cats
  • International Tiger Day
  • Tiger Temple

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The tiger Panthera tigris is a large cat and a member of the genus Panthera native to Asia It has a powerful muscular body with a large head and paws a long tail and orange fur with black mostly vertical stripes It is traditionally classified into nine recent subspecies though some recognise only two subspecies mainland Asian tigers and the island tigers of the Sunda Islands Tiger Temporal range Early Pleistocene Present PreꞒ Ꞓ O S D C P T J K Pg N A Bengal tigress in Kanha Tiger Reserve IndiaConservation statusEndangered IUCN 3 1 CITES Appendix I CITES Scientific classificationDomain EukaryotaKingdom AnimaliaPhylum ChordataClass MammaliaOrder CarnivoraSuborder FeliformiaFamily FelidaeSubfamily PantherinaeGenus PantheraSpecies P tigrisBinomial namePanthera tigris Linnaeus 1758 SubspeciesP t tigris P t sondaica P t acutidens P t soloensis P t trinilensisTiger distribution as of 2022SynonymsFelis tigris Linnaeus 1758Tigris striatus Severtzov 1858Tigris regalis Gray 1867 Throughout the tiger s range it inhabits mainly forests from coniferous and temperate broadleaf and mixed forests in the Russian Far East and Northeast China to tropical and subtropical moist broadleaf forests on the Indian subcontinent and Southeast Asia The tiger is an apex predator and preys mainly on ungulates which it takes by ambush It lives a mostly solitary life and occupies home ranges defending these from individuals of the same sex The range of a male tiger overlaps with that of multiple females with whom he mates Females give birth to usually two or three cubs that stay with their mother for about two years When becoming independent they leave their mother s home range and establish their own Since the early 20th century tiger populations have lost at least 93 of their historic range and are locally extinct in West and Central Asia in large areas of China and on the islands of Java and Bali Today the tiger s range is severely fragmented It is listed as Endangered on the IUCN Red List of Threatened Species as its range is thought to have declined by 53 to 68 since the late 1990s Major threats to tigers are habitat destruction and fragmentation due to deforestation poaching for fur and the illegal trade of body parts for medicinal purposes Tigers are also victims of human wildlife conflict as they attack and prey on livestock in areas where natural prey is scarce The tiger is legally protected in all range countries National conservation measures consist of action plans anti poaching patrols and schemes for monitoring tiger populations In several range countries wildlife corridors have been established and tiger reintroduction is planned The tiger is among the most popular of the world s charismatic megafauna It has been kept in captivity since ancient times and has been trained to perform in circuses and other entertainment shows The tiger featured prominently in the ancient mythology and folklore of cultures throughout its historic range and has continued to appear in culture worldwide EtymologyThe Old English tigras derives from Old French tigre from Latin tigris which was a borrowing from tigris Ancient Greek tigris Since ancient times the word tigris has been suggested to originate from the Armenian or Persian word for arrow which may also be the origin of the name for the river Tigris However today the names are thought to be homonyms and the connection between the tiger and the river is doubted TaxonomyIn 1758 Carl Linnaeus described the tiger in his work Systema Naturae and gave it the scientific name Felis tigris as the genus Felis was being used for all cats at the time His scientific description was based on descriptions by earlier naturalists such as Conrad Gessner and Ulisse Aldrovandi In 1929 Reginald Innes Pocock placed the species in the genus Panthera using the scientific name Panthera tigris Subspecies Nine recent tiger subspecies have been proposed between the early 19th and early 21st centuries namely the Bengal Malayan Indochinese South China Siberian Caspian Javan Bali and Sumatran tigers The validity of several tiger subspecies was questioned in 1999 as most putative subspecies were distinguished on the basis of fur length and colouration striping patterns and body size of specimens in natural history museum collections that are not necessarily representative for the entire population It was proposed to recognise only two tiger subspecies as valid namely P t tigris in mainland Asia and the smaller P t sondaica in the Greater Sunda Islands This two subspecies proposal was reaffirmed in 2015 through a comprehensive analysis of morphological ecological and mitochondrial DNA mtDNA traits of all putative tiger subspecies In 2017 the Cat Classification Task Force of the IUCN Cat Specialist Group revised felid taxonomy in accordance with the 2015 two subspecies proposal and recognised only P t tigris and P t sondaica Results of a 2018 whole genome sequencing study of 32 samples from the six living putative subspecies the Bengal Malayan Indochinese South China Siberian and Sumatran tiger found them to be distinct and separate clades These results were corroborated in 2021 and 2023 The Cat Specialist Group states that Given the varied interpretations of data the subspecific taxonomy of this species is currently under review by the IUCN SSC Cat Specialist Group The following tables are based on the classification of the tiger as of 2005 and also reflect the classification recognised by the Cat Classification Task Force in 2017 Panthera tigris tigris Linnaeus 1758 Population Description ImageBengal tiger formerly P t tigris Linnaeus 1758 This population inhabits the Indian subcontinent The Bengal tiger has shorter fur than tigers further north with a light tawny to orange red colouration and relatively long and narrow nostrils Caspian tiger formerly P t virgata Illiger 1815 This population occurred from Turkey to around the Caspian Sea It had bright rusty red fur with thin and closely spaced brownish stripes and a broad occipital bone Genetic analysis revealed that it was closely related to the Siberian tiger It has been extinct since the 1970s Siberian tiger formerly P t altaica Temminck 1844 This population lives in the Russian Far East Northeast China and possibly North Korea The Siberian tiger has long hair and dense fur Its ground colour varies widely from ochre yellow in winter to more reddish and vibrant after moulting The skull is shorter and broader than the skulls of tigers further south South China tiger formerly P t amoyensis Hilzheimer 1905 This tiger historically lived in south central China The skulls of the five type specimens had shorter carnassials and molars than tigers from India a smaller cranium orbits set closer together and larger postorbital processes skins were yellowish with rhombus like stripes It has a unique mtDNA haplotype due to interbreeding with ancient tiger lineages It is extinct in the wild as there has not been a confirmed sighting since the 1970s and survives only in captivity Indochinese tiger formerly P t corbetti Mazak 1968 This tiger population occurs on the Indochinese Peninsula Indochinese tiger specimens have smaller craniums than Bengal tigers and appear to have darker fur with somewhat thin stripes Malayan tiger formerly P t jacksoni Luo et al 2004 The Malayan tiger was proposed as a distinct subspecies on the basis of mtDNA and micro satellite sequences that differ from the Indochinese tiger It does not differ significantly in fur colour or skull size from Indochinese tigers There is no clear geographical barrier between tiger populations in northern Malaysia and southern Thailand Panthera tigris sondaica Temminck 1844 Population Description Image Javan tiger formerly P t sondaica Temminck 1944 This tiger was described based on an unspecified number of skins with short and smooth hair Tigers from Java were small compared to tigers of the Asian mainland had relatively elongated skulls compared to the Sumatran tiger and longer thinner and more numerous stripes The Javan tiger is thought to have gone extinct by the 1980s Bali tiger formerly P t balica Schwarz 1912 This tiger occurred on Bali and had brighter fur and a smaller skull than the Javan tiger A typical feature of Bali tiger skulls is the narrow occipital bone which is similar to the Javan tiger s skull The tiger went extinct in the 1940s Sumatran tiger formerly P t sumatrae Pocock 1929 The type specimen from Sumatra had dark fur The Sumatran tiger has particularly long hair around the face thick body stripes and a broader and smaller nasal bone than other island tigers Evolution Panthera Snow leopardTigerJaguarLeopardLionPhylogeny of the genus Panthera based on a 2016 nuclear DNA study The tiger shares the genus Panthera with the lion leopard jaguar and snow leopard Results of genetic analyses indicate that the tiger and snow leopard are sister species whose lineages split from each other between 2 70 and 3 70 million years ago The tiger s whole genome sequencing shows repeated sequences that parallel those in other cat genomes The fossil species Panthera palaeosinensis of early Pleistocene northern China was described as a possible tiger ancestor when it was discovered in 1924 but modern cladistics places it as basal to modern Panthera Panthera zdanskyi lived around the same time and place and was suggested to be a sister species of the modern tiger when it was examined in 2014 However as of 2023 at least two subsequent studies considered P zdanskyi likely to be a synonym of P palaeosinensis noting that its proposed differences from that species fell within the range of individual variation The earliest appearance of the modern tiger species in the fossil record are jaw fragments from Lantion in China that are dated to the early Pleistocene Middle to late Pleistocene tiger fossils have been found throughout China Sumatra and Java Prehistoric subspecies include Panthera tigris trinilensis and P t soloensis of Java and Sumatra and P t acutidens of China late Pleistocene and early Holocene fossils of tigers have also been found in Borneo and Palawan Philippines Fossil specimens of tigers have also been reported from the Middle Late Pleistocene of Japan Results of a phylogeographic study indicate that all living tigers have a common ancestor that lived between 108 000 and 72 000 years ago Genetic studies suggest that the tiger population contracted around 115 000 years ago due to glaciation Modern tiger populations originated from a refugium in Indochina and spread across Asia after the Last Glacial Maximum As they colonised northeastern China the ancestors of the South China tiger intermixed with a relict tiger population Hybrids Tigers can interbreed with other Panthera cats and have done so in captivity The liger is the offspring of a female tiger and a male lion and the tigon the offspring of a male tiger and a female lion The lion sire passes on a growth promoting gene but the corresponding growth inhibiting gene from the female tiger is absent so that ligers grow far larger than either parent species By contrast the male tiger does not pass on a growth promoting gene while the lioness passes on a growth inhibiting gene hence tigons are around the same size as their parents Since they often develop life threatening birth defects and can easily become obese breeding these hybrids is regarded as unethical CharacteristicsTiger skeleton from Royal Natural History Volume 1 1839 The tiger has a typical felid morphology with a muscular body shortened legs strong forelimbs with wide front paws a large head and a tail that is about half the length of the rest of its body It has five digits including a dewclaw on the front feet and four on the back all of which have retractile claws that are compact and curved and can reach 10 cm 3 9 in long The ears are rounded and the eyes have a round pupil The snout ends in a triangular pink tip with small black dots the number of which increase with age The tiger s skull is robust with a constricted front region proportionally small elliptical orbits long nasal bones and a lengthened cranium with a large sagittal crest It resembles a lion s skull but differs from it in the concave or flattened underside of the lower jaw and in its longer nasals The tiger has 30 fairly robust teeth and its somewhat curved canines are the longest in the cat family at 6 4 7 6 cm 2 5 3 0 in The tiger has a head body length of 1 4 2 8 m 4 ft 7 in 9 ft 2 in with a 0 6 1 1 m 2 ft 0 in 3 ft 7 in tail and stands 0 8 1 1 m 2 ft 7 in 3 ft 7 in at the shoulder The Siberian and Bengal tigers are the largest Male Bengal tigers weigh 200 260 kg 440 570 lb and females weigh 100 160 kg 220 350 lb island tigers are the smallest likely due to insular dwarfism Male Sumatran tigers weigh 100 140 kg 220 310 lb and females weigh 75 110 kg 165 243 lb The tiger is popularly thought to be the largest living felid species but since tigers of the different subspecies and populations vary greatly in size and weight the tiger s average size may be less than the lion s while the largest tigers are bigger than their lion counterparts Coat Siberian tiger coat on flank side The tiger s coat usually has short hairs reaching up to 35 mm 1 4 in though the hairs of the northern living Siberian tiger can reach 105 mm 4 1 in Belly hairs tend to be longer than back hairs The density of their fur is usually thin though the Siberian tiger develops a particularly thick winter coat The tiger has lines of fur around the face and long whiskers especially in males It has an orange colouration that varies from yellowish to reddish White fur covers the underside from head to tail along with the inner surface of the legs and parts of the face On the back of the ears it has a prominent white spot which is surrounded by black The tiger is marked with distinctive black or dark brown stripes which are uniquely patterned in each individual The stripes are mostly vertical but those on the limbs and forehead are horizontal They are more concentrated towards the backside and those on the trunk may reach under the belly The tips of stripes are generally sharp and some may split up or split and fuse again Tail stripes are thick bands and a black tip marks the end The tiger is one of only a few striped cat species Stripes are advantageous for camouflage in vegetation with vertical patterns of light and shade such as trees reeds and tall grass This is supported by a Fourier analysis study showing that the striping patterns line up with their environment The orange colour may also aid in concealment as the tiger s prey is colour blind and possibly perceives the tiger as green and blended in with the vegetation Colour variations Pseudo melanistic white tiger The three colour variants of Bengal tigers nearly stripeless snow white white and golden are now virtually non existent in the wild due to the reduction of wild tiger populations but continue in captive populations The white tiger has a white background colour with sepia brown stripes The golden tiger is pale golden with reddish brown stripes The snow white tiger is a morph with extremely faint stripes and a pale sepia brown ringed tail White and golden morphs are the result of an autosomal recessive trait with a white locus and a wideband locus respectively The snow white variation is caused by polygenes with both white and wideband loci The breeding of white tigers is controversial as they have no use for conservation Only 0 001 of wild tigers have the genes for this colour morph and the overrepresentation of white tigers in captivity is the result of inbreeding Hence their continued breeding will risk both inbreeding depression and loss of genetic variability in captive tigers Pseudo melanistic tigers with thick merged stripes have been recorded in Simlipal National Park and three Indian zoos a population genetic analysis of Indian tiger samples revealed that this phenotype is caused by a mutation of a transmembrane aminopeptidase gene Around 37 of the Simlipal tiger population has this feature which has been linked to genetic isolation Distribution and habitatCamera trap of a Siberian tiger in Russia The tiger historically ranged from eastern Turkey northern Iran and Afghanistan to Central Asia and from northern Pakistan through the Indian subcontinent and Indochina to southeastern Siberia Sumatra Java and Bali As of 2022 it inhabits less than 7 of its historical distribution and has a scattered range in the Indian subcontinent the Indochinese Peninsula Sumatra northeastern China and the Russian Far East 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 Records in Central Asia indicate that it primarily inhabited Tugay riverine forests and hilly and lowland forests in the Caucasus In the Amur Ussuri region of Russia and China it inhabits Korean pine and temperate broadleaf and mixed forests riparian forests serve as dispersal corridors providing food and water for both tigers and ungulates On the Indian subcontinent it inhabits mainly tropical and subtropical moist broadleaf forests temperate broadleaf and mixed forests tropical moist evergreen forests tropical dry forests alluvial plains and the mangrove forests of the Sundarbans In the Eastern Himalayas it was documented in temperate forest up to an elevation of 4 200 m 13 800 ft in Bhutan of 3 630 m 11 910 ft in the Mishmi Hills and of 3 139 m 10 299 ft in Medog County southeastern Tibet In Thailand it lives in deciduous and evergreen forests In Sumatra it inhabits lowland peat swamp forests and rugged montane forests Population density Camera trapping during 2010 2015 in the deciduous and subtropical pine forest of Jim Corbett National Park northern India revealed a stable tiger population density of 12 17 individuals per 100 km2 39 sq mi in an area of 521 km2 201 sq mi In northern Myanmar the population density in a sampled area of roughly 3 250 km2 1 250 sq mi in a mosaic of tropical broadleaf forest and grassland was estimated to be 0 21 0 44 tigers per 100 km2 39 sq mi as of 2009 Population density in mixed deciduous and semi evergreen forests of Thailand s Huai Kha Khaeng Wildlife Sanctuary was estimated at 2 01 tigers per 100 km2 39 sq mi during the 1970s and 1980s logging and poaching had occurred in the adjacent Mae Wong and Khlong Lan National Parks where population density was much lower estimated at only 0 359 tigers per 100 km2 39 sq mi as of 2016 Population density in dipterocarp and montane forests in northern Malaysia was estimated at 1 47 2 43 adult tigers per 100 km2 39 sq mi in Royal Belum State Park but 0 3 0 92 adult tigers per 100 km2 39 sq mi in the unprotected selectively logged Temengor Forest Reserve Behaviour and ecologyTiger bathing Camera trap data show that tigers in Chitwan National Park avoided locations frequented by people and were more active at night than during day In Sundarbans National Park six radio collared tigers were most active from dawn to early morning and reached their zenith around 7 00 o clock in the morning A three year long camera trap survey in Shuklaphanta National Park revealed that tigers were most active from dusk until midnight In northeastern China tigers were crepuscular and active at night with activity peaking at dawn and dusk they were largely active at the same time as their prey The tiger is a powerful swimmer and easily transverses rivers as wide as 8 km 5 0 mi it immerses in water particularly on hot days In general it is less capable of climbing trees than many other cats due to its size but cubs under 16 months old may routinely do so An adult was recorded climbing 10 m 33 ft up a smooth pipal tree Social spacing Adult tigers lead largely solitary lives within home ranges or territories the size of which mainly depends on prey abundance geographic area and sex of the individual Males and females defend their home ranges from those of the same sex and the home range of a male encompasses that of multiple females Two females in the Sundarbans had home ranges of 10 6 and 14 1 km2 4 1 and 5 4 sq mi In Panna Tiger Reserve the home ranges of five reintroduced females varied from 53 67 km2 20 26 sq mi in winter to 55 60 km2 21 23 sq mi in summer and to 46 94 km2 18 36 sq mi during the monsoon three males had 84 147 km2 32 57 sq mi large home ranges in winter 82 98 km2 32 38 sq mi in summer and 81 118 km2 31 46 sq mi during monsoon seasons In Sikhote Alin Biosphere Reserve 14 females had home ranges 248 520 km2 96 201 sq mi and five resident males of 847 1 923 km2 327 742 sq mi that overlapped with those of up to five females When tigresses in the same reserve had cubs of up to four months of age they reduced their home ranges to stay near their young and steadily enlarged them until their offspring were 13 18 months old Bengal tigers spraying urine above and rubbing against a tree to mark territory The tiger is a long ranging species and individuals disperse over distances of up to 650 km 400 mi to reach tiger populations in other areas Young tigresses establish their first home ranges close to their mothers while males migrate further than their female counterparts Four radio collared females in Chitwan dispersed between 0 and 43 2 km 0 0 and 26 8 mi and 10 males between 9 5 and 65 7 km 5 9 and 40 8 mi A subadult male lives as a transient in another male s home range until he is older and strong enough to challenge the resident male Tigers mark their home ranges by spraying urine on vegetation and rocks clawing or scent rubbing trees and marking trails with faeces anal gland secretions and ground scrapings Scent markings also allow an individual to pick up information on another s identity Unclaimed home ranges particularly those that belonged to a deceased individual can be taken over in days or weeks Male tigers are generally less tolerant of other males within their home ranges than females are of other females Disputes are usually solved by intimidation rather than fighting Once dominance has been established a male may tolerate a subordinate within his range as long as they do not come near him The most serious disputes tend to occur between two males competing for a female in oestrus Though tigers mostly live alone relationships between individuals can be complex Tigers are particularly social at kills and a male tiger will sometimes share a carcass with the females and cubs within this home range and unlike male lions will allow them to feed on the kill before he is finished with it However a female is more tense when encountering another female at a kill Communication Siberian tiger baring teeth as a sign of aggression source source source source source source Captive Sumatran tiger roaring During friendly encounters and bonding tigers rub against each other s bodies Facial expressions include the defence threat which involves a wrinkled face bared teeth pulled back ears and widened pupils Both males and females show a flehmen response a characteristic curled lip grimace when smelling urine markings Males also use the flehmen to detect the markings made by tigresses in oestrus Tigers will move their ears around to display the white spots particularly during aggressive encounters and between mothers and cubs They also use their tails to signal their mood To show cordiality the tail sticks up and sways slowly while an apprehensive tiger lowers its tail or wags it side to side When calm the tail hangs low Tigers are normally silent but can produce numerous vocalisations They roar to signal their presence to other individuals over long distances This vocalisation is forced through an open mouth as it closes and can be heard 3 km 1 9 mi away They roar multiple times in a row and others respond in kind Tigers also roar during mating and a mother will roar to call her cubs to her When tense tigers moan a sound similar to a roar but softer and made when the mouth is at least partially closed Moaning can be heard 400 m 1 300 ft away Aggressive encounters involve growling snarling and hissing An explosive coughing roar or coughing snarl is emitted through an open mouth and exposed teeth In friendlier situations tigers prusten a soft low frequency snorting sound similar to purring in smaller cats Tiger mothers communicate with their cubs by grunting while cubs call back with miaows When startled they woof They produce a deer like pok sound for unknown reasons but most often at kills Hunting and diet Bengal tiger attacking a sambar deer in Ranthambore Tiger Reserve The tiger is a carnivore and an apex predator feeding mainly on large and medium sized ungulates with a preference for sambar deer Manchurian wapiti barasingha gaur and wild boar Abundance and body weight of prey species are assumed to be the main criteria for the tiger s prey selection both inside and outside protected areas It also preys opportunistically on smaller species like monkeys peafowl and other ground based birds porcupines and fish Occasional attacks on Asian elephants and Indian rhinoceroses have also been reported More often tigers take the more vulnerable calves They sometimes prey on livestock and dogs in close proximity to settlements Tigers occasionally consume vegetation fruit and minerals for dietary fibre and supplements Tigers learn to hunt from their mothers though the ability to hunt may be partially inborn Depending on the size of the prey they typically kill weekly though mothers must kill more often Families hunt together when cubs are old enough They search for prey using vision and hearing A tiger will also wait at a watering hole for prey to come by particularly during hot summer days It is an ambush predator and when approaching potential prey it crouches with the head lowered and hides in foliage It switches between creeping forward and staying still A tiger may even doze off and can stay in the same spot for as long as a day waiting for prey and launch an attack when the prey is close enough usually within 30 m 98 ft If the prey spots it before then the cat does not pursue further A tiger can sprint 56 km h 35 mph and leap 10 m 33 ft it is not a long distance runner and gives up a chase if prey outpaces it over a certain distance Two Bengal tigers attacking a wild boar in Kanha Tiger Reserve The tiger attacks from behind or at the sides and tries to knock the target off balance It latches onto prey with its forelimbs twisting and turning during the struggle and tries to pull it to the ground The tiger generally applies a bite to the throat until its victim dies of strangulation It has an average bite force at the canine tips of 1234 3 newtons Holding onto the throat puts the cat out of reach of horns antlers tusks and hooves Tigers are adaptable killers and may use other methods including ripping the throat or breaking the neck Large prey may be disabled by a bite to the back of the hock severing the tendon Swipes from the large paws are capable of stunning or breaking the skull of a water buffalo They kill small prey with a bite to the back of the neck or head Estimates of the success rate for hunting tigers range from a low of 5 to a high of 50 They are sometimes killed or injured by large or dangerous prey like gaur buffalo and boar Tigers typically move kills to a private usually vegetated spot no further than 183 m 600 ft though they have been recorded dragging them 549 m 1 801 ft They are strong enough to drag the carcass of a fully grown buffalo for some distance They rest for a while before eating and can consume as much as 50 kg 110 lb of meat in one session but feed on a carcass for several days leaving little for scavengers Competitors An 1807 illustration of dholes attacking a tiger In much of their range tigers share habitat with leopards and dholes They typically dominate both of them though with dholes it depends on their pack size Interactions between the three predators involve chasing stealing kills and direct killing Large dhole packs may kill tigers Tigers leopards and dholes coexist by hunting different sized prey In Nagarhole National Park the average weight for tiger kills was found to be 91 5 kg 202 lb compared to 37 6 kg 83 lb for leopards and 43 4 kg 96 lb for dholes In Kui Buri National Park following a reduction in prey numbers tigers continued to kill favoured prey while leopards and dholes increased their consumption of small prey Both leopards and dholes can live successfully in tiger habitat when there is abundant food and vegetation cover Otherwise they appear to be less common where tigers are numerous The recovery of the tiger population in Rajaji National Park during the 2000s led to a reduction in leopard population densities Similarly at two sites in central India the size of dhole packs was negatively correlated with tiger densities Leopard and dhole distribution in Kui Buri correlated with both prey access and tiger scarcity In Jigme Dorji National Park tigers were found to inhabit the deeper parts of forests while the smaller predators were pushed closer to the fringes Reproduction and life cycle A Bengal tiger family in Kanha Tiger Reserve The tiger generally mates all year round particularly between November and April A tigress is in oestrus for three to six days at a time separated by three to nine week intervals A resident male mates with all the females within his home range who signal their receptiveness by roaring and marking Younger transient males are also attracted leading to a fight in which the more dominant resident male drives the usurper off During courtship the male is cautious with the female as he waits for her to show signs she is ready to mate She signals to him by positioning herself in lordosis with her tail to the side Copulation typically lasts no more than 20 seconds with the male biting the female by the scruff of her neck After it is finished the male quickly pulls away as the female may turn and slap him Tiger pairs may stay together for up to four days and mate multiple times Gestation lasts around or over three months A tigress gives birth in a secluded location be it in dense vegetation in a cave or under a rocky shelter Litters consist of as many as seven cubs but two or three are more typical Newborn cubs weigh 785 1 610 g 27 7 56 8 oz and are blind and altricial The mother licks and cleans her cubs suckles them and viciously defends them from any potential threat Cubs open their eyes at the age of three to 14 days and their vision becomes clear after a few more weeks They can leave the denning site after two months and around the same time they start eating meat The mother only leaves them alone to hunt and even then she does not travel far When she suspects an area is no longer safe she moves her cubs to a new spot transporting them one by one by grabbing them by the scruff of the neck with her mouth A tigress in Sikhote Alin Biosphere Reserve maximised the time spent with her cubs by reducing her home range killing larger prey and returning to her den more rapidly than without cubs when the cubs started to eat meat she took them to kill sites thereby optimising their protection and access to food In the same reserve one of 21 cubs died in over eight years of monitoring and mortality did not differ between male and female juveniles Tiger monitoring over six years in Ranthambore Tiger Reserve indicated an average annual survival rate of around 85 percent for 74 male and female cubs survival rate increased to 97 percent for both males and female juveniles of one to two years of age Causes of cub mortality include predators floods fires death of the mother and fatal injuries A Siberian tigress with her cub at Buffalo Zoo After around two months the cubs are able to follow their mother They still hide in vegetation when she goes hunting Young bond through play fighting and practice stalking A hierarchy develops in the litter with the biggest cub often a male being the most dominant and the first to eat its fill at a kill Around the age of six months cubs are fully weaned and have more freedom to explore their environment Between eight and ten months they accompany their mother on hunts A cub can make a kill as early as 11 months and reach independence as a juvenile of 18 to 24 months of age males become independent earlier than females Radio collared tigers in Chitwan started leaving their natal areas at the age of 19 months Young females are sexually mature at three to four years whereas males are at four to five years Generation length of the tiger is about 7 10 years Wild Bengal tigers live 12 15 years Data from the International Tiger Studbook 1938 2018 indicate that captive tigers lived up to 19 years The father does not play a role in raising the young but he encounters and interacts with them The resident male appears to visit the female cub families within his home range They socialise and even share kills One male was recorded looking after cubs whose mother had died By defending his home range the male protects the females and cubs from other males When a new male takes over dependent cubs are at risk of infanticide as the male attempts to sire his own young with the females A seven year long study in Chitwan National Park revealed that 12 of 56 detected cubs and juveniles were killed by new males taking over home ranges Health and diseases Tigers are recorded as hosts for various parasites including tapeworms like Diphyllobothrium erinacei Taenia pisiformis in India and nematodes like Toxocara species in India and Physaloptera preputialis Dirofilaria ursi and species in Siberia Canine distemper is known to occur in Siberian tigers A morbillivirus infection was the likely cause of death of a tigress in the Russian Far East that was also tested positive for feline panleukopenia and feline coronavirus Blood samples from 11 adult tigers in Nepal showed antibodies for canine parvovirus 2 feline herpesvirus feline coronavirus leptospirosis and Toxoplasma gondii ThreatsThe tiger has been listed as Endangered on the IUCN Red List since 1986 and the global tiger population is thought to have continuously declined from an estimated population of 5 000 8 262 tigers in the late 1990s to 3 726 5 578 individuals estimated as of 2022 During 2001 2020 landscapes where tigers live declined from 1 025 488 km2 395 943 sq mi to 911 901 km2 352 087 sq mi Habitat destruction habitat fragmentation and poaching for fur and body parts are the major threats that contributed to the decrease of tiger populations in all range countries Protected areas in central India are highly fragmented due to linear infrastructure like roads railway lines transmission lines irrigation channels and mining activities in their vicinity In the Tanintharyi Region of southern Myanmar deforestation coupled with mining activities and high hunting pressure threatens the tiger population In Thailand nine of 15 protected areas hosting tigers are isolated and fragmented offering a low probability for dispersal between them four of these have not harboured tigers since about 2013 In Peninsular Malaysia 8 315 7 km2 3 210 7 sq mi of tiger habitat was cleared during 1988 2012 most of it for industrial plantations Large scale land acquisitions of about 23 000 km2 8 900 sq mi for commercial agriculture and timber extraction in Cambodia contributed to the fragmentation of potential tiger habitat especially in the Eastern Plains Inbreeding depression coupled with habitat destruction insufficient prey resources and poaching is a threat to the small and isolated tiger population in the Changbai Mountains along the China Russia border In China tigers became the target of large scale anti pest campaigns in the early 1950s where suitable habitats were fragmented following deforestation and resettlement of people to rural areas who hunted tigers and prey species Though tiger hunting was prohibited in 1977 the population continued to decline and is considered extinct in South China since 2001 A Javan tiger skin 1915 Tiger populations in India have been targeted by poachers since the 1990s and were extirpated in two tiger reserves in 2005 and 2009 Between March 2017 and January 2020 630 activities of hunters using snares drift nets hunting platforms and hunting dogs were discovered in a reserve forest of about 1 000 km2 390 sq mi in southern Myanmar Nam Et Phou Louey National Park was considered the last important site for the tiger in Laos but it has not been recorded there at least since 2013 this population likely fell victim to indiscriminate snaring Anti poaching units in Sumatra s Kerinci Seblat landscape removed 362 tiger snare traps and seized 91 tiger skins during 2005 2016 annual poaching rates increased with rising skin prices Poaching is also the main threat to the tiger population in far eastern Russia where logging roads facilitate access for poachers and people harvesting forest products that are important for prey species to survive in winter Body parts of 207 tigers were detected during 21 surveys in 1991 2014 in two wildlife markets in Myanmar catering to customers in Thailand and China During the years 2000 2022 at least 3 377 tigers were confiscated in 2 205 seizures in 28 countries seizures encompassed 665 live and 654 dead individuals 1 313 whole tiger skins 16 214 body parts like bones teeth paws claws whiskers and 1 1 t 1 1 long tons 1 2 short tons of meat 759 seizures in India encompassed body parts of 893 tigers and 403 seizures in Thailand involved mostly captive bred tigers Seizures in Nepal between January 2011 and December 2015 obtained 585 pieces of tiger body parts and two whole carcasses in 19 districts Seizure data from India during 2001 2021 indicate that tiger skins were the most often traded body parts followed by claws bones and teeth trafficking routes mainly passed through the states of Maharashtra Karnataka Tamil Nadu and Assam A total of 292 illegal tiger parts were confiscated at US ports of entry from personal baggage air cargo and mail between 2003 and 2012 Demand for tiger parts for use in traditional Chinese medicine has also been cited as a major threat to tiger populations Interviews with local people in the Bangladeshi Sundarbans revealed that they kill tigers for local consumption and trade of skins bones and meat in retaliation for attacks by tigers and for excitement Tiger body parts like skins bones teeth and hair are consumed locally by wealthy Bangladeshis and are illegally trafficked from Bangladesh to 15 countries including India China Malaysia Korea Vietnam Cambodia Japan and the United Kingdom via land borders airports and seaports Tiger bone glue is the prevailing tiger product purchased for medicinal purposes in Hanoi and Ho Chi Minh City Tiger farm facilities in China and Southeast Asia breed tigers for their parts but these appear to make the threat to wild populations worse by increasing the demand for tiger products Local people killing tigers in retaliation for attacking and preying on livestock is a threat in several tiger range countries as this consequence of human wildlife conflict also contributes to the decline of the population ConservationGlobal wild tiger population Country Year EstimateIndia 2022 3 167 3 682Russia 2022 573 600Indonesia 2022 393Nepal 2022 316 355Thailand 2022 148 189Malaysia 2022 lt 150Bhutan 2022 131Bangladesh 2022 118 122China 2022 gt 60Myanmar 2022 28Total 5 638 5 899 Internationally the tiger is protected under CITES Appendix I banning trade of live tigers and their body parts In Russia hunting the tiger has been banned since 1952 In Bhutan it has been protected since 1969 and enlisted as totally protected since 1995 Since 1972 it has been afforded the highest protection level under India s Wild Life Protection Act 1972 In Nepal and Bangladesh it has been protected since 1973 Since 1976 it has been totally protected under Malaysia s Protection of Wild Life Act and the country s Wildlife Conservation Act enacted in 2010 increased punishments for wildlife related crimes In Indonesia it has been protected since 1990 In China the trade in tiger body parts was banned in 1993 The Thai Wildlife Preservation and Protection Act was enacted in 2019 to combat poaching and trading of body parts In 1973 the National Tiger Conservation Authority and Project Tiger were founded in India to gain public support for tiger conservation Since then 53 tiger reserves covering an area of 75 796 km2 29 265 sq mi have been established in the country up to 2022 These efforts contributed to the recovery of India s tiger population between 2006 and 2018 so that it occurs in an area of about 138 200 km2 53 400 sq mi Myanmar s national tiger conservation strategy developed in 2003 comprises management tasks such as restoration of degraded habitats increasing the extent of protected areas and wildlife corridors protecting tiger prey species thwarting tiger killing and illegal trade of its body parts and promoting public awareness through wildlife education programmes Bhutan s first Tiger Action Plan implemented during 2006 2015 revolved around habitat conservation human wildlife conflict management education and awareness the second Action Plan aimed at increasing the country s tiger population by 20 until 2023 compared to 2015 In 2009 the Bangladesh Tiger Action Plan was initiated to stabilise the country s tiger population maintain habitat and a sufficient prey base improve law enforcement and foster cooperation between governmental agencies responsible for tiger conservation The Thailand Tiger Action Plan ratified in 2010 envisioned increasing the country s tiger populations by 50 in the Western Forest Complex and Dong Phayayen Khao Yai Forest Complex and reestablish populations in three potential landscapes until 2022 The Indonesian National Tiger Recovery Program ratified in 2010 aimed at increasing the Sumatran tiger population by 2022 The third strategic and action plan for the conservation of the Sumatran tiger for the years 2020 2030 revolves around strengthening management of small tiger population units of less than 20 mature individuals and connectivity between 13 forest patches in North Sumatra and West Sumatra provinces Wild Sumatran tiger caught by camera trap Increases in anti poaching patrol efforts in four Russian protected areas during 2011 2014 contributed to reducing poaching stabilising the tiger population and improving protection of ungulate populations Poaching and trafficking were declared to be moderate and serious crimes in 2019 Anti poaching operations were also established in Nepal in 2010 with increased cooperation and intelligence sharing between agencies These policies have led to many years of zero poaching and the country s tiger population has doubled in a decade Anti poaching patrols in the 1 200 km2 460 sq mi large core area of Taman Negara lead to a decrease of poaching frequency from 34 detected incidents in 2015 2016 to 20 incidents during 2018 2019 the arrest of seven poaching teams and removal of snares facilitated the survival of three resident female tigers and at least 11 cubs Army and police officers are deployed for patrolling together with staff of protected areas in Malaysia Wildlife corridors are important conservation measures as they facilitate tiger populations to connect between protected areas tigers use at least nine corridors that were established in the Terai Arc Landscape and Sivalik Hills in both Nepal and India Corridors in forested areas with low human encroachment are highly suitable In West Sumatra 12 wildlife corridors were identified as high priority for mitigating human wildlife conflicts In 2019 China and Russia signed a memorandum of understanding for transboundary cooperation between two protected areas Northeast China Tiger and Leopard National Park and Land of the Leopard National Park that includes the creation of wildlife corridors and bilateral monitoring and patrolling along the Sino Russian border Rescued and rehabilitated problem tigers and orphaned tiger cubs have been released into the wild and monitored in India Sumatra and Russia In Kazakhstan habitat restoration and reintroduction of prey species in Ile Balkash Nature Reserve have progressed and tiger reintroduction is planned for 2025 Reintroduction of tigers is considered possible in eastern Cambodia once management of protected areas is improved and forest loss stabilized South China tigers are kept and bred in Chinese zoos with plans to reintroduce their offspring into remote protected areas Coordinated breeding programs among zoos have led to enough genetic diversity in tigers to act as insurance against extinction in the wild Relationship with humansTiger hunting on elephant back in India 1808Hunting Tigers have been hunted by humans for millennia as indicated by a painting on the Bhimbetka rock shelters in India that is dated to 5 000 6 000 years ago They were hunted throughout their range in Asia chased on horseback elephant back or even with sled dogs and killed with spears and later firearms Such hunts were conducted both by Asian governments and empires like the Mughal Empire as well as European colonists Tigers were often hunted as trophies and because of their perceived danger An estimated 80 000 tigers were killed between 1875 and 1925 Attacks A Bengal tiger in the Sundarbans In most areas tigers avoid humans but attacks are a risk wherever people coexist with them Dangerous encounters are more likely to occur in edge habitats between wild and agricultural areas Most attacks on humans are defensive including protection of young however tigers do sometimes see people as prey Man eating tigers tend to be old and disabled Tigers driven from their home ranges are also at risk of turning to man eating At the beginning of the 20th century the Champawat Tiger was responsible for over 430 human deaths in Nepal and India before she was shot by Jim Corbett This tigress suffered from broken teeth and was unable to kill normal prey Modern authors speculate that sustaining on meagre human flesh forced the cat to kill more and more Tiger attacks were particularly high in Singapore during the mid 19th century when plantations expanded into the tiger s habitat In the 1840s the number of deaths in the area ranged from 200 to 300 annually Tiger attacks in the Sundarbans caused 1 396 human deaths in the period 1935 2006 according to official records of the Bangladesh Forest Department Victims of these attacks are local villagers who enter the tiger s domain to collect resources like wood and honey Fishermen have been particularly common targets Methods to counter tiger attacks have included face masks worn backwards protective clothes sticks and carefully stationed electric dummies Captivity Tiger at Big Cat Rescue in 2014Publicity photo of animal trainer Gunther Gebel Williams with several of his trained tigers c 1969 Tigers have been kept in captivity since ancient times In ancient Rome tigers were displayed in amphitheatres they were slaughtered in venatio hunts and used to kill criminals The Mongol ruler Kublai Khan is reported to have kept tigers in the 13th century Starting in the Middle Ages tigers were being kept in European menageries Tigers and other exotic animals were mainly used for the entertainment of elites but from the 19th century onward they were exhibited more to the public Tigers were particularly big attractions and their captive population soared In 2020 there were over 8 000 captive tigers in Asia over 5 000 in the US and no less than 850 in Europe There are more tigers in captivity than in the wild Captive tigers may display stereotypical behaviours such as pacing or inactivity Modern zoos are able to reduce such behaviours with exhibits designed so the animals can move between separate but connected enclosures Enrichment items are also important for the cat s welfare and the stimulation of its natural behaviours Tigers have played prominent roles in circuses and other live performances Ringling Bros included many tiger tamers in the 20th century including Mabel Stark who became a big draw and had a long career She was well known for being able to control the tigers despite being a small woman using manly tools like whips and guns Another trainer was Clyde Beatty who used chairs whips and guns to provoke tigers and other beasts into acting fierce and allowed him to appear courageous He would perform with as many as 40 tigers and lions in one act From the 1960s onward trainers like Gunther Gebel Williams would use gentler methods to control their animals Sara Houcke was dubbed the Tiger Whisperer as she trained the cats to obey her by whispering to them Siegfried amp Roy became famous for performing with white tigers in Las Vegas The act ended in 2003 when a tiger attacked Roy during a performance In 2009 tigers were the most traded circus animals The use of tigers and other animals in shows eventually declined in many countries due to pressure from animal rights groups and greater desires from the public to see them in more natural settings Several countries restrict or ban such acts Tigers have become popular in the exotic pet trade particularly in the United States where only 6 of the captive tiger population in 2020 were being housed in zoos and other facilities approved by the Association of Zoos and Aquariums Private collectors are thought to be ill equipped to provide proper care for tigers which compromises their welfare They can also threaten public safety by allowing people to interact with them The keeping of tigers and other big cats by private people was banned in the US in 2022 Most countries in the European Union have banned breeding and keeping tigers outside of licensed zoos and rescue centres but some still allow private holdings Cultural significance Tiger shaped jie badge of authority with gold inlays from the tomb of Zhao Mo The tiger is among the most famous of the charismatic megafauna Kailash Sankhala has called it a rare combination of courage ferocity and brilliant colour while Candy d Sa calls it fierce and commanding on the outside but noble and discerning on the inside In a 2004 online poll involving more than 50 000 people from 73 countries the tiger was voted the world s favourite animal with 21 of the vote narrowly beating the dog Similarly a 2018 study found the tiger to be the most popular wild animal based on surveys as well as appearances on websites of major zoos and posters of some animated movies While the lion represented royalty and power in Western culture the tiger played such a role in various Asian cultures In ancient China the tiger was seen as the king of the forest and symbolised the power of the emperor In Chinese astrology the tiger is the third out of 12 symbols in the Chinese zodiac and controls the period between 15 00 and 17 00 o clock in the afternoon The Year of the Tiger is thought to bring dramatic and extreme events The White Tiger is one of the Four Symbols of the Chinese constellations representing the west along with the yin and the season of autumn It is the counterpart to the Azure Dragon which conversely symbolises the east yang and springtime The tiger is one of the animals displayed on the Pashupati seal of the Indus Valley Civilisation The big cat was depicted on seals and coins during the Chola dynasty of southern India as it was the official emblem The Hindu goddess Durga riding a tiger Guler school early 18th century Tigers have had religious and folkloric significance In Buddhism the tiger monkey and deer are the Three Senseless Creatures with the tiger symbolising anger In Hinduism the tiger is the vehicle of Durga the goddess of feminine power and peace whom the gods created to fight demons Similarly in the Greco Roman world the tiger was depicted being ridden by the god Dionysus In Korean mythology tigers are messengers of the Mountain Gods In both Chinese and Korean culture tigers are seen as protectors against evil spirits and their image was used to decorate homes tombs and articles of clothing In the folklore of Malaysia and Indonesia tiger shamans heal the sick by invoking the big cat People turning into tigers and the inverse has also been widespread in particular weretigers are people who could change into tigers and back again The Mnong people of Indochina believed that tigers could shapeshift into humans Among some indigenous peoples of Siberia it was believed that men would seduce women by transforming into tigers William Blake s 1794 poem The Tyger portrays the animal as the duality of beauty and ferocity It is the sister poem to The Lamb in Blake s Songs of Innocence and of Experience and he ponders how God could create such different creatures The tiger is featured in the mediaeval Chinese novel Water Margin where the cat battles and is slain by the bandit Wu Song while the tiger Shere Khan in Rudyard Kipling s The Jungle Book 1894 is the mortal enemy of the human protagonist Mowgli Friendly tame tigers have also existed in culture notably Tigger the Winnie the Pooh character and Tony the Tiger the Kellogg s cereal mascot See alsoList of largest cats International Tiger Day Tiger TempleReferencesGoodrich J Wibisono H Miquelle D Lynam A J Sanderson E Chapman S Gray T N E Chanchani P amp Harihar A 2022 Panthera tigris IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2022 e T15955A214862019 doi 10 2305 IUCN UK 2022 1 RLTS T15955A214862019 en Retrieved 31 August 2022 Linnaeus C 1758 Felis tigris Caroli Linnaei Systema naturae per regna tria naturae secundum classes ordines genera species cum characteribus differentiis synonymis locis in Latin Vol Tomus I decima reformata ed Holmiae Laurentius Salvius p 41 Ellerman J R amp Morrison Scott T C S 1951 Panthera tigris Linnaeus 1758 Checklist of Palaearctic and Indian mammals 1758 to 1946 London British Museum pp 318 319 Liddell H G amp Scott R 1940 tigris A Greek English Lexicon Revised and augmented ed Oxford Clarendon Press Archived from the original on 21 October 2020 Retrieved 21 February 2021 Varro M T 1938 XX Ferarum vocabula XX The names of wild beasts De lingua latina On the Latin language Translated by Kent R G London W Heinemann pp 94 97 Thorley D 2017 Naming the tiger in the Early Modern world Renaissance Quarterly 70 3 977 1006 doi 10 1086 693884 JSTOR 26560471 S2CID 165388712 Pocock R I 1929 Tigers Journal of the Bombay Natural History Society 33 3 505 541 Pocock R I 1939 Panthera tigris The Fauna of British India Including Ceylon and Burma Vol Mammalia Volume 1 London T Taylor and Francis Ltd pp 197 210 Wozencraft W C 2005 Species Panthera tigris In Wilson D E Reeder D M eds Mammal Species of the World A Taxonomic and Geographic Reference 3rd ed Johns Hopkins University Press p 546 ISBN 978 0 8018 8221 0 OCLC 62265494 Wilting A Courtiol A Christiansen P Niedballa J Scharf A K Orlando L Balkenhol N Hofer H Kramer Schadt S Fickel J amp Kitchener A C 2015 Planning tiger recovery Understanding intraspecific variation for effective conservation Science Advances 11 5 e1400175 Bibcode 2015SciA 1E0175W doi 10 1126 sciadv 1400175 PMC 4640610 PMID 26601191 Kitchener A 1999 Tiger distribution phenotypic variation and conservation issues in Seidensticker Christie amp Jackson 1999 pp 19 39 Kitchener A C Breitenmoser Wursten C Eizirik E Gentry A Werdelin L Wilting A Yamaguchi N Abramov A V Christiansen P Driscoll C Duckworth J W Johnson W Luo S J Meijaard E O Donoghue P Sanderson J Seymour K Bruford M Groves C Hoffmann M Nowell K Timmons Z amp Tobe S 2017 A revised taxonomy of the Felidae The final report of the Cat Classification Task Force of the IUCN Cat Specialist Group PDF Cat News Special Issue 11 66 68 Archived PDF from the original on 17 January 2020 Retrieved 27 August 2019 Liu Y C Sun X Driscoll C Miquelle D G Xu X Martelli P Uphyrkina O Smith J L D O Brien S J amp Luo S J 2018 Genome wide evolutionary analysis of natural history and adaptation in the world s tigers Current Biology 28 23 3840 3849 Bibcode 2018CBio 28E3840L doi 10 1016 j cub 2018 09 019 PMID 30482605 Armstrong E E Khan A Taylor R W Gouy A Greenbaum G Thiery A Kang J T Redondo S A Prost S Barsh G Kaelin C Phalke S Chugani A Gilbert M Miquelle D Zachariah A Borthakur U Reddy A Louis E Ryder O A Jhala Y V Petrov D Excoffier L Hadly E amp Ramakrishnan U 2021 Recent evolutionary history of tigers highlights contrasting roles of genetic drift and selection Molecular Biology and Evolution 38 6 2366 2379 doi 10 1093 molbev msab032 PMC 8136513 PMID 33592092 Wang C Wu D D Yuan Y H Yao M C Han J L Wu Y J Shan F Li W P Zhai J Q Huang M Peng S H Cai Q H Yu J Y Liu Q X Lui Z Y Li L X Teng M S Huang W Zhou J Y Zhang C Chen W amp Tu X L 2023 Population genomic analysis provides evidence of the past success and future potential of South China tiger captive conservation BMC Biology 21 1 64 doi 10 1186 s12915 023 01552 y PMC 10111772 PMID 37069598 Tiger CatSG Retrieved 14 June 2024 Nowell K amp Jackson P 1996 Tiger Panthera tigris Linnaeus 1758 PDF Wild Cats Status Survey and Conservation Action Plan Gland Switzerland IUCN pp 55 65 ISBN 2 8317 0045 0 Archived PDF from the original on 25 January 2024 Retrieved 25 January 2024 Srivastav A Malviya M Tyagi P C amp Nigam P 2011 Indian National Studbook of the Bengal Tiger Panthera tigris tigris PDF Report Central Zoo Authority Wildlife Institute of India Retrieved 27 May 2024 Mazak J H 2010 Craniometric variation in the tiger Panthera tigris Implications for patterns of diversity taxonomy and conservation Mammalian Biology 75 1 45 68 Bibcode 2010MamBi 75 45M doi 10 1016 j mambio 2008 06 003 Illiger C 1815 Uberblick der Saugethiere nach ihrer Verteilung uber die Welttheile Abhandlungen der Koniglichen Preussischen Akademie der Wissenschaften zu Berlin 1804 1811 39 159 Sludskii 1992 p 137 Driscoll C A Yamaguchi N Bar Gal G K Roca A L Luo S MacDonald D W amp O Brien S J 2009 Mitochondrial phylogeography illuminates the origin of the extinct Caspian Tiger and its relationship to the Amur Tiger PLOS ONE 4 1 e4125 Bibcode 2009PLoSO 4 4125D doi 10 1371 journal pone 0004125 PMC 2624500 PMID 19142238 Seidensticker J Christie S amp Jackson P 1999 Preface in Seidensticker Christie amp Jackson 1999 pp xv xx Temminck C J 1844 Apercu general et specifique sur les Mammiferes qui habitent le Japon et les Iles qui en dependent In Siebold P F v Temminck C J Schlegel H eds Fauna Japonica sive Descriptio animalium quae in itinere per Japoniam jussu et auspiciis superiorum qui summum in India Batava imperium tenent suscepto annis 1825 1830 collegit notis observationibus et adumbrationibus illustravit Ph Fr de Siebold Leiden Lugduni Batavorum Sludskii 1992 p 131 Hilzheimer M 1905 Uber einige Tigerschadel aus der Strassburger zoologischen Sammlung Zoologischer Anzeiger 28 594 599 Sun X Liu Y C Tiunov M P Gimranov D O Zhuang Y Han Y Driscoll C A Driscoll C A Pang Y Li C Pan Y Velasco M S Gopalakrishnan S Yang R Z Li B G Jin K Xu X Uphyrkina O Huang Y Wu X H Gilbert M T P O Brien S J Yamaguchi N amp Luo S J 2023 Ancient DNA reveals genetic admixture in China during tiger evolution Nature Ecology amp Evolution 7 11 1914 1929 Bibcode 2023NatEE 7 1914S doi 10 1038 s41559 023 02185 8 PMID 37652999 Hu J Westbury M V Yuan J Wang C Xiao B Chen S Song S Wang L Lin H Lai X amp Sheng G 2022 An extinct and deeply divergent tiger lineage from northeastern China recognized through palaeogenomics Proceedings of the Royal Society B Biological Sciences 289 1979 doi 10 1098 rspb 2022 0617 PMC 9326283 PMID 35892215 Mazak V 1968 Nouvelle sous espece de tigre provenant de l Asie du sud est Mammalia 32 1 104 112 doi 10 1515 mamm 1968 32 1 104 S2CID 84054536 Mazak J H amp Groves C P 2006 A taxonomic revision of the tigers Panthera tigris of Southeast Asia PDF Mammalian Biology 71 5 268 287 Bibcode 2006MamBi 71 268M doi 10 1016 j mambio 2006 02 007 Archived PDF from the original on 31 May 2023 Retrieved 15 January 2024 Luo S J Kim J H Johnson W E van der Walt J Martenson J Yuhki N Miquelle D G Uphyrkina O Goodrich J M Quigley H B Tilson R Brady G Martelli P Subramaniam V McDougal C Hean S Huang S Q Pan W Karanth U K Sunquist M Smith J L D amp O Brien S J 2004 Phylogeography and genetic ancestry of tigers Panthera tigris PLOS Biology 2 12 e442 doi 10 1371 journal pbio 0020442 PMC 534810 PMID 15583716 Schwarz E 1912 Notes on Malay tigers with description of a new form from Bali Annals and Magazine of Natural History 8 10 57 324 326 doi 10 1080 00222931208693243 Mazak V 2004 Der Tiger in German Madgeburg Westarp Wissenschaften Hohenwarsleben ISBN 978 3 89432 759 0 Mazak V Groves C P amp Van Bree P 1978 Skin and Skull of the Bali Tiger and a list of preserved specimens of Panthera tigris balica Schwarz 1912 Zeitschrift fur Saugetierkunde 43 2 108 113 Pocock R I 1929 Tigers Journal of the Bombay Natural History Society 33 505 541 Li G Davis B W Eizirik E Murphy W J 2016 Phylogenomic evidence for ancient hybridization in the genomes of living cats Felidae Genome Research 26 1 1 11 doi 10 1101 gr 186668 114 PMC 4691742 PMID 26518481 Davis B W Li G amp Murphy W J 2010 Supermatrix and species tree methods resolve phylogenetic relationships within the big cats Panthera Carnivora Felidae Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution 56 1 64 76 Bibcode 2010MolPE 56 64D doi 10 1016 j ympev 2010 01 036 PMID 20138224 Cho Y S Hu L Hou H Lee H Xu J Kwon S Oh S Kim H M Jho S Kim S Shin Y A Kim B C Kim H Kim C U Luo S J Johnson W E Koepfli K P Schmidt Kuntzel A Turner J A Marker L Harper C Miller S M Jacobs W Bertola L D Kim T H Lee S Zhou Q Jung H J Xu X amp Gadhvi P 2013 The tiger genome and comparative analysis with lion and snow leopard genomes Nature Communications 4 2433 Bibcode 2013NatCo 4 2433C doi 10 1038 ncomms3433 hdl 2263 32583 PMC 3778509 PMID 24045858 Mazak J H Christiansen P amp Kitchener A C 2011 Oldest Known Pantherine Skull and Evolution of the Tiger PLOS ONE 6 10 e25483 Bibcode 2011PLoSO 625483M doi 10 1371 journal pone 0025483 PMC 3189913 PMID 22016768 Tseng Z J Wang X Slater G J Takeuchi G T Li Q Liu J amp Xie G 2014 Himalayan fossils of the oldest known pantherine establish ancient origin of big cats Proceedings of the Royal Society B Biological Sciences 281 1774 20132686 doi 10 1098 rspb 2013 2686 PMC 3843846 PMID 24225466 Hemmer Helmut 2023 The identity of the lion Panthera principialis sp nov from the Pliocene Tanzanian site of Laetoli and its significance for molecular dating the pantherine phylogeny with remarks on Panthera shawi Broom 1948 and a revision of Puma incurva Ewer 1956 the Early Pleistocene Swartkrans leopard Carnivora Felidae Palaeobiodiversity and Palaeoenvironments 103 2 465 487 Bibcode 2023PdPe 103 465H doi 10 1007 s12549 022 00542 2 Jiangzuo Q Wang Y Ge J Liu S Song Y Jin C Jiang H amp Liu J 2023 Discovery of jaguar from northeastern China middle Pleistocene reveals an intercontinental dispersal event Historical Biology 35 3 293 302 Bibcode 2023HBio 35 293J doi 10 1080 08912963 2022 2034808 S2CID 246693903 Kitchener A amp Yamaguchi N 2009 What is a Tiger Biogeography Morphology and Taxonomy in Tilson amp Nyhus 2010 pp 53 84 Hasegawa Y Takakuwa Y Nenoki K amp Kimura T Fossil tiger from limestone mine of Tsukumi City Oita Prefecture Kyushu Island Japan Bull Gunma Museum Nat Hist 23 2019 in Japanese with English abstract Gabrys J Kij B Kochan J amp Bugno Poniewierska M 2021 Interspecific hybrids of animals in nature breeding and science a review Annals of Animal Science 21 2 403 415 doi 10 2478 aoas 2020 0082 Genomic Imprinting Genetic Science Learning Center Utah org Archived from the original on 4 September 2019 Retrieved 26 August 2018 Mazak V 1981 Panthera tigris Mammalian Species 152 1 8 doi 10 2307 3504004 JSTOR 3504004 Sludskii 1992 p 98 Thapar 2004 p 26 Zhao C Dai W Liu Q Liu D Roberts N J Liu Z Gong M Qiu H Liu C Liu D Ma G amp Jiang G 2024 Combination of facial and nose features of Amur tigers to determine age Integrative Zoology doi 10 1111 1749 4877 12817 PMID 38509845 Sludskii 1992 p 103 Thapar 2004 p 25 Novak R M amp Walker E P 1999 Panthera tigris tiger Walker s Mammals of the World 6th ed Baltimore Johns Hopkins University Press pp 825 828 ISBN 978 0 8018 5789 8 Archived from the original on 5 May 2024 Retrieved 17 October 2020 a href wiki Template Cite book title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link Sunquist M 2010 What is a Tiger Ecology and Behaviour in Tilson amp Nyhus 2010 pp 19 34 Thapar 2004 p 28 Sludskii 1992 pp 99 102 Miquelle D Tiger in MacDonald 2001 pp 18 21 Allen W L Cuthill I C Scott Samuel N E amp Baddeley R 2010 Why the leopard got its spots relating pattern development to ecology in felids Proceedings of the Royal Society B 278 1710 1373 1380 doi 10 1098 rspb 2010 1734 PMC 3061134 PMID 20961899 Caro T 2005 The adaptive significance of coloration in mammals BioScience 55 2 125 136 doi 10 1641 0006 3568 2005 055 0125 TASOCI 2 0 CO 2 Godfrey D Lythgoe J N amp Rumball D A 1987 Zebra stripes and tiger stripes the spatial frequency distribution of the pattern compared to that of the background is significant in display and crypsis Biological Journal of the Linnean Society 32 4 427 433 doi 10 1111 j 1095 8312 1987 tb00442 x Fennell J G Talas L Baddeley R J Cuthill I C amp Scott Samuel N E 2019 Optimizing colour for camouflage and visibility using deep learning the effects of the environment and the observer s visual system Journal of the Royal Society Interface 16 154 20190183 doi 10 1098 rsif 2019 0183 PMC 6544896 PMID 31138092 Xu X Dong G X Schmidt Kuntzel A Zhang X L Zhuang Y Fang R Sun X Hu X S Zhang T Y Yang H D Zhang D L Marker L Jiang Z F Li R amp Luo S J 2017 The genetics of tiger pelage color variations PDF Cell Research 27 7 954 957 doi 10 1038 cr 2017 32 PMC 5518981 PMID 28281538 Retrieved 25 August 2018 Xavier N 2010 A new conservation policy needed for reintroduction of Bengal tiger white PDF Current Science 99 7 894 895 Retrieved 29 January 2024 Sagar V Kaelin C B Natesh M Reddy P A Mohapatra R K Chhattani H Thatte P Vaidyanathan S Biswas S Bhatt S amp Paul S 2021 High frequency of an otherwise rare phenotype in a small and isolated tiger population Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 118 39 e2025273118 Bibcode 2021PNAS 11825273S doi 10 1073 pnas 2025273118 PMC 8488692 PMID 34518374 Sanderson E W Miquelle D G Fisher K Harihar A Clark C Moy J Potapov P Robinson N Royte L Sampson D Sanderlin J Yackulic C B Belecky M Breitenmoser U Breitenmoser Wursten C Chanchani P Chapman S Deomurari A Duangchantrasiri S Facchini E Gray T N E Goodrich J Hunter L Linkie M Marthy W Rasphone A Roy S Sittibal D Tempa T Umponjan M amp Wood K 2023 Range wide trends in tiger conservation landscapes 2001 2020 Frontiers in Conservation Science 4 1191280 doi 10 3389 fcosc 2023 1191280 Sludskii 1992 pp 108 112 Miquelle D G Smirnov E N Merrill T W Myslenkov A E Quigley H Hornocker M G amp Schleyer B 1999 Hierarchical spatial analysis of Amur tiger relationships to habitat and prey in Seidensticker Christie amp Jackson 1999 pp 71 99 Wikramanayake E D Dinerstein E Robinson J G Karanth K U Rabinowitz A Olson D Mathew T Hedao P Connor M Hemley G amp Bolze D 1999 Where can tigers live in the future A framework for identifying high priority areas for the conservation of tigers in the wild in Seidensticker Christie amp Jackson 1999 pp 265 267 Jigme K amp Tharchen L 2012 Camera trap records of tigers at high altitudes in Bhutan Cat News 56 14 15 Adhikarimayum A S amp Gopi G V 2018 First photographic record of tiger presence at higher elevations of the Mishmi Hills in the Eastern Himalayan Biodiversity Hotspot Arunachal Pradesh India Journal of Threatened Taxa 10 13 12833 12836 doi 10 11609 jott 4381 10 13 12833 12836 Li X Y Hu W Q Wang H J amp Jiang X L 2023 Tiger reappearance in Medog highlights the conservation values of the region for this apex predator Zoological Research 44 4 747 749 doi 10 24272 j issn 2095 8137 2023 178 PMC 10415778 PMID 37464931 Simcharoen S Pattanavibool A Karanth K U Nichols J D amp Kumar N S 2007 How many tigers Panthera tigris are there in Huai Kha Khaeng Wildlife Sanctuary Thailand An estimate using photographic capture recapture sampling Oryx 41 4 447 453 doi 10 1017 S0030605307414107 Wibisono H T Linkie M Guillera Arroita G Smith J A Sunarto Pusarini W Asriadi Baroto P Brickle N Dinata Y Gemita E Gunaryadi D Haidir I A amp Herwansyah 2011 Population status of a cryptic top predator An island wide assessment of Tigers in Sumatran rainforests PLOS ONE 6 11 e25931 Bibcode 2011PLoSO 625931W doi 10 1371 journal pone 0025931 PMC 3206793 PMID 22087218 Bisht S Banerjee S Qureshi Q amp Jhala Y 2019 Demography of a high density tiger population and its implications for tiger recovery Journal of Applied Ecology 56 7 1725 1740 Bibcode 2019JApEc 56 1725B doi 10 1111 1365 2664 13410 Lynam A J Rabinowitz A Myint T Maung M Latt K T amp Po S H T 2009 Estimating abundance with sparse data tigers in northern Myanmar Population Ecology 51 1 115 121 Bibcode 2009PopEc 51 115L doi 10 1007 s10144 008 0093 5 Phumanee W Steinmetz R Phoonjampa R Weingdow S Phokamanee S Bhumpakphan N amp Savini T 2021 Tiger density movements and immigration outside of a tiger source site in Thailand Conservation Science and Practice 3 12 e560 Bibcode 2021ConSP 3E 560P doi 10 1111 csp2 560 Rayan D M amp Linkie M 2015 Conserving tigers in Malaysia A science driven approach for eliciting conservation policy change Biological Conservation 184 18 26 Bibcode 2015BCons 184 18R doi 10 1016 j biocon 2014 12 024 Carter N H Shrestha B K Karki J B Pradhan N M B amp Liu J 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66 Barlow A C D Smith J L D Ahmad I U Hossain A N M Rahman M amp Howlader A 2011 Female tiger Panthera tigris home range size in the Bangladesh Sundarbans the value of this mangrove ecosystem for the species conservation Oryx 45 1 125 128 doi 10 1017 S0030605310001456 Sarkar M S Ramesh K Johnson J A Sen S Nigam P Gupta S K Murthy R S amp Saha G K 2016 Movement and home range characteristics of reintroduced tiger Panthera tigris population in Panna Tiger Reserve central India European Journal of Wildlife Research 62 5 537 547 Bibcode 2016EJWR 62 537S doi 10 1007 s10344 016 1026 9 S2CID 254187854 Goodrich J M Miquelle D G Smirnov E M Kerley L L Quigley H B amp Hornocker M G 2010 Spatial structure of Amur Siberian tigers Panthera tigris altaica on Sikhote Alin Biosphere Zapovednik Russia Journal of Mammalogy 91 3 737 748 doi 10 1644 09 mamm a 293 1 Klevtcova A V Miquelle D G Seryodkin I V Bragina E V Soutyrina S V amp Goodrich J M 2021 The influence of reproductive status on home range 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Behaviour 37 1 10 doi 10 1016 0003 3472 89 90001 8 S2CID 53149100 Thapar 2004 p 105 Mills 2004 pp 85 86 Schaller 1967 pp 244 251 Mills 2004 p 89 Schaller 1967 pp 262 263 Schaller 1967 p 263 Sunquist M E amp Sunquist F 2002 Tiger Panthera tigris Linnaeus 1758 Wild Cats of the World Chicago University of Chicago Press pp 343 372 ISBN 978 0 226 77999 7 Thapar 2004 p 29 Schaller 1967 p 256 Thapar 2004 p 99 Schaller 1967 pp 258 261 Schaller 1967 p 261 Peters G amp Tonkin Leyhausen B A 1999 Evolution of acoustic communication signals of mammals Friendly close range vocalizations in Felidae Carnivora Journal of Mammalian Evolution 6 2 129 159 doi 10 1023 A 1020620121416 S2CID 25252052 Schaller 1967 pp 257 258 Schaller 1967 pp 256 258 Mills 2004 p 62 Hayward M W Jedrzejewski W amp Jedrzejewska B 2012 Prey preferences of the tiger Panthera tigris Journal of Zoology 286 3 221 231 doi 10 1111 j 1469 7998 2011 00871 x Steinmetz R Seuaturien N Intanajitjuy P Inrueang P amp Prempree K 2021 The effects of prey depletion on dietary niches of sympatric apex predators in Southeast Asia Integrative Zoology 16 1 19 32 doi 10 1111 1749 4877 12461 PMID 32627329 Variar A S Anoop N R Komire S Vinayan P A Sujin N S Raj A amp Prasadan P K 2023 Prey selection by the Indian tiger Panthera tigris tigris outside protected areas in Indias Western Ghats implications for conservation Food Webs 34 e00268 Bibcode 2023FWebs 3400268V doi 10 1016 j fooweb 2022 e00268 Biswas S Kumar S Bandhopadhyay M Patel S K Lyngdoh S Pandav B amp Mondol S 2023 What drives prey selection Assessment of Tiger Panthera tigris food habits across the Terai Arc Landscape India Journal of Mammalogy 104 6 1302 1316 doi 10 1093 jmammal gyad069 Karanth K U 2003 Tiger ecology and conservation in the Indian subcontinent PDF Journal of the Bombay Natural History Society 100 2 amp 3 169 189 Karanth K U amp Nichols J D 1998 Estimation of tiger densities in India using photographic captures and recaptures PDF Ecology 79 8 2852 2862 doi 10 1890 0012 9658 1998 079 2852 EOTDII 2 0 CO 2 JSTOR 176521 Archived PDF from the original on 27 November 2022 Retrieved 16 December 2021 Perry R 1965 The World of the Tiger London Cassell pp 133 134 ASIN B0007DU2IU Fabregas M C Fosgate G T amp Koehler G M 2015 Hunting performance of captive born South China tigers Panthera tigris amoyensis on free ranging prey and implications for their reintroduction Biological Conservation 192 57 64 Bibcode 2015BCons 192 57F doi 10 1016 j biocon 2015 09 007 hdl 2263 50208 Thapar 2004 p 63 Schaller 1967 pp 284 285 Schaller 1967 p 288 Thapar 2004 p 120 Thapar 2004 pp 119 120 122 Schaller 1967 p 287 Thapar 2004 p 23 Thapar 2004 p 121 Schaller 1967 p 295 Mills 2004 p 24 Christiansen P 2007 Canine morphology in the larger Felidae implications for feeding ecology Biological Journal of the Linnean Society 91 4 573 592 doi 10 1111 j 1095 8312 2007 00819 x Schaller 1967 pp 295 296 Thapar 2004 p 126 Schaller 1967 p 289 Schaller 1967 pp 297 300 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population Journal of Applied Ecology 48 3 806 814 Bibcode 2011JApEc 48 806H doi 10 1111 j 1365 2664 2011 01981 x Habib B Nigam P Ghaskadbi P amp Bhandari A 2021 Dhole pack size variation Assessing the effect of prey availability and apex predator Ecology and Evolution 11 9 4774 4785 Bibcode 2021EcoEv 11 4774B doi 10 1002 ece3 7380 PMC 8093734 PMID 33976847 Steinmetz R Seuaturien N amp Chutipong W 2013 Tigers leopards and dholes in a half empty forest Assessing species interactions in a guild of threatened carnivores Biological Conservation 163 68 78 Bibcode 2013BCons 163 68S doi 10 1016 j biocon 2012 12 016 Thinley P Rajaratnam R Lassoie J P Morreale S J Curtis P D Vernes K Leki Leki Phuntsho S Dorji T amp Dorji P 2018 The ecological benefit of tigers Panthera tigris to farmers in reducing crop and livestock losses in the eastern Himalayas Implications for conservation of large apex predators Biological Conservation 219 119 125 Bibcode 2018BCons 219 119T doi 10 1016 j biocon 2018 01 015 Mills 2004 p 42 Thapar 2004 p 145 Sankhala K S 1967 Breeding behaviour of the tiger Panthera tigris in Rajasthan International Zoo Yearbook 7 1 133 147 doi 10 1111 j 1748 1090 1967 tb00354 x Thapar 2004 p 148 Thapar 2004 p 45 Mills 2004 pp 50 51 Mills 2004 p 50 Thapar 2004 p 51 Petrunenko Y K Seryodkin I V Bragina E V Soutyrina S S Mukhacheva A S Rybin N N amp Miquelle D G 2019 How does a tigress balance the opposing constraints of raising cubs Mammal Research 65 2 245 253 doi 10 1007 s13364 019 00466 x Robinson H S Goodrich J M Miquelle D G Miller C S amp Seryodkin I V 2015 Mortality of Amur tigers The more things change the more they stay the same Integrative Zoology 10 4 344 353 doi 10 1111 1749 4877 12147 PMID 26096683 Sadhu A Jayam P P C Qureshi Q Shekhawat R S Sharma S amp Jhala Y V 2017 Demography of a small isolated tiger Panthera tigris tigris population in a semi arid region of western India BMC Zoology 2 16 doi 10 1186 s40850 017 0025 y Mills 2004 p 51 Barlow A C D 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1016 j biocon 2018 01 011 Slaght J C Milakovsky B Maksimova D A Zaitsev V A Seryodkin I Panichev A amp Miquelle D 2017 Anthropogenic influences on the distribution of a Vulnerable coniferous forest specialist habitat selection by the Siberian musk deer Moschus moschiferus Oryx 53 1 174 180 doi 10 1017 S0030605316001617 Nijman V amp Shepherd C R 2015 Trade in tigers and other wild cats in Mong La and Tachilek Myanmar A tale of two border towns Biological Conservation 182 1 7 Bibcode 2015BCons 182 1N doi 10 1016 j biocon 2014 10 031 Wong R amp Krishnasamy K 2022 Skin and Bones Tiger Trafficking Analysis from January 2000 June 2022 PDF Petaling Jaya Selangor Malaysia TRAFFIC Southeast Asia Regional Office Archived PDF from the original on 17 January 2024 Retrieved 1 March 2024 Paudel P K Acharya K P Baral H S Heinen J T amp Jnawali S R 2020 Trends patterns and networks of illicit wildlife trade in Nepal A national synthesis Conservation Science and Practice 2 9 e247 Bibcode 2020ConSP 2E 247P doi 10 1111 csp2 247 Nittu G Shameer T T Nishanthini N K amp Sanil R 2023 The tide of tiger poaching in India is rising An investigation of the intertwined facts with a focus on conservation GeoJournal 88 1 753 766 Bibcode 2023GeoJo 88 753N doi 10 1007 s10708 022 10633 4 PMC 9005341 PMID 35431409 Khanwilkar S Sosnowski M amp Guynup S 2022 Patterns of illegal and legal tiger parts entering the United States over a decade 2003 2012 Conservation Science and Practice 4 3 e622 Bibcode 2022ConSP 4E 622K doi 10 1111 csp2 622 Van Uhm D P 2016 The Illegal Wildlife Trade Inside the World of Poachers Smugglers and Traders Studies of Organized Crime New York Springer pp 224 226 Saif S Rahman H T amp MacMillan D C 2018 Who is killing the tiger Panthera tigris and why Oryx 52 1 46 54 doi 10 1017 S0030605316000491 Uddin N Enoch S Harihar A Pickles R S amp Hughes A C 2023 Tigers at a crossroads Shedding light on the role of Bangladesh in the illegal trade of this iconic big cat Conservation 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Resources and Environment Archived from the original on 5 May 2024 Retrieved 16 April 2024 Chandradewi D S Semiadi G Pinondang I Kheng V amp Bahaduri L D 2019 A decade on The second collaborative Sumatra wide Tiger survey Cat News 69 41 42 Wibisono H T 2021 An Island wide Status of Sumatran Tiger Panthera tigris sumatrae and Principal Prey in Sumatra Indonesia Doctor of Philosophy in Entomology and Wildlife Ecology Delaware University of Delaware Hotte M H Kolodin I A Bereznuk S L Slaght J C Kerley L L Soutyrina S V Salkina G P Zaumyslova O Y Stokes E J amp Miquelle D G 2016 Indicators of success for smart law enforcement in protected areas A case study for Russian Amur tiger Panthera tigris altaica reserves Integrative Zoology 11 1 2 15 doi 10 1111 1749 4877 12168 PMID 26458501 Lam W Y Phung C C Mat Z A Jamaluddin H Sivayogam C P Zainal Abidin F A Sulaiman A Cheok M K Y Osama N A W Sabaan S Abu Hashim A K Booton M D Harihar A Clements G R amp Pickles R S A 2023 Using a crime 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