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Tigers Diet ,The best of it!

Tigers Diet
Tigers Diet
The different tiger subspecies live in a variety of Tigers Diet  habitats. Some live in forests in southern Asia, some in the woodlands of Siberia. Others are found in mangrove swamps and in tall grass jungles. Some are found in the mountains where it is snowy Tigers Diet.

Appearance and Behaviours

Most tigers are orange-brown or dark yellow with Tigers Diet dark brown, grey or black stripes. There are patches of white fur on their faces and ears. There is a white mark on the back of each ear so that from behind it looks like the tiger is watching, particularly in Tiger Diet a shadowy forest Tiger Diet. This is a defence marking Tigers Diet.

Tigers have white fur on their stomachs. A tiger's stripes helps it to get close to prey when it is hunting Tiger Diet. The stripes camouflage the tiger, helping it to blend into the grasses and edges of forests where it lives. Each tiger's pattern is different, like human fingerprints Tigers Diet.

Did you know Tigers Diet?

A white tiger is not a subspecies of Tigers Diet. The original was captured in India, and was a true 'accident', or mutation, but was then bred to produce white cubs. White tigers today are generally part Siberian and part of Bengal Tigers Diet.

They are bred in captivity by in-breeding animals that are closely related. White tigers would not survive in the Tiger Diet as a  wild because they are not camouflaged like gold and black tigers are. In attempting to breed white tigers, there are many birth defects and cub deaths before Tigers Diet.

The largest tiger is the male Tigers Diet Amur or Siberian tiger which can grow to be 3.3 metres long and weigh up to 300 kilograms. The smallest is the female Sumatran Tiger Diet which grows to be about 230 centimetres long and weighs up to 110 kilograms Tigers Diet.

A tiger's tail, which helps it keep its balance when running fast, is about a metre long Tigers Diet.

Most tigers live and hunt alone and mark their territory by spraying the ground and plants with urine (pee) and by leaving scratch marks on Tiger Diet to trees.They are excellent swimmers, and can swim across wide rivers. They keep cool by spending time in water, the only cats to deliberately do so.

Tigers Diet is to:

Tigers are carnivores, or meat eaters. They hunt mainly between sunset and dawn. They stalk their prey, get as close as possible and then race at the Tigers Diet from behind, pouncing on it and biting the neck or throat. When the prey is dead, the Tiger Diet it to a safe place and eats it.

If the prey is a large animal the tiger can feed on it for a few days. Not every hunt is successful Tigers Diet, so tigers don't eat every day. They hunt and eat many different kinds of animal such as deer, wild pigs, birds, monkeys, leopards, bears and wild cattle. Tigers eat up to 18 kilograms of meat at one time.

A Bengal tiger chasing prey

Life Cycle of  Tigers Diet:

About 103 days after mating with a male tiger, the female gives birth to a litter of 2 or 3 cubs, but sometimes up to 7. She looks after the cubs, feeding them milk for Tiger Diet about 8 weeks. Later she teaches them to hunt. The cubs stay with their mother for up to three years.

Siberian tiger cubs


Conservation Status and threats

Tigers are facing extinction. The Tigers Diet in South China tiger may already be extinct Tiger Diet. Numbers of other subspecies are very low. One major threat is that in some countries medicines made of tiger body parts are considered to be almost magical.

 Tigers are illegally killed for body parts, fur and meat. Although there is an international ban on killing tigers, illegal medicines made from tiger body parts sell for large sums of money, so poachers continue to kill tigers. Loss of habitat is also a big threat, and there is less and less space in the wild for tigers to live. What is left of wild Tiger Diet is often small patches, like islands, which makes it hard for tigers to move about and meet each other for breeding.

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