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AMPHIBIANS:
Pac Man Frog
BIRDS:
Chickens
Cockatoo, Sulfer Crested
Chinese Geese
Ducks
Helmeted Guinea Fowl
Macaw, Blue & Yellow
Miniature Macaw
Parrot, Amazon
MAMMALS:
Black Bear
Bobcat
Capuchin, Black & White
Coati Mundis
Cougar
Deer, Fallow
Ferrets
Goat (Pygmy)
Hedgehog
Lemur, Ringtailed
Leopard, black
Liger
Lion (African)
Lion (Barbary)
Macaque, Java
Macaque, Snow
Marmoset
Pig
Sheep
Tiger (Bengal)
Tiger (Siberian)
Vervet
Wolves
Zebra
REPTILES:
Alligator
Anaconda
Bearded Dragon
Boa, Columbian
California King Snake
Corn Snake
Iguana
Lizard, African Plated
Python, Burmese
Python, Reticulated
Python, Royal
Skink, Blue Tongue
Tortoise, Spurred
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| Bengal
Tiger |
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| DESCRIPTION: |
Head/body
length: 5 feet 10 inches- 9 feet 1 inch; tail length: 36 inches; weight:
350-550 pounds; shoulder height three feet or less. Eyes are large
with excellent vision. Hearing is good with well developed ear flaps.
They have large canine teeth and strong, powerful jaws. Paws are heavily
padded; claws are retractable. Coloration is bright fawn to reddish
tan, shading to white underneath, and sharply marked with uneven black
stripes: a unique pattern for each individual. Fur is short and thick.
Whiskers (vibrissae) are long with thick individual hairs.
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| GEOGRAPHICAL
RANGE AND HABITAT: |
Found
throughout India from the Himalayas to Cape Comorin, except in the
deserts. (Other races are found in Burma, Malay Peninsula, Sumatra,
Java, and Bali.) Prefered habitats include dense thickets, long grass,
or tamarisk shrubs along river banks. Some seem to have special fondness
for cover in old ruins.
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| DIET: |
| Carnivorous.
Diet varies according to locality. Prefers deer, wild pigs, young
buffalo, young elephants and cattle in general, any prey over 100
pounds in weight. But when driven by hunger will eat almost anything:
fowl, fish, lizards, frogs, crocodiles, carrion, or even humans,
on occasion. Hunting method is a slow patient stalk through cover
until close enough for the final spring. For prey less than half
a tiger 's weight, the killing bite is delivered to the nape of
the neck. For larger prey, a throat bite is prefered. Tigers are
heavier predators than lions, and average about 50 deer each, per
year. Only one hunt in 20 is successful. Man-eating and cattle-killing
are usually attributed to older tigers, injured tigers, or young
adults unable to leave an over-crowded territory. Oakland Zoo feeds
Feline Diet (beef fortified with ground bone, vitamins and minerals)
and occasionally whole carcasses.
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| LIFE
CYCLE/SOCIAL STRUCTURE: |
Usually
solitary, but occasionally travels in parties of 3 or 4 (probably
mother with sub-adult children or an estrous female and suitors).
Both sexes mark territories but a male's territory will overlap several
females' territories. Tigers are polyestrous but most commonly conceive
after the monsoon rains; the majority of cubs are born between February
and May after a gestation of three and a half months. Cubs weigh under
three pounds at birth and are striped. Eyes open in 15-16 days. Litter
consists of 1-4 cubs, occasionally up to 6, but it is unusual for
more than two or three to survive. Cubs are weaned at 4-6 months but
depend on their mother for food and protection for another two years.
Females bear single litters every 2-3 years. New males entering a
female's territory may eat cubs. There is some evidence that females
permit their daughters to take over their home ranges and there have
been verified reports of rather large groups of tigers (up to 9) feeding
at a single kill. In one case, the additional tigers were offspring
from several litters of the one who had made the kill. Maximum longevity
is about 26 years.
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| SPECIAL
ADAPTATIONS: |
| The
white ear spots may enable mothers and cubs to keep track of each
other in the dim forests at night. Unlike conspecific leopards,
tigers take advantage of human-made trails and roads. They are excellent
swimmers.
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| INTERPRETIVE
INFORMATION: |
| The
male regularly patrols his territory, scent-marking and scraping
tree trunks. The stiff whiskers enable a tiger to move through thick
cover at night. If the whiskers fit, the whole body can follow.
Notice how little interaction there is between our pair.
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| STATUS
IN WILD: |
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Endangered.
They have been hunted heavily by man for sport, skins, and as a
source of traditional medical products. Superstition has surrounded
tigers for centuries; necklets of claws are thought to protect a
child from "the evil eye", whiskers have been considered
either a dreadful poison (Malaysia), a powerful aphrodisiac (Indonesia),
or an aid to childbirth (India and Pakistan) and the bones, fat,
liver and penis are prized as aphrodisiacs or medicines.
The main tiger population of the Indian subcontinent has suffered
a serious decline in the last 50 years. It is estimated that some
200 tigers yet survive in Nepal, and perhaps 4000 in India, up from
a low of 2000 in the 1970s. A government program, called Project
Tiger, established nine sanctuaries designed to provide ample habitat
and prey. However, small isolated parks may promote inbreeding and
the future of the Bengal tiger is still in question. In the 90s,
there has been a resurgence of poaching for the escalating Chinese
and Korean markets, in spite of a Chinese ban on tiger products
in 1993 and South Korea's joining of CITES.
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| Special
thanks to the Oakland Zoo website where most of this data was obtained.
Please visit them at http://www.oaklandzoo.org |
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