Not completely.White tigers are comapritively fluffier than normal tigers in certain parts of their body such as the humerus,the sacrum and the medulla oblongata.
The only difference between white and normal tigers is the color of the fur. Any difference will be down to individual reasons, not color.
White Tigers are not a separate species. There are no wild white tigers. There has only ever been one wild White Tiger. It was captured and bred to normal tigers and bred back to produce more white tigers. All white tigers live in captivity and they are all descendants of that one white tiger. He was a Bengal Tiger. Bengal Tigers eat Cows, Oxen, Guar, Deer, Bear, as well as small animals and pets.
White tigers are a rare varation of the normal bengal tiger. Left to itself, it would hav the same kind of habitat as the normal bengal tigers - the Forests of India and some neighboring countries. But since us humans found the black and White tiger so striking, there are more White tigers alive today in captivity in parks and zoos than there has ever been in the wild. So today, the most probable habitat of a White tiger is a zoo or a park.
White Bengal tigers are the ONLY white tiger and are only found in zoos, the white is just a genetic mutation. white Siberian tigers do not exist.
Tigers can live for twenty years or more. White tigers are Bengals, not Siberians.
What is done to save the white tigers they're taking more white tigers into zoo all around the world, and people are taking more into reserves.
Yes. White tigers are exactly the same as your normal orange tigers except the color. This difference is a mutation in the DNA, making it an albino. These are much more rare in the wild because they stand out too much, but they do still have all the characteristics of living things.
As white tigers are only a rare color morph of the Bengal tiger, protect that subspecies and there will always be a chance of more white tigers.
It depends on the individual. White tigers are simply color mutations of the Bengal tiger- collectively they are no stronger or weaker than a normal tiger. Note - the recessive pigmentation variation that results in white tigers is unique to the Bengal tiger: no other tiger sub-species has this variant (i.e all white tigers are Bengal tigers). White tigers are not albino. Actually it depends on how the tiger has been living. If the tiger has had a good food source for most of its life it would have more muscle and energy making the weak one less stronger.
The simple answer is that the gene that causes the white coat of the white tiger is a mutant gene and thus is very rare. In most places where tigers are indigenous (native), a white coat would be a disadvantage rather than an advantage. The normal orange coloring of the tiger combined with its stripes actually help the animal to blend into its surroundings when hunting. White tigers tend to lose that advantage and are much more easily spotted by potential prey.
Simply google white tiger.Many sites are there.
coz da fluf is awesome braaa!!