No they only live in captivity because lions and tigers don't come together in the wild.
No
There are no wild ligers.
It has none. Ligers do not occur naturally in the wild- they were created through captive breeding.
No. Ligers do not exist in the wild.
There are no wild ligers. They are all in zoos and private collections. They don't have to hunt, and get fed meat by their keepers.
yes. ligers are part tiger, part lion. Lions and tigers would not meet in the wild, only in zoos. yes. ligers are part tiger, part lion. Lions and tigers would not meet in the wild, only in zoos.
Ligers are artificial hybrids. Offspring of two animal species that wouldn't meet and breed in the wild. They don't live ANYWHERE naturally. But in a zoo or a private collection they could live anywhere.
There are around 4500 tigers in the wild, in six subspecies.
There are no wild ligers, they all live in zoos or private collections. While not impossible, it is unlikely that a liger would be fed zebra on a regular basis. Cattle is cheaper.
A liger is a mixture breed between a tiger and a lion. That is possible because their breeding mechanics are very similar. For that reason, ligers are hybrid and they live in captivity, mainly in zoos. They don't have a specific area from which they originate. Ligers were not introduced until the 1990s.
• Ligers don't occur in the wild. They result only from captive breeding.
ligers live in antartica