No. Tigers are solitary hunters. They live and hunt alone. During the mating season, the Tigress can be spotted with one or more cubs. But, at all other times Tigers are solitary and live alone.
No. Tigers are solitary animals. Adults only get together during breeding, cubs stay with their mother until big enough to fend for themselves.
They can live in groups with their families, but they can also live alone.
No.
Tigers are solitary. Males and females come together to mate, then the male leaves. Females and their cubs form family groups until the cubs are old enough to make it on their own.
No, tigers are solitary by nature.
all tigers live alone except for a mother and hre cubs.
Tigers are largely solitary
Great whites are solitary animals. They do not live in groups.
Tigers are solitary animals, and only come together to mate. The only instance in which there would be a group of tigers in the wild is when a mother is with her cubs, but even these will go their separate ways once the cubs are independent.
tigers are soletary animals in the wild.
Orange Tigers live in North America White Tigers live near Russia
they live alone and hunt alone, haven't you seen nemo!?
white tigers live in Russa
they live alone.
There are no black tigers.
Tigers generally live alone and therefore do not form packs. Further, white tigers are only a rare color morph of typical orange and black tigers like Siberian tigers, so there would probably never be a group of white tigers in the wild.
no they do not live in groups