hi yall
There are six living subspecies of tigers: Bengal, Indochinese, Malayan, Siberian, South China, and Sumatran tigers. The two extinct types are the Caspian and Javan tigers.
It's possible, and has been considered. Since the Javan tiger is extinct, the nominate subspecies would be the Sumatran race, which is a smaller animal than the Bengal, but larger than the Javan was. First the prey biomass must be in place to support a population of tigers before they can act on this introduction.
Java tigers lived in Java! The clues in their name.
Six current subspecies, or breeds, are recognized today: Bengal, Burmese (also known as Indochinese), Malayan, Siberian, South Chinese, and Sumatran. (The Bali, Javan, and Caspian breeds have all gone extinct in the past century.) All six living subspecies of tigers are now on the endangered lists. Note: The famous "white tigers" are a rare color mutation mostly within the Bengal breed, not a separate subspecies. Additional note: As mentioned above, there would be nine but the Caspian, Bali and Javan are all now extinct.
It depends on the Tiger. Some Tigers do, some Tigers don't.
The Caspian, Bali, and Javan tigers are extinct.
There are only 47 in the world
The smallish Javan tiger lived on the island nation of Java. Now extinct.
Once found on the island of Java, this smallish tiger is now extinct.
There are six living subspecies of tigers: Bengal, Indochinese, Malayan, Siberian, South China, and Sumatran tigers. The two extinct types are the Caspian and Javan tigers.
Bali, Javan, Caspian. However, there is new evidence that suggests the Caspian and Siberian tigers are genetically identical, may be the same subspecies.
The Balinese Tiger and the Javan Tiger are two extinct species of Tigers.
Javan,bengal,siberian,chinsese,indochinese,amur,indian,aumatran,and thats it.
no because cheeters have spot and tigers have stripes
well you say it like javan,after the j is a long a then goes a another long a
Most tigers live in jungles with high to moderate rainfall. However, some tigers, like the Siberian Tiger live on the plains and therefore receive low to average rainfall. However, there are no tigers in deserts with minimal rainfall, even though there are some rainforests where tigers used to live (like Java where the now-extinct Javan tiger used to live).
It's possible, and has been considered. Since the Javan tiger is extinct, the nominate subspecies would be the Sumatran race, which is a smaller animal than the Bengal, but larger than the Javan was. First the prey biomass must be in place to support a population of tigers before they can act on this introduction.