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Yes it is possible to release Siberian Tigers into Alaska because the climate and terrain of Alaska is almost identical to Russia. Alaska has some of the same animals such as Brown Bears and Siberian Tigers would have many animals to hunt such as Mountain Goat and Moose, Caribou, Roosevelt Elk, Dall Sheep, American Bison, Sitka Black-tailed Deer and other small game like Hares and many other animals that live in Alaska. Alaska has many national state parks such as Denali National park. Release Siberian Tigers in places like Denali National Park where there are thousands of square miles of wilderness to roam and hunt and there are no people. I hope to see one day thousands of Siberian Tigers back in the wild where they belong with no threat of becoming extinct. This would be good because loggers in Russia are taking forests away from the Siberian Tigers' habitat. We in the USA could better protect the Siberian Tigers if released into Alaska's Wild. I know that Siberian Tigers are not native to Alaska but neither is the American Bison, and it was released into Alaska with excellent results. I think the same could happen with Siberian Tigers if given a chance. This was written by a person who has a passion for Siberian Tigers and would like not to see them endangered anymore.
Russia is a country known for raising wild animals in domestic homes because there are no laws regulating the animals that can or can not be pets. An example of an pet that should be wild but has been domesticated in Russia is the Fishing Cat.
Sure they can, they are both members of the cat family and can easily interbreed but the chances of this happening in nature are slim given that White Tigers are Bengal Tigers which live in Northern Asia and the Siberian Tiger lives in Siberia and other parts of Russia. If you are asking whether a Siberian tiger could mate with a white Bengal tiger, then yes it could, but not in the wild. Scientists believe that when a white Siberian tiger is born, it is more likely to be the result of human intervention; Previously mating a Siberian tiger and a Bengal tiger, which carries the white gene, leaving offspring as carriers. see related link..
White tigers eat rabbits.
None. Tigers are Native to the Asian Continent. Two species of tigers live here. The Royal Bengal Tiger in India and the Siberian Tiger in Russia. No known species of Tiger have been found to live in Africa.
Yes, Reindeer do migrate every year. see related link for some interesting facts about their migration.
Though not as well known as the Bengal tiger as maneaters, Siberian tigers will sometimes prey on humans.
Tigers are usually quite big, and orange with black stripes. There is this breed of tiger that is white with black stripes.
Most likely in Siberia. Additional Info: The Siberian, or Amur Tiger's range is much smaller, and more scattered than ever, due to logging and other development. The Sikhote-Alin Mountain range in Primorski, and Khabarovski provinces, east of the Amur River, in the Southeast corner of Russia, is where most wild Siberian Tigers are found today. Some may still be found in patchwork areas in the border areas of China, and North Korea. They were formerly found in Northeastern China, the Korean Peninsula, and as far into the west as Mongolia. For more details see site listed below.
Zoos. If you are looking for countries that you would most likely see tigers, I'd recommend you to go to Malaysia, India, Indonesia, Russia, Thailand, Africa, etc. There's a lot more countries that has many tigers, just searched it up in the net.
No.
If Russian folk tales are any indication, then bears, wolves, foxes, hares and hedgehogs are the principal Russian animals (and they all talk, too). Moose are very Russian, as are beavers, nutria, lynx, Arctic foxes, sables, weasels, minks. Basically, if they make hats out of it, it lives in Russia. Siberian tigers are now endangered and are only found in Russia. Some of the native Russian birds are ravens, Great Eagles and owls. Russian brown bear is considered by most to be the national animal.