The Lions, Tigers and Kitties set has just as much bedding as the Winnie the pooh collection. The only difference is the pattern.
Maybe in a zoo or private Collection. Tigers of any colour aren't native to Australia.
The motif of Clemson bedding sets is a tiger paw print. The tiger paw print is orange colored and represents Clemson University's mascot or team name, which is the Tigers.
What DID they eat. Sabre-tooth tigers were saber tooth tigers, and they're extinct. They ate a collection of Deer, Mammoth, Macharachinia and Carcass. Sources: Another Answers.com answer
The Clemson Tigers are a collection of athletic teams that compete in such sports as athletics, football, baseball, golf and basketball. They represent Clemson University and introduced their Tiger Paw logo in July 1970.
The term big cat is in reference to large cats. Included in this group are cheetahs, lions, tigers, jaguars, and cougars. Also included are snow and clouded leopards.
There's no species known as "South African tigers". And tigers are not native to South Africa. Any tiger living in South Africa would be in a zoo, private collection or similar, and would weigh according to specie, gender, age, Health etc.
There's no species known as "Australian tigers". And tigers are not native to Australia. Any tiger living in Australia would be in a zoo, private collection or similar, and would weigh according to specie, gender, age, Health etc.
its because people are moving in on the Bengal tigers land and the humans are getting killed for envading the tigers space therfore the people come back to kill the tigers for killing other people....and the tigers eventually end up getting shot with a rifel (gun) or something
Well, all house cats have evolved from wildcats, which evolved from the earliest felines, which included saber toothed tigers.
Saber toothed cats were carnivores. They had specific adaptations for hunting megafaunal mammals. These included bison, mammoths, mastodons, camelops (American camels) etc.
Yes, the Sumatran tigers are the smallest tigers in the world.
There are various legends about how the Tigers got their nickname. One involves the orange stripes they wore on their black stockings. Tigers manager George Stallings took credit for the name; however, the name appeared in newspapers before Stallings was manager. Another legend concerns a sportswriter equating the 1901 team's opening day victory with the ferocity of his alma mater, the Princeton Tigers. The earliest known use of the name "Tigers" in the news was in the Detroit Free Press on April 16, 1895. The truth is revealed in Richard Bak's 1998 book, A Place for Summer: A Narrative History of Tiger Stadium. In the 19th century, the city of Detroit had a military unit called the Detroit Light Guard, who were known as "The Tigers". They had played significant roles in certain Civil War battles and in the 1899 Spanish-American War. The baseball team was still informally called both "Wolverines" and "Tigers" in the news. Upon entry into the majors the ballclub sought and received formal permission from the Light Guard to use its trademark and from that day forth it is officially the Tigers. In short, the Tigers most likely wore stripes because they were already Tigers, rather than the other way around which is the conventional story. The "Tigers" name originates from the 19th century military unit that was based in the city and held the same name. They are nicknamed "the Motor City Kitties", "the Bengals", "the Tigs", and "the Bless You Boys".