Since the liger is a hybrid species, cross between a lion and a tigress, it cannot be listed.
Ligers are not an actual species - they're bred in some circus, the mother is a tiger, the father is a lion. You shouldn't find some ligers in the wild, unless they have escaped from a circus. So they're not endangered, because they're not a natural species found in the wild.
Tigons and ligers are not naturally occurring animals, but are hybrids bred in captivity. Non-natural species are not classified with an endangered status.
Since ligers are created by human intervention by breeding a male lion with a female tiger, and cannot happen in the wild, they cannot be listed as endangered.
It depends on how you look at a liger. If you feel that a liger is not wildbecause they are bred in captivity then no they are not endangered. If you feel a liger is a wild animal then ligers everywhere are endangered.
It's hard to say, but not really really. Since ligers are hybrid animals, cross between a lion and a tigress, and do not oocur in the wild as a viable species, they cannot be considered under any listing. And as long as there are tigers and lions, there can always be new ligers.
They did not. Ligers are not a species in their own right or a natural occurrence. They are the result of the captive cross-breeding of a lion and a tiger.
Technicly no, since they were man made and aren't natural in the wild, plus ligers are getting more common by the years.
they become endangered in 2099.
Ligers are animals created when humans crossbreed tigers and lions. They are not found in the wild, so have no level of endangerment.
they started to become endangered when global warming had started to increase
they become endangered when the food they eat is scarce.
They are listed as vulnurable or threatened, not endangered.