yes
Extinct is forever. However, the Amur tiger (also known as the Siberian tiger) is not extinct.
The extinct Caspian tiger was almost geneticly identical to the Siberian.
Because the Siberian Tiger is the largest tiger in the world, it is also the rarest tiger in the world.
there are about 501 Siberian tigers. Indeed the South China tiger may have become extinct in the last few years - a The chances for each Siberian tiger to be a white tiger is one out of 10000. Female tigers will carry their babies for 3 to 3 1/2 months
animals that are going extinct are the platypus and also the Dhole. not to forget the Siberian tiger
Siberian tigers are not extinct yet, although there may be a few left in very remote regions, but most are found in zoos.
There are many species of tigers world over. * The Royal Bengal Tiger * Siberian Tiger * Malayan Tiger * Indochinese Tiger * Sumatran Tiger * Siberian Tiger * South China Tiger There are a few extinct species too. * Balinese Tiger * Javan Tiger
Bengal tiger (Panthera Tigris Tigris)Indochinese tiger (Panthera Tigris corbetti)Chinese tiger (Panthera Tigris amoyensis)Siberian tiger (Panthera Tigris altaica)Sumatran tiger (Panthera Tigris sumatrae)Malayan tiger (Panthera Tigris malayensis)Caspian Tiger (Extinct)Javan Tiger (Extinct)Balinese Tiger (Extinct)
There's 8 species of Tigers but 3 have gone extinct. The species are: Still Alive: Sumatran Tiger Bengal Tiger Indochinese Tiger South China Tiger Amur (Siberian) Tiger Extinct: Caspian Tiger Bali Tiger Javan Tiger
Mainly by persecution by man. But is it really extinct? Recent evidence shows it may be a race of the Siberian tiger, as nearly all genetic codes of the two are identical.
Other tiger subspecies, of which five others are living today. However, the extinct Caspian tiger, recent evidence shows, was very closely related to the Siberian, and may have been an extant race of that subspecies.