Yes, tiger cubs are potentially at risk of not surviving into adulthood, due to killings by larger male tigers for food.
The baby is more likely to have green eyes, as green is a recessive trait compared to hazel. Since the mother has green eyes, it is possible for her to pass on the green eye gene to the baby. However, there is still a chance the baby could have hazel eyes, depending on the specific genetics involved.
the eye's more likely will be black, but could turn out to be the fathers color. i had a child and i had brown eyes and my husband had brown eye's and my mother has green aye's and my daughter had green eye's when she was born.
The baby boy is most likely to have brown hair and blue or green eyes. Brown hair is a dominant trait, so it is more likely to be expressed. Blue eyes are recessive, but it is possible for the baby to inherit them if both parents carry the gene. Green eyes are a combination of blue and brown pigments, so the baby may inherit either blue or green eyes from the parents.
Every person has a domninant trait, so theres no real way to find out until the baby is born. If you have blue eyes, your dominant trait for passing on genes, could be brown. so, its pretty random. However, in any case, Blue is dominant and Brown is not. it all depends on the traits that were passed down from your parents.
Yes, tigers are multicellular organisms.Yes, tigers are multicellular.
Yes , a few species like homotherium,or maybe even smilodon fatalis.Homotherium hunts mammoths with high speed and coordinated effortYoung mastodons (relatives of the mammoth ) are also on the menu
yes they do because other animals feel that they are easyer to catch
At the time horses were being hunted for food distinctive breeds did not exist in their modern forms. Back then, they likely would have been more of a certain type, though it is known that the Tarpan and Przewalski's horse were hunted.
More likely the north because they weren't hunted in the north.
It just depends on what kind of person you are and if you like animals or not, but i think that even though they are tigers they seem nice. It also depends if the tiger has been trained well or not, if they have been shown aggressive behavior then they may copy it but if they have been shown good behavior then they are more likely to be nice.
Yes, Bengal tigers can prey on baby elephants, although such occurrences are relatively rare. Tigers typically prefer smaller, more manageable prey, but if food is scarce, they may target vulnerable young elephants. Adult elephants tend to be too large and dangerous for tigers to attack. Overall, while not a common part of their diet, baby elephants can fall victim to Bengal tigers under certain circumstances.
A baby rat is more likely to be a dark colour when it is newborn, but a baby mouse is pink.
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.
Camels and Tigers do not naturally occur in the same places. More than likely and if not cornered a camel would run if he encountered a tiger.
Yes, getting in an auto accident can hurt an unborn baby. The more severe the accident is, the more likely that it will hurt the baby.
Sadly, tigers are still hunted to this day. Even though they are an endangered species, some hunters will pay high amounts of money to go and kill these magnificent animals. There are some tigers that must be destroyed because they have attacked humans that live close to the tiger's natural habitats, but poaching is more common as the reason why tigers die from human hands.
I think that they need to learn how to fight, fend, and stalk...there are more, but not that I know of.