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Saber Toothed Tigers

Saber toothed tiger is the common name of a number of extinct prehistoric felids often misconceived as tigers. Characterized by grossly oversized canine teeth, these fierce predators were a powerful force to reckoned with, and have come to captain prehistoric predators in the common mind.

249 Questions

Could saber tooth tigers be pets?

Females bred in early spring and could have a litter of 3 cubs.

What things ate saber-toothed tigers?

Scientists believe that saber tooth tigers ate mammoths, antelope, deer, and buffalo. To kill animals bigger than themselves, packs of saber tooths would hunt together.

hope this helped xoxo

How large were the saber-tooth tigers?

There are none alive today. Saber tooth tigers were prehistoric animals and are now extinct. Only their fossilized remains can be found. You can find a link below for more information.

What period did the saber-toothed tiger live in?

The saber toothed cat subfamily, Machairodontinae, first evolved about 23 million years ago and became extinct 10,000 years ago. That means that they first appeared during the late Paleogene period, and they lived through the Neogene and the early Quaternary periods. All three of these periods are parts of the Cenozoic era.

What type of plants exsisted when the saber-toothed tiger was around?

Considering the fact that saber-toothed cats died out only about 10,000 years ago, the plants were probably almost exactly the same at that time as they are today.

Who hunted the saber-toothed tiger?

In 1987 scientists found fossils that resembled a feline. These scientists named this prehistoric "cat" phytrimpy domin. These animals were said to have mated with a wolf like creature called carninthine vilatiose that died off thousands of years later. Carninthine had tong sharp teeth that over laped its mouth and was orange brown complecture. These to animals made the saber tooth tiger

Size of the saber-toothed tiger?

The most common species of Sabre tooth tiger was smaller than the common day panther. However traces have been found of some cats growing up to fifteen feet in length commonly reported to having weighed aprox 460 pounds.

What is the prey of saber-toothed tiger?

Tigers are pure carnivores. They prefer hunting large ungulates such as chital, sambar, gaur, and to a small extent also barasingha, water buffalo, nilgai, serow and takin. Among the medium-sized prey species they frequently kill wild boar, and occasionally hog deer, muntjac and Gray langur. Small prey species such as porcupines, hares and peafowl are also hunted and form a very small part in their diet. Sometimes, they also prey on domestic livestock too that wander off into the jungles

Is a saber tooth tiger endangered?

Saber Toothed Tigers were endangered but they are extinct now.

Saber-toothed tiger adaptations?

Modern big cats kill mainly by strangling their victims, which may take a few minutes. Smilodon's jaw muscles were probably too weak for this and its long canines would have been vulnerable to snapping in a prolonged struggle. Research in 2007 concluded that that Smilodon more probably used its great upper-body strength to wrestle prey to the ground, where its long canines could deliver a deep stabbing bite to the throat which would generally cut through the jugular vein and / or the trachea and thus kill the prey very quickly.[5] The leaders of this study also commented to scientific journalists that this technique may have made Smilodon a more efficient killer of large prey than modern lions or tigers, but also made it more dependent on the supply of large animals. This highly-specialized hunting style may have contributed to its extinction, as Smilodon's cumbersome build and over-sized canines would have made it less efficient at killing smaller, faster prey if the ecosystem changed for any reason.

What did a Saber toothed cat eat?

Saber-tooth tigers ate meat they were carnivores

Where did the saber tooth tiger live?

The saber tooth tiger, or more commonly known as the rabbit, originally started out from the planet Mars. In the early creatacious period they came to search our planet and their ship crash landed and they forgot all sense of technology. Then later in the 1920's on Mars something went chemically wrong in their beat labaratory and the planet was cleared of all life forms as we know it. So the answer to your original question is Mars. And yes, they still exist to this day!!

Did saber-toothed tigers evolved during the paleozoic era?

No. During the Cretaceous epoch, the dinosaurs ruled. The only mammals that existed at the time were small, hardy rodents that resembled shrews or opossums. It wasn't until fifty or sixty million years after the last non- avian dinosaur died that Saber- toothed cats became popular.

How did saber toothed tigers adapt?

they obviously didn't or they would be alive today lool :p

Where was the first saber-toothed tiger fossil found?

This event took place millons of years ago when man first began to explore his world and before there was written language so it can not be answered. We don't know who, where, or when it happened.

What was the saber-toothed tiger appearance?

CHARASTERIC FEATURES:
The saber tooth cats are not tigers; in fact, they belong to a different family, the macairodontinae.They were no larger than a tiger, but their bodies were more stockier, with high shoulders and very short hind legs. The muscles of the shoulders were huge. They could rank among the heaviest felines in history, with some specimens reaching the 350 kg. The tail was very short; similar to the lynx. The jaw of the sabre-tooth is another characteristic that separates it from other cats. Unlike other carnivorous mammals, the sabre- tooth cat could open its jaw quite wide. That the jaw may have opened to a maximum angle of 120º. they are most known for having maxillary canines which were, in some species, up to 20 cm long and extended down from the mouth even when the mouth was closed. Saber-tooth cats were generally more robust than today's cats and were quite bear-like in build.

How big is a saber-toothed tiger?

The largest known saber toothed cat was the Smilodon populator, which was eight feet long without its tail and weighed 490 to 880 lb. One of the smaller types was Dinofelis, which weighed only 190 lb, about as much as a jaguar.

What is the scientific name for saber-toothed cat?

There were many species, and each one has its own scientific name. All saber toothed cats belong to the subfamily Machairodontinae. One example would be Smilodon fatalis, a species belonging to the most famous genus of saber toothed cat.

Was the saber-toothed cat dangerous?

no sorry but more of a cat but the creature did go back to the prehestoric times hears some info i found of the saber toothed cat maybe this can help you out.......

With their enormous, deadly-sharp canines, saber-toothed carnivores are well known to many people as frightening and ferocious predators of the Cenozoic. Surprisingly, there is more than one "saber-toothed cat." The sabertooth morphology has appeared several times during the history of the mammals. Saber-toothed members of the Carnivora, (the mammalian order that contains cats, dogs, bears, weasels, and others) appeared independently at least twice. Saber teeth evolved both among the true cats, or the family Felidae (these saber-toothed cats are sometimes classified in a separate subfamily of cats, the Machairodontinae) and within the Nimravidae (an extinct carnivore family that was related both to the true cats and to the civets and mongooses). The Hyaenodontidae, a family of the extinct mammalian order Creodonta, also included saber-toothed members. Even saber-toothed marsupial "cats" or thylacosmilids inhabited South America from the upper Miocene to the late Pliocene. The saber-tooth morphology is an excellent example of convergent evolution as it appeared in several evolutionary lineages independently.

Why the enormous teeth? Certainly they were used in hunting, but opinions vary as to exactly how they were used. Some paleontologists have suggested that they were used to grab and hold onto prey. However, attacking a large herbivore this way could easily break the saber teeth and saber teeth that were demonstrably broken during an animal's lifetime are rare in fossil deposits. A more plausible hypothesis suggests that saber teeth were used to deliver a fatal ripping wound to the belly or throat of a prey animal. Sabertooth carnivores may not have tried to grapple with prey. More likely, delivered one crippling stab wound and then waited for the prey to die.

We present two sabertooths, both classified in the order Carnivora, from different geological periods. Click on either picture to view an enlarged version.

Smilodon, the saber-toothed "tiger"

The "saber-toothed tiger," Smilodon, is the California State Fossil and the second most common fossil mammal found in the La Brea tar pits. The name "saber-toothed tiger" is misleading as these animals are not closely related to tigers. Juvenile to adult-sized fossils are represented in the large Berkeley collections. The first Chairman of the University of California Department of Paleontology, Professor John C. Merriam, and his student Chester Stock, monographed the morphology of this great carnivore in 1932. Since then, hundreds of thousands of Smilodon bones have been found at La Brea. These finds have permitted remarkably detailed reconstructions of how Smilodon lived. We now know Smilodon was about a foot shorter than living lions but was nearly twice as heavy. Also, unlike cheetahs and lions (which have long tails that help provide balance when the animals run) Smilodon had a bobtail. These suggest that Smilodon did not chase down prey animals over long distances as lions, leopards, and cheetahs do. Instead, it probably charged from ambush, waiting for its prey to come close before attacking.

Smilodon is a relatively recent sabertooth, from the Late Pleistocene. It went extinct about 10,000 years ago. Fossils have been found all over North America and Europe. Smilodonfossils from the La Brea tar pits include bones that show evidence of serious crushing or fracture injuries, or crippling arthritis and other degenerative diseases. Such problems would have been debilitating for the wounded animals. Yet many of these bones show extensive healing and regrowth indicating that even crippled animals survived for some time after their injuries. How did they survive? It seems most likely that they were cared for, or at least allowed to feed, by other saber-toothed cats. Solitary hunters with crippling injuries would not be expected to live long enough for the bones to heal. Smilodon appears to have lived in packs and had a social structure like modern lions. They were unlike tigers and all other living cats, which are solitary hunters. Occasional finds of sabertooth-sized holes in Smilodon bones suggest the social life of Smilodon was not always peaceful. The cats may have fought over food or mates as lions do today. Such fights were probably accompanied by loud roaring. From the structure of the hyoid bones in the throat of Smilodon, we know it could roar.

Hoplophoneus

Hoplophoneus is another type of saber-toothed cat classified in the Felidae or true cat family. This creature lived in the Oligocene (e.g., about 20 million years older than Smilodon). This picture shows various bones of the skeleton of Hoplophoneus. Note the skull with its saber teeth in the center of the picture. The canines have a sharp bend and fit into a groove on an expanded process on the lower jaw: a feature seen in other sabertooths but not in Smilodon. Note also that Hoplophoneus was a relatively small cat. The skull is only about 15 cm long. Hoplophoneus was roughly the size of a bobcat, or about one and a half to two times the size of a housecat.

How many saber-toothed tigers are left?

Smilodon became extinct at the end of the Pleistocene around 10,000 BC, a time which saw the extinction of many other large herbivorous and carnivorous mammals.

Prehistoric humans, who reached North America at the same time and are known to have hunted many of the species that disappeared, are often viewed as responsible for this extinction wave. Others have suggested that the end of the ice age caused the extinction. As the ice sheets retreated there would have been changing vegetation patterns. Grasslands expanded. The summers became more extreme and parts of North America began to dry out. However, this hypothesis does not explain why Smilodon and its ancestors as well as other megafaunal species successfully survived many previous interglacials, and then fairly suddenly died out over the entire contiguous land area of North and South America.

When did the saber-toothed tiger disappear?

The last surviving genus of saber toothed cats, the Smilodon, died out around 10,000 years ago in North America.
Two of the three accepted species walked the planet as recently as ten thousand years ago: Smilodon fatalis and Smilodon populator. The smaller of the three species Smilodon gracilis, which probably never exceeded 225 pounds departed earth's ecology about 500 thousand years ago. Perhaps bigger is better made sense among the early big cats. In any case they are gone, the big cats are at risk and only the common house cats appear to have a promising future.
They were extinct billions of years ago.
The last species of saber toothed cats became extinct about 10,000 years ago. This time is known as the late Pleistocene. They probably died out because many of the large game species that they depended on, like mammoths, American camels (camelops), and giant ground sloths became extinct.
The last saber toothed cats died out 10,000 years ago, at the end of the Pleistocene. They probably became extinct because many species of their megafauna prey, such as mammoths and mastodons, became extinct. Why the megafaunal herbivores died out is a mystery.

What are the saber tooth tiger's predators?

Humans are the large cats only predators, they WERE on the top of the food chain.

What is the name for the long teeth of the saber-toothed cat?

Saber toothed tigers, similar to modern cats, had two main types of teeth. The long, sharp teeth that they are famous for were their upper canines, although they had a smaller set of canines in their lower jaw as well. The other teeth in a saber toothed cat's mouth were molar and premolar teeth designed for ripping flesh off of their food. These teeth are caller carnassial teeth.

How long were saber-toothed tiger's canines?

The length of their canines varied between species, but the longest they could get is up to 20 inches.