White Siberian tigers, like all tigers, can range in length from 8 to 10 feet, with their tail adding an extra 3 to 4 feet.
Sure they can, they are both members of the cat family and can easily interbreed but the chances of this happening in nature are slim given that White Tigers are Bengal Tigers which live in Northern Asia and the Siberian Tiger lives in Siberia and other parts of Russia. If you are asking whether a Siberian tiger could mate with a white Bengal tiger, then yes it could, but not in the wild. Scientists believe that when a white Siberian tiger is born, it is more likely to be the result of human intervention; Previously mating a Siberian tiger and a Bengal tiger, which carries the white gene, leaving offspring as carriers. see related link..
White tigers are albino individuals of the Bengal tiger species of India, and occurs naturally but rarely among their populations. There are also Siberian white tigers which are crossbreeds between white Bengals and normal Siberians. (There is no record of a naturally albino Siberian, although that might provide an advantage in its natural habitat.)
No,the Caspian tiger was an extinct subspecie of tigers that was almost in the Same size and Looks like the modern Siberian tiger,white tigers are a color morph Of any Subspecies of tigers(the Siberian tigers don't have this problem only if a Bengal tiger with a color morph and a Siberian will mate,so generally only a Bengal Tigers seem to have this mutant).A white tiger's pale coloration is caused by the presence of a recessive gene (the Same thing that causing a dominant allele for the jaguars and recessive allele for The leopards to have black fur)
The term "snow tiger" is used to refer to a couple of different sub-species of tigers. Often it is used to refer to the Bengal tigers that have a gene mutation giving them a white coloration. Sometimes these white Bengal tigers are also called the "snow white tiger". This coloration in the Bengal is very rare, especially in the wild. But perhaps, more frequently, the only tiger that lives in snowy country, the Siberian, is referred to the "snow tiger" or "Siberian Snow tiger". These Siberian tigers are believed to number only around 600 in the wild today."Snow tigers" are of the Siberian tiger species and are estimated at between 500 to 600 in the wild.
White tigers aren't a separate species, they're simply a Bengal tiger with an unusual fur color. As such, they'll happily breed with other tigers if they get the chance. In fact, being so rare, a White tiger in the wild would pretty much have to breed with a normal-colored one, if it is to have any chance of breeding. Holding out for another White - if tigers thought that way - wouldn't be an option.
Siberian tigers Siberian tigers
Tigers can live for twenty years or more. White tigers are Bengals, not Siberians.
You cannot find white Siberian tigers anywhere, they do not exist. The only white tigers are Bengal tigers and they are only found in zoos.
White Bengal tigers are the ONLY white tiger, white Siberian tigers do not exist. People just mistake white Bengals for siberians.
Siberian tigers live in deciduous forests, and are not white. All of the wild white tigers were Bengals.
White Siberian tigers do not exist, the only white tigers are Bengal tigers and those are only found in zoos.
Gorillas are not the Siberian tiger's enemy, they live on different continents. And, there are no white Siberian tigers. Only Bengal tigers carry the white gene, and these are very rare.
White tigers are not Siberians, but rare color variation of the Bengal tiger. Big Siberian males can be over eleven feet long and weigh 650 pounds.
White Bengal tigers are the ONLY white tiger and are only found in zoos, the white is just a genetic mutation. white Siberian tigers do not exist.
White tigers are Bengals, not Siberian, and deer and wild hog, and buffalo are their prey.
White Siberian tigers do not exist. The only white tigers are Bengal tigers and they just a genetic mutation and are only found in zoos.
The white tigers are bengals, not siberians, and none are currently in the wild. All are in captivity.