The male tiger leaves after mating with the female. He does not help with the cubs.
The offspring are called cubs. The female is a tigress and the male is called a tiger.
Baby tigers, or cubs, live with their mothers. When the mothers go out hunting, they hide their babies to help them remains safe against predators. The father has nothing to do with the cubs after they're born.
Lion: cubs (for both male and female)Tiger: cubs (for both male and female)Lion: cubs (for both male and female)Tiger: cubs (for both male and female)Lion: cubs (for both male and female)Tiger: cubs (for both male and female)Lion: cubs (for both male and female)Tiger: cubs (for both male and female)Lion: cubs (for both male and female)Tiger: cubs (for both male and female)Lion: cubs (for both male and female)Tiger: cubs (for both male and female)
usally the male is more aggresive but if protecting her cubs the females are more aggressive.
yes
male tigers leave the female to take care of cubs because the male cubs are hunting for food so that it can feed its family
yes they do
On occasion, yes
The male will eat their own tiger cubs if they are very hungry and can't find food for themself.
The male Siberian tigers usually travel by themselves while the female tigers travel with their cubs.
Usually male tigers never see their cubs, they will mate with the female then move on. But if a mother tiger encounters another tiger (it could be male OR female), she will protect her cubs in fear of them being killed or eaten.
The male adult is a Tiger, the female is a Tigeress and the young are cubs.
Because the male's will fight over the female's whilst their in heat and male tigers could kill female tiger cubs
Well, they've have to have mated at least to have cubs. Tigers are solitary animals, and the dad doesn't stay around to help with the cubs.
Yes, especially when the female has young cubs to protect.
The offspring are called cubs. The female is a tigress and the male is called a tiger.
The tiger's only enemy as an adult are humans, but cubs are vulnerable to a variety of dangers, including leopards, hyenas, and male tigers that are not their father.