Tuesday, January 22, 2013

Siberian Tigers are Endangered Animals


Siberian tiger is also known as the Amur tiger, Manchuria, Northeast China tiger and tiger Ussurian. Latin name is Panthera tigris altaicia.

Siberian tigers can reach a length of 130 inches (286 cm), which makes it the largest of the different tiger variants. Siberian Tiger also has a very broad muzzle compared with other variants of the tiger, and the male Siberian tiger usually have manes. Special body length for male Siberian tiger is 106-130 inches (233.2 to 286 cm), while females are smaller and usually live between 95 and 108 inches (209 cm and 237.6). Measured between the tiger tail. Their male Siberian tiger much heavier than the female tiger and usually weigh 419-675 lb (190-306 kg). The really big tiger Siberian male weight 800 pounds (364 kg) or more. Siberian Tiger Women tend to stay around 221-368 lb (101-168 kg).

Mantle of the Siberian tiger is orange and a little pale in comparison to the mantle of tiger subspecies other. There is also a very pale variant known as Siberian tigers White. Both variants have brown lines very much space compared with black lines and narrow space from other subspecies. White belly.

Wild Siberian tigers live in eastern Russia, northeastern China, and North Korea. Previously, wild Siberian tigers are also found in south-eastern Russia and South Korea. Siberian tigers are near extinction in the wild, but has the largest captive population of all tiger subspecies are different. Estimates claim that there are between 350 and 500 wild Siberian tigers, but we still do not know the numbers for sure. In the captive population, some 500 specimens participate in conservation programs, including the Species Survival Program (SSP). The bulk of this specimen down from 83 Siberian tigers were captured from nature. Most scholars agree that this population is large enough to be stable and genetically diverse.

Wild Siberian tiger hunt, especially deer and wild boar, and every Siberian tigers require a large area. Male Siberian tigers will try to claim the area around 800 to 1.000 km2 (309-390 mile2), while women generally claim around 100-400 km2 (39 to 154 mile2). Special environment of the Siberian tiger is the birch forest and scrub oak areas.

In Russia, the number of wild Siberian tigers are known not greater than 24 specimens in the late 1940s. In 1994, estimates show the population of Russia 150-200 tigers, and three years later this figure had risen to 360-400. Amounts increase as efforts Conservation and protected areas appointed Russia: Kedrovaya Pad, and Sikhote-Alin Lazovsky. Because Russian tigers roam over a wide area and across the Russian border, the exact number of tigers in Russia are naturally difficult to determine. The Chinese and North Korean tiger population is much smaller and estimates indicate that there are currently less than 35 Siberian tigers in China.

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