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Tiger Predation - Printable Version

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RE: Tiger Predation - sanjay - 05-30-2014

Kaziranga Tiger and Tiger from Nepal region are Real King of Beast.


RE: Tiger Predation - Pckts - 05-30-2014

You know that the actual measurements from old Assam tiger hunting records actually show that these tigers have the largest skulls amongst bengals. Their body weight seem to be in line with other big bengals but their head measurements where larger. Not sure about their neck, forearm and chest girth, gaute would have more info. But the tigers in Kaziranga are definitely larger than any others IMO. Very little is known on kaziranga tiger size, but I would definitely be willing to bet they are the largest cat alive today. Bar none!

 


RE: Tiger Predation - Apollo - 05-30-2014

Kariya Ghati male tiger next to a gaur kill at Kanha NP

Look at the size of the tiger next to the gaur


*This image is copyright of its original author


 


RE: Tiger Predation - Apollo - 05-30-2014

Tiger defending its kill


*This image is copyright of its original author

 


RE: Tiger Predation - Apollo - 05-30-2014

Tigress chasing wild boars at Bandhavgarh NP


*This image is copyright of its original author


 


RE: Tiger Predation - Apollo - 05-30-2014

Kariya Ghati male tiger kills mother sloth bear and her cub at Kanha NP








RE: Tiger Predation - Apollo - 05-30-2014

Generally a tigress hunts and provide food for her cubs till they reach the age of 2 years. Here the cubs are about 1 year old. After seeing the boar on the other side of the road, the family took strategic position, mother on the left, two cubs on the road and two towards the right. The cubs cornered the boar towards the jaws of death(mother). Probably for the first time such an astute planning by a family of tigers was witnessed in the wild.



*This image is copyright of its original author




*This image is copyright of its original author



 


RE: Tiger Predation - sanjay - 05-30-2014

Tiger Behavior is less explored compare to lion


RE: Tiger Predation - Apollo - 05-31-2014

(05-30-2014, 09:18 PM)'sanjay' Wrote: Tiger Behavior is less explored compare to lion

 


Yes.

 


RE: Tiger Predation - Apollo - 05-31-2014

Machli carrying a wild boar kill


*This image is copyright of its original author


 


RE: Tiger Predation - Apollo - 06-01-2014

Credits Pckts


Kaziranga tigress attacking water buffalo

*This image is copyright of its original author





Notice the Bloody rump section of the Asiatic Water Buffalo.

*This image is copyright of its original author






Too close for comfort and seems to me like the tigress is more concerned about the Photographer..

*This image is copyright of its original author




 


RE: Tiger Predation - Pckts - 06-01-2014

Cool story, tigers are extremely social and families can form quite impressive hunting teams. Just goes to show how much we thought we knew about their social behavior and now we see how different they are. 

Great to see Machli still making kills even without any of her canines. 


RE: Tiger Predation - Apollo - 06-01-2014

The famous Rajbehera tiger family in Bandhavgarh's Tala Range. A family of five.


*This image is copyright of its original author





According to photographer, Santosh Saligram, a couple of playful cubs spotted a Long-billed Vulture and chased it into the water in the Bandhavgarh Tiger Reserve. The vulture survived the episode and flew away when the cubs eventually lost interest.

*This image is copyright of its original author



 


RE: Tiger Predation - Apollo - 06-02-2014

Credits to Sanjay


*This image is copyright of its original author



*This image is copyright of its original author




 


RE: Tiger Predation - Apollo - 06-02-2014

When the leopard and tiger meet in Ranthambhore


The writer is a conservation biologist at Tiger Watch, Ranthambore



The tiger and the leopard are two big cats, both equally charismatic and magnificent. There is always a curiosity of how these two species interact and how they share space and prey base. This was an observation in Sariska, when all the tigers were poached in 2005, the leopard’s activity even in daytime, had risen up and they roamed fearlessly in the entire habitat. Not just leopards, the movement of hyenas and jackals also went up around that time.

The year 2005 was also a time when there was poaching in Ranthambhore too, and the tiger number had gone down. The legendary tiger conservationist, Fateh Singh Rathore also observed that there was an increase in leopard number and sighting rates and this itself was an indicator of a decrease in tiger numbers. However, there is no scientific study to prove this; these are mere observations, which are used as signs by experienced individuals. Indian male tigers weigh about 220 kg on an average, whereas the Indian male leopard weighs about 63 kg. An average tigress weighs about 139 kg while the leopardess weighs about 32 kg.

The tiger is about three or four times heavier than the leopard; hence, there is no equal confrontation. However, there is one trick on the leopard’s sleeve, which always saves it from the tiger -- its ability to climb treetop to save itself from danger. Yet each year, a few leopards are killed each year due to tiger attacks. In Ranthambhore, the figure could be 2-3 leopards. Most of the times these are sub-adult leopard cubs that get killed by tigers, as they move out to find their own territory and lack the experience to tackle such situations. An incident was observed in 2010, when a leopard cub with its mother confronted a tiger and both climbed two separate trees. However, the young cub was afraid and impatient to get to the mother. Before he could even climb down completely, the tiger had managed to attack him; he was killed in front of the mother who stayed back on the tree. In the same instant, the tiger had started to eat the young leopard.

The tiger does not look at a leopard as food, it looks at it as an enemy or intrusion, which would compete for same prey base and thus needs to be taken out. In one instance, there was a leopardess caught in a tense dramatic situation, where a tiger chased it and she climbed on a ghost tree (Sterculia urens) and awaited the tiger to move away. Her two sub-adult cubs were watching the mother from top of a cliff. The cubs were signalled by the mother to move away from danger, gauging that the tiger had moved out of the area. The mother leopard climbed down carefully surveying the place and went in the opposite direction of the tiger. She then climbed up the cliff near her two cubs. Often the tigers end up snatching the leopard’s food when it gets a chance to scavenge; however there are limited observations on such behaviour. We too are not fully aware of these interactions between animals and these are the mysteries, which pull us to the wild.

 

http://www.mydigitalfc.com/sporting-life/when-leopard-and-tiger-meet-ranthambhore-367