Amur Tiger P1180145
A day at Woburn Safari Park with Tommy 21st March 2014 Woburn Safari Park has four Amur tigers, living in the Kingdom of the Carnivores in a secure area, giving them around 8 acres to roam, including shady areas for the height of summer and a house with an overnight space. The tigers are Korushka and Neurka who are litter sisters, born in 1998 and Elton, born June 2011 and Minerva, born October 2011.
Amur tigers (from a region of Siberia) are the largest of the big cat species and are renowned for their power and strength. There are only an estimated 400 to 500 Amur tigers living in the wild, in the birch forests of Eastern Russia. These powerful hunters travel many miles to find prey, such as elk and wild boar on nocturnal hunts. Tigers use their distinctive coats as camouflage (no two tigers have exactly the same stripes) and hunt by stealth. A hungry tiger can eat as much as 60 pounds (27 kilograms) in one night.
Amur Tiger P1180145
A day at Woburn Safari Park with Tommy 21st March 2014 Woburn Safari Park has four Amur tigers, living in the Kingdom of the Carnivores in a secure area, giving them around 8 acres to roam, including shady areas for the height of summer and a house with an overnight space. The tigers are Korushka and Neurka who are litter sisters, born in 1998 and Elton, born June 2011 and Minerva, born October 2011.
Amur tigers (from a region of Siberia) are the largest of the big cat species and are renowned for their power and strength. There are only an estimated 400 to 500 Amur tigers living in the wild, in the birch forests of Eastern Russia. These powerful hunters travel many miles to find prey, such as elk and wild boar on nocturnal hunts. Tigers use their distinctive coats as camouflage (no two tigers have exactly the same stripes) and hunt by stealth. A hungry tiger can eat as much as 60 pounds (27 kilograms) in one night.