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Waiting to be fed, very eagerly awaiting food. Looking and searching everything passing by - including our safari verhicle - for food.
Tigergehege mit Mutter kind abgetrentem Gehege, Mutter Maruschka mit ihren vier Welpen im Mutterkind gehege.
Tiger Temple in Western Thailand. Yes, I did a lot of research before I went, and it seems totally legitimate and well meaning. The tigers all appear healthy and are visited by a vet on a regular basis. The temple is run by some monks and a lot of western volunteers.
Absolutely amazing experience!
Nias, a Sumatran Tiger photographed at the Wildlife Heritage Foundation, Kent. Here Nias is coming out from his bamboo undergrowth.
This Tiger stoped dead in his tracks the moment Mike and I came into sight. One of my all time favorite pictures!
Tiger (Panthera tigris);Animal or Wildlife Photos and images by James Markus Photography LLC Copyright © 1970-2010 - All Rights Reserved - www.Photomatter.com
Tigergehege mit Mutter kind abgetrentem Gehege, Mutter Maruschka mit ihren vier Welpen im Mutterkind gehege.
Siberian Tiger - Toronto Zoo
June 10, 2003
Taken with:
Camera: Kiev 60
Lens: Carl Zeiss Jena 180mm
f-stop: 11
Shutter: 1/500
I really enjoy visiting the Amur tiger section at Longleat, as I find them extremely beautiful animals. The tigers at Longleat are well looked after, and the zoo keepers are very good at feeding times as they occasionally hide the meat in the branches of trees so that when the tigers are let into their enclosure they have to search for their food.
Amur tigers are fully mature and able to mate from 4 years of age. Their cubs are born small, helpless and blind and depend on their mother for safety and for the mother’s milk. Tiger cubs grow very fast and will be almost 4 times their original size after just one month.
The Amur tiger is also known as the Siberian tiger, and are considered to be the largest of all of the big cats. They have many stripes; however no two tigers have the same stripe pattern. Amur tigers are now protected by law in the wild and are linked to conservation projects
SIBERIAN AMUR TIGER (panthera tigris altaica) | Amurtiger | Tigre de Sibérie | Tigre della Siberia.
Photo dedicated to Dersu Uzala, Vladimir Arsenjev and Akira Kurosawa!
I really enjoy visiting the Amur tiger section at Longleat, as I find them extremely beautiful animals. The tigers at Longleat are well looked after, and the zoo keepers are very good at feeding times as they occasionally hide the meat in the branches of trees so that when the tigers are let into their enclosure they have to search for their food.
Amur tigers are fully mature and able to mate from 4 years of age. Their cubs are born small, helpless and blind and depend on their mother for safety and for the mother’s milk. Tiger cubs grow very fast and will be almost 4 times their original size after just one month.
The Amur tiger is also known as the Siberian tiger, and are considered to be the largest of all of the big cats. They have many stripes; however no two tigers have the same stripe pattern. Amur tigers are now protected by law in the wild and are linked to conservation projects