• Summary

  • Hello ladies and gentlemen, I am Shrishti Lunia. Today, I am going to tell you about tigers. So be careful as we are going to travel into the world of tigers. I hope the adventure will be fantastic.

    Currently, tigers are found in a variety of habitats in South and Southeast Asia, China, and eastern Russia. They thrive in temperate, tropical, or evergreen forests, mangrove swamps, and grasslands. The tiger helps maintain a healthy ecosystem and a balanced food chain, and as an apex predator, it is India's national animal.

    Types of Tigers
    1. Royal Bengal Tiger:
    • Habitat: Tropical forests of the Indian subcontinent, Bhutan (up to 4500 m above sea level), and mangrove forests.
    1. Amur Tiger:
    • Habitat: Snowfields, evergreen forests, mangrove swamps, grasslands, and birch forests in eastern Russia, China, and North Korea.
    • Characteristics: Solitary animals.
    1. Sumatran Tiger:
    • Habitat: Forests of Sumatra.
    • Characteristics: Orange fur with thick black stripes.
    • Status: Less than 400 remaining due to deforestation and poaching.
    1. Caspian Tiger:
    • Habitat: Eastern Turkey, southern Caucasus, northern Iran, Iraq, northwestern China, and Central Asia.
    • Status: Disappeared by the early 1880s.
    1. Javan Tiger (Panther tiger is sondaica):
    • Habitat: Indonesian island of Java until the mid-1970s, evergreen forests, mangroves, and grasslands.
    1. Indochinese Tiger:
    • Habitat: Tropical and subtropical forests of South Asia, native to Cambodia, China, Laos, Myanmar, Thailand, and Vietnam.
    • Characteristics: Strong, long legs allow them to jump high, swim, and run up to 60 miles per hour.
    1. Malayan Tiger:
    • Habitat: Malay Peninsula and southern Thailand.
    • Status: Threatened by deforestation, poaching, and human-tiger conflict.
    1. Bornean Tiger:
    • Habitat: Island of Borneo in prehistoric times.
    • Status: Potentially extinct.
    1. South China Tiger:
    • Discovery: Found in Xiamen, Fujian Province by American naturalist Harry Caldwell in the early 19th century.
    • Status: One of China's 10 endangered species, protected as a first-class animal.
    Diet and Lifespan
    • Favorite Food: Deer and wild boar, including sambar deer, chital deer, swamp deer, and sika deer. They also eat prey ranging in size from termites to elephants.
    • Diet: Includes large prey weighing around 20 kg (45 lb) or more, such as elk, deer, pigs, cattle, horses, buffalo, and goats.
    • Lifespan: Typically 10 to 15 years in the wild, up to 20 years in rare cases. About half of all wild tiger cubs do not live beyond the age of two.
    • Reproduction: Female tigers give birth to 2 to 3 cubs (sometimes up to 7) after about 103 days of mating. Cubs stay with their mothers until they are three years old.
    Habitat and Threats

    Tigers live in a variety of habitats, including rainforests, grasslands, savannahs, and mangrove swamps. Unfortunately, human activity has led to the loss of 93% of their historical habitat. Predators of tigers include humans, elephants, and bears, while tiger cubs face threats from hyenas, alligators, and snakes.

    Thank you for joining me on this


    Copyright 2024 Shrishti
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Episodes
  • Episode 1
    Jul 4 2024

    Hello ladies and gentlemen, I am Shrishti Lunia. Today, I am going to tell you about tigers. So be careful as we are going to travel into the world of tigers. I hope the adventure will be fantastic.

    Currently, tigers are found in a variety of habitats in South and Southeast Asia, China, and eastern Russia. They thrive in temperate, tropical, or evergreen forests, mangrove swamps, and grasslands. The tiger helps maintain a healthy ecosystem and a balanced food chain, and as an apex predator, it is India's national animal.

    Types of Tigers
    1. Royal Bengal Tiger:
    • Habitat: Tropical forests of the Indian subcontinent, Bhutan (up to 4500 m above sea level), and mangrove forests.
    1. Amur Tiger:
    • Habitat: Snowfields, evergreen forests, mangrove swamps, grasslands, and birch forests in eastern Russia, China, and North Korea.
    • Characteristics: Solitary animals.
    1. Sumatran Tiger:
    • Habitat: Forests of Sumatra.
    • Characteristics: Orange fur with thick black stripes.
    • Status: Less than 400 remaining due to deforestation and poaching.
    1. Caspian Tiger:
    • Habitat: Eastern Turkey, southern Caucasus, northern Iran, Iraq, northwestern China, and Central Asia.
    • Status: Disappeared by the early 1880s.
    1. Javan Tiger (Panthera tigris sondaica):
    • Habitat: Indonesian island of Java until the mid-1970s, evergreen forests, mangroves, and grasslands.
    1. Indochinese Tiger:
    • Habitat: Tropical and subtropical forests of South Asia, native to Cambodia, China, Laos, Myanmar, Thailand, and Vietnam.
    • Characteristics: Strong, long legs allow them to jump high, swim, and run up to 60 miles per hour.
    1. Malayan Tiger:
    • Habitat: Malay Peninsula and southern Thailand.
    • Status: Threatened by deforestation, poaching, and human-tiger conflict.
    1. Bornean Tiger:
    • Habitat: Island of Borneo in prehistoric times.
    • Status: Potentially extinct.
    1. South China Tiger:
    • Discovery: Found in Xiamen, Fujian Province by American naturalist Harry Caldwell in the early 19th century.
    • Status: One of China's 10 endangered species, protected as a first-class animal.
    Diet and Lifespan
    • Favorite Food: Deer and wild boar, including sambar deer, chital deer, swamp deer, and sika deer. They also eat prey ranging in size from termites to elephants.
    • Diet: Includes large prey weighing around 20 kg (45 lb) or more, such as elk, deer, pigs, cattle, horses, buffalo, and goats.
    • Lifespan: Typically 10 to 15 years in the wild, up to 20 years in rare cases. About half of all wild tiger cubs do not live beyond the age of two.
    • Reproduction: Female tigers give birth to 2 to 3 cubs (sometimes up to 7) after about 103 days of mating. Cubs stay with their mothers until they are three years old.
    Habitat and Threats

    Tigers live in a variety of habitats, including rainforests, grasslands, savannahs, and mangrove swamps. Unfortunately, human activity has led to the loss of 93% of their historical habitat. Predators of tigers include humans, elephants, and bears, while tiger cubs face threats from hyenas, alligators, and snakes.

    Thank you for joining me on this



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    5 mins

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