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  1. #16
    NBA Legend CavaliersFTW's Avatar
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    Default Re: Animal of the Day: The Caspian Tiger (EXTINCT)

    Big cats! Reminds me of when I used to do paleontology art.

    By the time we are old I predict most of the pantherine group of big cats will be extinct. Most have already been decimated to small pockets and parks which can not sustain them long-term. Population of humans just has no room to keep enough of the planet "wild" for these kinds of animals and they're being isolated to small forests and genetically bottlenecked to like 7 breeding pairs at any given moment with no wild space between parks for the animals to traverse. Populations of animals like tigers have declined like 95% in just 100 years - with many of the subspecies (such as the Caspian tiger) already being wiped out.

    Save for possibly the Siberian subspecies, tigers will be just a zoo species in 50 years. I reserve the Siberian subspecies as a candidate for survival so long as it isn't poached to extinction by the Chinese because although it isn't the most numerous of tigers (maybe a few hundred alive in the wild at any given time), it has an unbroken wild habitat that has yet to be divided by towns, roads, and cities.

  2. #17
    skuduskur DonD13's Avatar
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    Default Re: Animal of the Day: The Caspian Tiger (EXTINCT)

    beautiful, skrong cat

    RIP

  3. #18
    NBA Legend CavaliersFTW's Avatar
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    Default Re: Animal of the Day: The Caspian Tiger (EXTINCT)

    Interesting fact: Tigers and Lions used to have a large overlap of population. Caspian range was one of those areas, (as was entire Bengal tiger range) where Asiatic subspecies of lions lived.

    Though Lions typically lived/hunted in open plains where as Tigers prefer woodland.

    Asiatic lions are still not "extinct". They once lived all over southeast Europe, the middle east and throughout the entire country of India not more than 2 hundred years ago. They now live only in one park and come from only a few breeding lions that managed to survive like 100 years ago so they're all inbred af. The Gir forest in India.


  4. #19
    XXL Im Still Ballin's Avatar
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    Default Re: Animal of the Day: The Caspian Tiger (EXTINCT)

    Quote Originally Posted by CavaliersFTW
    Interesting fact: Tigers and Lions used to have a large overlap of population. Caspian range was one of those areas, (as was entire Bengal tiger range) where Asiatic subspecies of lions lived.

    Though Lions typically lived/hunted in open plains where as Tigers prefer woodland.

    Asiatic lions are still not "extinct". They once lived all over southeast Europe, the middle east and throughout the entire country of India not more than 2 hundred years ago. They now live only in one park and come from only a few breeding lions that managed to survive like 100 years ago so they're all inbred af. The Gir forest in India.

    Have you read about the historical accounts of Lion v Tiger fights? Quite fascinating really. I remember reading that an Indian King had a famous Bengal Tiger who had slain many Lions, and they brought in a Barbary Lion which was the biggest most ferocious lion subspecies, as they thought it was to prove a match for the Bengal. The Bengal destroyed the Lion.

  5. #20
    XXL Im Still Ballin's Avatar
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    Default Re: Animal of the Day: The Caspian Tiger (EXTINCT)

    Wait here it is;

    At the end of the 19th century, the Gaekwad of Baroda arranged a fair fight between a Barbary lion and a Bengal tiger before an audience of thousands as the Asiatic lions were no match for the Bengal tigers. The Gaekwad favoured the lion, and as a result had to pay 37,000 rupees as the lion was mauled by the tiger.
    In India, towards the end of the 19th Century, the Gaekwad of Baroda arranged a fair fight between a Barbary lion called 'Atlas', from the Atlas Mountains between Algeria and Morocco, and a Bengal tiger from the Indian region of Shimla, both big and hungry, before an audience of thousands, instead of between the Asiatic lion of India, and the tiger, as Asiatic lions were believed to be no match for Bengal tigers.

    The tiger was more than ten feet long, over four feet at the shoulder, had long teeth and claws, had strong shoulders, and was agile. The lion looked taller at the head than the tiger, and had large legs, mane and paws. Gettysburg Complier commented that "If the tiger was the personification of graceful strength and supple energy, the lion was the embodiment of massive power and adamantine muscle."

    The tiger crawled forward, crouched flat and calculated the distance for a spring, and then jumped onto Atlas. Atlas rose up on his hind legs, and crashed with the tiger. The two yelled, snarled and rolled over on the ground. They regained their feet and shook to be free. When they parted from the clinch, Atlas swung his right, clawed, paw on the tiger's head, ripping its ear, and scratching off skin. The tiger rolled off, Atlas went to get the tiger, swiping its paw, but the tiger managed to twist away from the paw-swipe, and escaped. Atlas advanced, but the tiger retreated, then jumped into the air, landing on Atlas' back, though it was twenty feet away. At first, Atlas looked disgusted, but then it forced the tiger to the wall of the arena, before the tiger ran, with its head nearly at the ground, towards Atlas' legs.

    Despite a crash, the tiger's head did not shake, and the two cats rose on their hind legs. For at least three minutes, they exchanged right and left paw swipes. Although the tiger's paw-swipes were faster than those of Atlas, out-numbering Atlas' paw-swipes three-to-one, Atlas' paw swipes had more been heavier, inflicting deeper gashes on the tiger's hide. Both cats injured, they retreated from each other, with blood flowing from their flanks. The tiger retreated to the wall, to hug it, whereas Atlas angrily roared and stood his ground, even though blood was dripping from about twenty wounds. After resting for a few moments, the tiger tried to circle Atlas, with Atlas looking worried, as his rushes did not stop the tiger at first. Then, sensing an opportunity, Atlas charged, but the tiger avoided the charge, and jumped onto Atlas' back again.

    Their bodies, bloodied and dirtied by the dust, rolled halfway across the arena. Atlas shook himself off the tiger, and delivered right swipes. One of the swipes dealt a blow to the tiger, causing it to stagger and retreat. The tiger sat, studying how effective the previous tussle was. Atlas was mauled, but not yet killed, with two long rips on his back, having deep bites to the shoulder, which bled, and hoarsely panting, with the wind flowing less evidently than those of the tiger.

    After observing Atlas for a moment, he tried circling Atlas again. Atlas rushed, facing the tiger's claws. After that, the lion, running out of breath, sank to his knees, whereas the tiger, though looking stronger, had its stripes disappear under fast-flowing blood. The tiger sprang onto Atlas, who was staggering, biting Atlas' nose, and then trying to bite Atlas' throat. However, the mane saved Atlas' neck, so the tiger's bite did not suffocate Atlas. Instead, as they wrestled much, the tiger managed to get hair in its mouth, and the hair interfered with the tiger's respiration, so it had to release its hold on Atlas, allowing Atlas to deliver a massive left uppercut, causing the tiger to stumble to about twenty feet away. Although Atlas now looked formidable on his legs, and brave, he could not catch the tiger, and the tiger darted towards him.

    Atlas used his claws, but missed the tiger, and went over with it. The tiger frantically pawed Atlas' body, using both fore and hind paws, for forty seconds. Then Atlas, in its last effort, threw the tiger off, roared, fell down, and died. As a result, the Gaekwad agreed to pay 37,000 rupees, accepted that the tiger was the "King of the Cat Family," and decided to prepare the tiger for a battle with a Sierra Grizzly bear weighing over 1,500.00 lb (680.39 kilograms), to determine which of these was the "King of Carnivorae." The battle was to happen after the tiger recovered from its wounds given to it by Atlas.[2][9]
    Last edited by Im Still Ballin; 01-28-2016 at 02:53 AM.

  6. #21
       
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    Default Re: Animal of the Day: The Caspian Tiger (EXTINCT)

    Quote Originally Posted by Trollsmasher
    humans stay winnin'
    not really.

    more like, the more we meddle with the natural conditions that propagated us, the more we sabotage our own future.

  7. #22
    I Insist JohnnySic's Avatar
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    Default Re: Animal of the Day: The Caspian Tiger (EXTINCT)

    One day humans will be the extinct. What a grand day that will be.

  8. #23
    NBA lottery pick Long Duck Dong's Avatar
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    Default Re: Animal of the Day: The Caspian Tiger (EXTINCT)

    Quote Originally Posted by Nick Young View Post
    .


    Good thread 10/10

    This series has potential to win the Thread Series of the Year award 2016 ISH Awards at the pace its going.
    Underrated thread

  9. #24
    Vince's Real Daddy n00bie's Avatar
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    Default Re: Animal of the Day: The Caspian Tiger (EXTINCT)

    Quote Originally Posted by bdreason View Post
    What's sad is that one day all of these amazing creatures will be extinct. Replaced by 8 billion humans.
    Or maybe we'll be extinct?

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