The lack of genetic and morphological differences between mainland tigers could allow them to be managed as single subspecies.
During
my time as a zookeeper I had the privilege of working with both
Sumatran and Amur
tigers. If they did not both have stripes, you would think they
were different species altogether.
The
Sumatran tiger is the smallest alive today. At around 100kg, it’s
“only” about the weight of a large adult male human. It is suited
to the warm and wet forests of the Indonesian island of Sumatra,
which is reflected in its smaller size and short, dark rusty orange
coat which has many thin black stripes to conceal it in dense
vegetation from their prey.
The
Amur – or Siberian – tiger is much larger, averaging around 170kg
(though there are historic reports of males clocking in at 300kg or
more) and is now found mainly one corner of far-eastern Russia. It
has a thicker but relatively pale coat, with sparse dark brown
stripes, which enables it to survive in freezing and snowy winters.
Tiger
experts have long debated what such differences mean scientifically.
Should the biggest of the big cats be divided into various
subspecies, or are all tigers
simply “tigers”?
It’s
an issue with serious implications for conservation. About 3,500 or
so tigers remain in the wild, in just 7% of their former range. And
if those tigers are all the same, or if even most of them are the
same, then saving individual populations matters slightly less –
and tigers can be moved around to assist breeding in the wild.
Traditionally,
eight subspecies were considered to exist. They are the two already
mentioned, plus the Bengal tiger, found mainly in India, the
Indochinese, the South China tiger and then three extinct subspecies:
the Bali (extinct in the 1940s) and Javan (80s), both closely related
to surviving tigers on nearby Sumatra, and the Caspian tiger from
Central Asia which went extinct in the 1970s.
As
genetic techniques evolved, a 2004 study found there was little
genetic diversity among tigers, but enough to support the separation
of subspecies. It also suggested that Indochinese tigers living on
the Malayan peninsular were different enough to those living further
north to warrant a ninth subspecies: the Malayan tiger.
These
ideas were contested by a group of researchers in 2015, who argued
that the relative lack of variation among the mainland Asian
subspecies and large overlaps in their shape, size and ecology meant
that all tigers from India to Siberia or Thailand should be
considered the same subspecies. The researchers called for just two
recognised subspecies: the continental tiger, and the Sunda tiger,
found on the various Indonesian islands.
However
the various subspecies are classified, one of the consistent findings
is that tigers follow Bergmann’s rule: a principle in zoology which
states that animals within the same overall species will tend to be
larger in colder environments and vice versa. The Amur tiger, for
instance, benefits from the fact that larger animals are better at
retaining heat as they have a smaller surface area relative to their
overall mass... Read
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