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Javan tiger

Javan tiger
Panthera tigris sondaica 01.jpg
Javan tiger photographed by Andries Hoogerwerf in Ujung Kulon National Park, 1938
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Mammalia
Order: Carnivora
Family: Felidae
Genus: Panthera
Species: P. tigris
Subspecies: P. t. sondaica
Trinomial name
Panthera tigris sondaica
Temminck, 1844
Java location inkscape.svg
Former range of the Javan tiger

The Javan tiger (Panthera tigris sondaica) is an extinct tiger subspecies that inhabited the Indonesian island of Java until the mid-1970s. It was one of the three subspecies limited to islands.

The Javan tiger was very small compared to other subspecies of the Asian mainland, but larger in size than the Bali tiger. It usually had long and thin stripes, which were slightly more numerous than those of the Sumatran tiger. Its nose was long and narrow, occipital plane remarkably narrow and carnassials relatively long. Based on these cranial differences, the Javan tiger was proposed to be assigned to a distinct species, Panthera sondaica.

Males had a mean body length of 248 cm (98 in) and weighed between 100 and 141 kg (220 and 311 lb). Females were smaller than males and weighed between 75 and 115 kg (165 and 254 lb).

The smaller body size of the Javan tiger is attributed to Bergmann’s rule and the size of the available prey species in Java, which are smaller than the cervid and bovid species distributed on the Asian mainland. However, the diameter of its tracks are larger than those of Bengal tiger in Bangladesh, India and Nepal.

Charles Frederick Partington wrote that Javan and Sumatran tigers were strong enough to break legs of horses or buffaloes with their paws, even though they were not as heavy as Bengal tigers.

At the end of the 19th century, Javan tigers inhabited most of Java. Around 1850, the people living in the rural areas still considered them a plague. In 1890, Dutch author Jan Gerhard ten Bokkel noted how the fear of tigers brought the people to superstitious use of language: "A Javan will never speak about a tiger without calling him "Mister", it's always: Mr. Tiger. The beast might hear him once, and take revenge at him for merely saying tiger in a familiar way!"


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Wikipedia

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