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Caspian tiger

The Caspian tiger was a Panthera tigris tigris population native to eastern Turkey, northern Iran, Mesopotamia, the Caucasus around the Caspian Sea, Central Asia to northern Afghanistan and the Xinjiang region in western China.[2] Until the Middle Ages, it was also present in southern Russia.[3] It inhabited sparse forests and riverine corridors in this region until the 1970s.[1] This population was regarded as a distinct subspecies and assessed as extinct in 2003.[4]

Caspian tiger
Tiger from the Caucasus in Berlin Zoological Garden, 1899[1]
Extinct (1970)
Scientific classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Mammalia
Order: Carnivora
Suborder: Feliformia
Family: Felidae
Subfamily: Pantherinae
Genus: Panthera
Species: P. tigris
Subspecies: P. t. tigris
Population: Caspian tiger
Historical distribution

Results of a phylogeographic analysis evinces that the Caspian and Siberian tiger populations shared a common continuous geographic distribution until the early 19th century.[5]

Some Caspian tigers were intermediate in size between Siberian and Bengal tigers.[3][6][7]

It was also called Balkhash tiger, Hyrcanian tiger, Turanian tiger,[4] and Mazandaran tiger.[8]

Taxonomy Edit

Felis virgata was a scientific name used by Johann Karl Wilhelm Illiger in 1815 for the greyish tiger in the area surrounding the Caspian Sea.[9]Tigris septentrionalis was the scientific name proposed by Konstantin Satunin in 1904 for a skull and mounted skins of tigers that were killed in the Lankaran Lowland in the 1860s.[10]Felis tigris lecoqi and Felis tigris trabata were proposed by Ernst Schwarz in 1916 for tiger skins and skulls from Lop Nur and Ili River areas, respectively.[11]

In 1929, Reginald Innes Pocock subordinated the tiger to the genus Panthera.[12] For several decades, the Caspian tiger was considered a distinct tiger subspecies.[6][13]

In 1999, the validity of several tiger subspecies was questioned. Most putative subspecies described in the 19th and 20th centuries were distinguished on basis of fur length and colouration, striping patterns and body size, hence characteristics that vary widely within populations. Morphologically, tigers from different regions vary little, and gene flow between populations in those regions is considered to have been possible during the Pleistocene. Therefore, it was proposed to recognize only two tiger subspecies as valid, namely P. t. tigris in mainland Asia, and P. t. sondaica in the Greater Sunda Islands and possibly in Sundaland.[14]

At the start of the 21st century, genetic studies were carried out using 20 tiger bone and tissue samples from museum collections and sequencing at least one segment of five mitochondrial genes. Results revealed a low amount of variability in the mitochondrial DNA in Caspian tigers; and that Caspian and Siberian tigers were remarkably similar, indicating that the Siberian tiger is the genetically closest living relative of the Caspian tiger. Phylogeographic analysis indicates that the common ancestor of Caspian and Siberian tigers colonized Central Asia via the GansuSilk Road region from eastern China less than 10,000 years ago, and subsequently traversed eastward to establish the Siberian tiger population in the Russian Far East. The Caspian and Siberian tigers were likely a single contiguous population until the early 19th century, but became isolated from another due to fragmentation and loss of habitat during the Industrial Revolution.[5]

In 2015, morphological, ecological and molecular traits of all putative tiger subspecies were analysed in a combined approach. Results support distinction of the two evolutionary groups continental and Sunda tigers. The authors proposed recognition of only two subspecies, namely P. t. tigris comprising the Bengal, Malayan, Indochinese, South Chinese, Siberian and Caspian tiger populations, and P. t. sondaica comprising the Javan, Bali and Sumatran tiger populations. Tigers in mainland Asia fall into two clades, namely a northern clade formed by the Caspian and Siberian tiger populations, and a southern clade formed by populations in remaining mainland Asia.[15]

In 2017, the Cat Specialist Group revised felid taxonomy and now recognizes the tiger populations in continental Asia as P. t. tigris.[2] However, a genetic study published in 2018 supported six monophyletic clades, with the Amur and Caspian tigers being distinct from other mainland Asian populations, thus supporting the traditional concept of six living subspecies.[16]

Characteristics Edit

 
Skin of a Caspian tiger from Iran
 
Illustration of two Caspian tigers

Fur Edit

Photographs of skins of Caspian and Siberian tigers indicate that the main background colour of the Caspian tiger's fur varied and was generally brighter and more uniform than that of the Siberian tiger. The stripes were narrower, fuller and more closely set than those of tigers from Manchuria. The colour of its stripes was a mixture of brown or cinnamon shades. Pure black patterns were invariably found only on head, neck, the middle of the back and at the tip of the tail. Angular patterns at the base of the tail were less developed than those of Far Eastern populations. The contrast between the summer and winter coats was sharp, though not to the same extent as in Far Eastern populations. The winter coat was paler, with less distinct patterns. The summer coat had a similar density and hair length to that of the Bengal tiger, though its stripes were usually narrower, longer and closer set. It had the thickest fur amongst tigers, possibly due its occurrence in the temperate parts of Asia.[3][6][7]

Size Edit

Male Caspian tigers had a body length of 270–295 cm (106–116 in) and weighed 170–240 kg (370–530 lb); females measured 240–260 cm (94–102 in) in head-to-body and weighed 85–135 kg (187–298 lb).[6] Maximum skull length in males was 297–365.8 mm (11.69–14.40 in), while that of females was 195.7–255.5 mm (7.70–10.06 in).[3] Its occiput was broader than of the Bengal tiger.[14] It ranked among the largest extant cat species, along with the Siberian tiger.[6][3][17]

Some individuals attained exceptional sizes. In 1954, a tiger was killed near the Sumbar River in Kopet-Dag, whose stuffed skin was put on display in a museum in Ashgabat. Its head-to-body length was 2.25 m (7.4 ft). Its skull had a condylobasal length of about 305 mm (12.0 in), and zygomatic width of 205 mm (8.1 in). Its skull length was 385 mm (15.2 in), hence more than the known maximum of 365.8 mm (14.40 in) for this population, and slightly exceeding skull length of most Siberian tigers.[3] In Prishibinske, a tiger was killed in February 1899. Measurements after skinning revealed a body length of 270 cm (8.9 ft) between the pegs, plus a 90 cm (3.0 ft) long tail, giving it a total length of about 360 cm (11.8 ft). Measurements between the pegs of up to 2.95 m (9.7 ft) are known.[6] It was said to have been "a tiger of immense proportions" and "no smaller than the local horse breeds." It had rather long fur.[3]

Skull size and shape of Caspian tigers significantly overlap with and are almost indistinguishable from other tiger specimens in mainland Asia.[18]

Distribution and habitat Edit

 
Shore of the Türkmenbaşy Gulf at the Caspian Sea
 
The Tigris River outside Mosul in Iraq
 
Landscape in the Altai Mountains

Historical records show that the distribution of the tiger in the region of the Caspian Sea was not continuous but patchy, and associated with wetlands such as river basins, lake edges and sea shores. In the Middle Ages, it inhabited the steppes and forest steppes of Ukraine and southern Russia.[3] In the 19th century, tigers occurred in:

Its former distribution can be approximated by examining the distribution of ungulates in the region.[25] Wild boar was the numerically dominant ungulate in forested habitats, along watercourses, in reed beds and in thickets of the Caspian and Aral Seas. Where watercourses penetrated deep into desert areas, suitable wild pig and tiger habitat was often linear, only a few kilometers wide at most. Red and roe deer occurred in forests around the Black Sea to the western side and around the southern side of the Caspian Sea in a narrow belt of forest cover. Roe deer occurred in forested areas south of Lake Balkash. Bactrian deer lived in the narrow belt of forest habitat on the southern border of the Aral Sea, and southward along the Syr-Darya and Amu Darya rivers.[3]

Throughout the late Pleistocene and Holocene, the Caspian tiger population was likely connected to the Bengal tiger population through corridors below elevations of 4,000 m (13,000 ft) in the Hindu Kush, before gene flow was interrupted by humans.[26]

Local extinction Edit

 
Tiger killed in northern Iran, early 1940s

The demise of the Caspian tiger began with the Russian colonisation of Turkestan during the late 19th century.[27] Its extirpation was caused by several factors:

  • Tigers were killed by large parties of sportsmen and military personnel who also hunted tiger prey species such as wild pigs. The wild pig range underwent a rapid decline between the middle of the 19th century and the 1930s due to overhunting, natural disasters, and diseases such as swine fever and foot-and-mouth disease, which caused large and rapid die-offs.[3]
  • The extensive reed beds of tiger habitat were increasingly converted to cropland for planting cotton and other crops that grew well in the rich silt along rivers.[27]
  • The tiger was already vulnerable due to the restricted nature of its distribution, having been confined to watercourses within the large expanses of desert environment.[25]

Until the early 20th century, the regular Russian army was used to clear predators from forests, around settlements, and potential agricultural lands. Until World War I, about 50 tigers were killed in the forests of Amu Darya and Piandj Rivers each year. High incentives were paid for tiger skins up to 1929. Wild pigs and deer, the prey base of tigers, were decimated by deforestation and subsistence hunting by the increasing human population along the rivers, supported by growing agricultural developments.[28] By 1910, cotton plants were estimated to occupy nearly one-fifth of Turkestan's arable land, with about one half located in the Fergana Valley.[29]

Last sightings Edit

In Iraq, a tiger was killed near Mosul in 1887.[1][19]

In Georgia, the last known tiger was killed in 1922 near Tbilisi, after taking domestic livestock.[1][30]

In China, tigers disappeared from the Tarim River basin in Xinjiang in the 1920s.[1][30] They reportedly disappeared from the Manasi River basin in the Tian Shan Range west of Ürümqi in the 1960s.[3]

In Turkey, a pair of tigers was allegedly killed in the area of Selçuk in 1943.[31] Several tiger skins found in the early 1970s near Uludere indicated the presence of a tiger population in eastern Turkey.[32][33] Questionnaire surveys conducted in this region revealed that one to eight tigers were killed each year until the mid-1980s, and that tigers likely had survived in the region until the early 1990s. Due to lack of interest, in addition to security and safety reasons, no further field surveys were carried out in the area.[20]

In Azerbaijan, the last known tiger was killed in 1932; however, there were alleged sightings in the Talysh Mountains in later years.[34]

In Iran, one of the last known tigers was shot in Golestan National Park in 1953. Another individual was sighted in the Golestan area in 1958.[7]

In Turkmenistan, the last known tiger was killed in January 1954 in the Sumbar River valley in the Kopet-Dag Range.[35] The last record from the lower reaches of the Amu Darya river was an unconfirmed observation in 1968 near Nukus in the Aral Sea area. By the early 1970s, tigers disappeared from the river's lower reaches and the Pyzandh Valley in the Turkmen-Uzbek-Afghan border region.[3]

The Piandj River area between Afghanistan and Tajikistan was a stronghold of the Caspian tiger until the late 1960s. The latest sighting of a tiger in the Afghan-Tajik border area dates to 1998 in the Babatag Range.[28]

In Kazakhstan, the last Caspian tiger was recorded in 1948, in the environs of the Ili River, the last known stronghold in the region of Lake Balkhash.[3] In May 2006, a Kazakh hunter claimed to have seen a female Caspian tiger with cubs near Lake Balkash. However, this sighting remains uncertain and unconfirmed.[36]

Behaviour and ecology Edit

 
Mosaic of an elephant attacking a tiger, from Roman Syria, which occupied parts of what is now Anatolia and Mesopotamia[37]

No information is available for home ranges of Caspian tigers. In search for prey, they possibly prowled widely and followed migratory ungulates from one pasture to another. Wild pigs and cervids probably formed their main prey base. In many regions of Central Asia, Bactrian deer and roe deer were important prey species, as well as Caspian red deer and goitered gazelle in Iran; Eurasian golden jackals, jungle cats, locusts, and other small mammals in the lower Amu Darya River area; saigas, wild horses and Persian onagers in the Miankaleh Peninsula; Turkmenian kulans, Mongolian wild asses, and mountain sheep in the Zhana-Darya and around the Aral Sea; and Manchurian wapiti and moose in the area of Lake Baikal. They caught fish in flooded areas and irrigation channels. In winter, they frequently attacked dogs and livestock straying away from herds. They preferred drinking water from rivers, and drank from lakes in seasons when water was less brackish.[3]

Disease Edit

Two tigers in southwestern Tajikistan harbored 5–7 tapeworms (Taenia bubesei) in their small and large intestines.[3]

Conservation Edit

In 1938, the first protected area Tigrovaya Balka (Russian: Тигровая балка, lit.'Tiger dry creek or Tiger arroyo'), was established in Tajikistan. The name was given to this zapovednik after a tiger had attacked two Russian Army officers riding horseback along dried-up river channel known in Russian as balka. Tigrovaya Balka was apparently the last refuge of Caspian tigers in the Soviet Union, and is situated in the lower reaches of Vakhsh River between the Piandj and Kofarnihon Rivers near the border of Afghanistan. A tiger was seen there in 1958.[38] After 1947, tigers were legally protected in the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics.[28]

In Iran, Caspian tigers had been protected since 1957, with heavy fines for shooting. In the early 1970s, biologists from the Department of Environment searched several years for Caspian tigers in the uninhabited areas of Caspian forests, but did not find any evidence of their presence.[7]

In captivity Edit

 
Colour-enhanced photo of the captive tiger in Berlin Zoo, 1899

A tiger from the Caucasus was housed at Berlin Zoo in the late 19th century.[1] DNA from a tiger caught in northern Iran and housed at Moscow Zoo in the 20th century was used in the genetic test that established the Caspian tiger's close genetic relationship with the Siberian tiger.[5]

Reintroduction project Edit

Stimulated by recent findings that the Siberian tiger is the closest relative of the Caspian tiger, discussions started as to whether the Siberian tiger could be appropriate for reintroduction into a safe place in Central Asia, where the Caspian tiger once roamed.[39] The Amu Darya delta was suggested as a potential site for such a project. A feasibility study was initiated to investigate if the area is suitable, and if such an initiative would receive support from relevant decision makers. A viable tiger population of about 100 animals would require at least 5,000 km2 (1,900 sq mi) of large tracts of contiguous habitat, with rich prey populations. Such habitat is not currently available, and cannot be provided in the short term. The proposed region is therefore unsuitable for the reintroduction, at least at the current stage.[28]

While the restoration of the Caspian tiger has stimulated discussions, the locations for the tiger have yet to become fully involved in the planning. But through preliminary ecological surveys it has been revealed that some small populated areas of Central Asia have preserved natural habitat suitable for tigers.[40]

In culture Edit

 
The 'Tiger Mosaic' in Palmyra
 
Portal of the Sher-Dor Madrasa in Samarkand depicting a tiger

In the Roman Empire, tigers and other large animals imported from Africa and Asia were used during gladiatorial games.[41] In the Taurus Mountains, stone traps were used to capture leopards and tigers.[42]

In the Fables of Pilpay, the tiger is described as furious and avid to rule over wilderness.[43] The babr (Persian: ببر, tiger) features in Persian and Central Asian culture. The name "Babr Mazandaran" is sometimes given to a prominent wrestler.[8] A Syrian mosaic in Palmyra depicts the Sassanids as tigers, possibly commemorating the victory of the Palmyrene King Odaenathus over Shapur I. The inscription on the mosaic conceals an earlier one that read: (Mrn), which is a title used by Odaenathus.[44] It possibly celebrates Odaenathus' victory over the Persians, the archer representing Odaenathus and the tigers the Persians; Odaenathus is about to be crowned with victory by the eagle flying above him.[45]

See also Edit

  • Holocene extinction

References Edit

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Further reading Edit

  • Abbott, J. (1856). A Narrative of a journey from Heraut to Khiva, Moscow and St. Petersburgh. Vol. 1. Khiva: James Madden. p. 26.
  • Schnitzler, A.; Hermann, L. (2019). "Chronological distribution of the tiger Panthera tigris and the Asiatic lion Panthera leo persica in their common range in Asia". Mammal Review. 49 (4): 340–353. doi:10.1111/mam.12166. S2CID 202040786.

External links Edit

  • "Caspian tiger (Panthera tigris virgata)". IUCN Cat Specialist Group.
  • . wildtiger.org. Archived from the original on 2013-10-04.
  • "The Caspian Tiger". lairweb.org.nz.
  • "Turanian tiger reintroduction". World Wildlife Fund Russia.
  • Richard Freeman (November 2018). "Animals & Men". reddit.

caspian, tiger, panthera, tigris, tigris, population, native, eastern, turkey, northern, iran, mesopotamia, caucasus, around, caspian, central, asia, northern, afghanistan, xinjiang, region, western, china, until, middle, ages, also, present, southern, russia,. The Caspian tiger was a Panthera tigris tigris population native to eastern Turkey northern Iran Mesopotamia the Caucasus around the Caspian Sea Central Asia to northern Afghanistan and the Xinjiang region in western China 2 Until the Middle Ages it was also present in southern Russia 3 It inhabited sparse forests and riverine corridors in this region until the 1970s 1 This population was regarded as a distinct subspecies and assessed as extinct in 2003 4 Caspian tigerTiger from the Caucasus in Berlin Zoological Garden 1899 1 Conservation statusExtinct 1970 Scientific classificationDomain EukaryotaKingdom AnimaliaPhylum ChordataClass MammaliaOrder CarnivoraSuborder FeliformiaFamily FelidaeSubfamily PantherinaeGenus PantheraSpecies P tigrisSubspecies P t tigrisPopulation Caspian tigerHistorical distributionResults of a phylogeographic analysis evinces that the Caspian and Siberian tiger populations shared a common continuous geographic distribution until the early 19th century 5 Some Caspian tigers were intermediate in size between Siberian and Bengal tigers 3 6 7 It was also called Balkhash tiger Hyrcanian tiger Turanian tiger 4 and Mazandaran tiger 8 Contents 1 Taxonomy 2 Characteristics 2 1 Fur 2 2 Size 3 Distribution and habitat 3 1 Local extinction 3 2 Last sightings 4 Behaviour and ecology 4 1 Disease 5 Conservation 5 1 In captivity 5 2 Reintroduction project 6 In culture 7 See also 8 References 9 Further reading 10 External linksTaxonomy EditFelis virgata was a scientific name used by Johann Karl Wilhelm Illiger in 1815 for the greyish tiger in the area surrounding the Caspian Sea 9 Tigris septentrionalis was the scientific name proposed by Konstantin Satunin in 1904 for a skull and mounted skins of tigers that were killed in the Lankaran Lowland in the 1860s 10 Felis tigris lecoqi and Felis tigris trabata were proposed by Ernst Schwarz in 1916 for tiger skins and skulls from Lop Nur and Ili River areas respectively 11 In 1929 Reginald Innes Pocock subordinated the tiger to the genus Panthera 12 For several decades the Caspian tiger was considered a distinct tiger subspecies 6 13 In 1999 the validity of several tiger subspecies was questioned Most putative subspecies described in the 19th and 20th centuries were distinguished on basis of fur length and colouration striping patterns and body size hence characteristics that vary widely within populations Morphologically tigers from different regions vary little and gene flow between populations in those regions is considered to have been possible during the Pleistocene Therefore it was proposed to recognize only two tiger subspecies as valid namely P t tigris in mainland Asia and P t sondaica in the Greater Sunda Islands and possibly in Sundaland 14 At the start of the 21st century genetic studies were carried out using 20 tiger bone and tissue samples from museum collections and sequencing at least one segment of five mitochondrial genes Results revealed a low amount of variability in the mitochondrial DNA in Caspian tigers and that Caspian and Siberian tigers were remarkably similar indicating that the Siberian tiger is the genetically closest living relative of the Caspian tiger Phylogeographic analysis indicates that the common ancestor of Caspian and Siberian tigers colonized Central Asia via the Gansu Silk Road region from eastern China less than 10 000 years ago and subsequently traversed eastward to establish the Siberian tiger population in the Russian Far East The Caspian and Siberian tigers were likely a single contiguous population until the early 19th century but became isolated from another due to fragmentation and loss of habitat during the Industrial Revolution 5 In 2015 morphological ecological and molecular traits of all putative tiger subspecies were analysed in a combined approach Results support distinction of the two evolutionary groups continental and Sunda tigers The authors proposed recognition of only two subspecies namely P t tigris comprising the Bengal Malayan Indochinese South Chinese Siberian and Caspian tiger populations and P t sondaica comprising the Javan Bali and Sumatran tiger populations Tigers in mainland Asia fall into two clades namely a northern clade formed by the Caspian and Siberian tiger populations and a southern clade formed by populations in remaining mainland Asia 15 In 2017 the Cat Specialist Group revised felid taxonomy and now recognizes the tiger populations in continental Asia as P t tigris 2 However a genetic study published in 2018 supported six monophyletic clades with the Amur and Caspian tigers being distinct from other mainland Asian populations thus supporting the traditional concept of six living subspecies 16 Characteristics Edit nbsp Skin of a Caspian tiger from Iran nbsp Illustration of two Caspian tigers Fur Edit Photographs of skins of Caspian and Siberian tigers indicate that the main background colour of the Caspian tiger s fur varied and was generally brighter and more uniform than that of the Siberian tiger The stripes were narrower fuller and more closely set than those of tigers from Manchuria The colour of its stripes was a mixture of brown or cinnamon shades Pure black patterns were invariably found only on head neck the middle of the back and at the tip of the tail Angular patterns at the base of the tail were less developed than those of Far Eastern populations The contrast between the summer and winter coats was sharp though not to the same extent as in Far Eastern populations The winter coat was paler with less distinct patterns The summer coat had a similar density and hair length to that of the Bengal tiger though its stripes were usually narrower longer and closer set It had the thickest fur amongst tigers possibly due its occurrence in the temperate parts of Asia 3 6 7 Size Edit Male Caspian tigers had a body length of 270 295 cm 106 116 in and weighed 170 240 kg 370 530 lb females measured 240 260 cm 94 102 in in head to body and weighed 85 135 kg 187 298 lb 6 Maximum skull length in males was 297 365 8 mm 11 69 14 40 in while that of females was 195 7 255 5 mm 7 70 10 06 in 3 Its occiput was broader than of the Bengal tiger 14 It ranked among the largest extant cat species along with the Siberian tiger 6 3 17 Some individuals attained exceptional sizes In 1954 a tiger was killed near the Sumbar River in Kopet Dag whose stuffed skin was put on display in a museum in Ashgabat Its head to body length was 2 25 m 7 4 ft Its skull had a condylobasal length of about 305 mm 12 0 in and zygomatic width of 205 mm 8 1 in Its skull length was 385 mm 15 2 in hence more than the known maximum of 365 8 mm 14 40 in for this population and slightly exceeding skull length of most Siberian tigers 3 In Prishibinske a tiger was killed in February 1899 Measurements after skinning revealed a body length of 270 cm 8 9 ft between the pegs plus a 90 cm 3 0 ft long tail giving it a total length of about 360 cm 11 8 ft Measurements between the pegs of up to 2 95 m 9 7 ft are known 6 It was said to have been a tiger of immense proportions and no smaller than the local horse breeds It had rather long fur 3 Skull size and shape of Caspian tigers significantly overlap with and are almost indistinguishable from other tiger specimens in mainland Asia 18 Distribution and habitat Edit nbsp Shore of the Turkmenbasy Gulf at the Caspian Sea nbsp The Tigris River outside Mosul in Iraq nbsp Landscape in the Altai Mountains Historical records show that the distribution of the tiger in the region of the Caspian Sea was not continuous but patchy and associated with wetlands such as river basins lake edges and sea shores In the Middle Ages it inhabited the steppes and forest steppes of Ukraine and southern Russia 3 In the 19th century tigers occurred in the Eastern Anatolia Region which is considered to have been the westernmost area where tigers occurred 1 Records are known from the region of Mount Ararat Sanliurfa Sirnak Siirt and Hakkari Provinces in eastern Turkey in the Hakkari Province tigers possibly occurred up to the 1990s 19 20 The only confirmed record in Iraq dates to 1887 when a tiger was shot near Mosul which is considered to have been a migrant from southeastern Turkey 19 There are also claims of historical tiger presence in the area of the Tigris Euphrates river system in Iraq and Syria 21 22 the extreme southeast of the Caucasus such as in hilly and lowland forests of the Talysh Mountains in the Lenkoran Lowlands in the lowland forests of Prishib from where tigers moved into the eastern plains of the Trans Caucasus up to the Don River basin the Armenian and Zangezur Mountains of northwestern Persia 3 In Iran historical records are known only from along the southern coast of the Caspian Sea and adjacent Alborz Mountains 23 Central Asia such as in southwestern Turkmenia along the Atrek River and its tributaries and the Sumbar and Chandyr Rivers in the western and southwestern parts of Kopet Dag in the environs of Ashkabad in the northern foothills in Afghanistan along the upper reaches of Hari Rud at Herat and along the jungles in the lower reaches of the river around Tedzhen and Murgap and along the Kushka and Kashan rivers in the Amu Darya basin as far the Aral Sea and along the entire coast of the Aral Sea along the Syr Darya to the Fergana Valley as far as Tashkent and the western spur of Talas Alatau along the Chu and Ili Rivers all along the southern shore of Lake Balkhash and northwards into the southern Altai Mountains and to southeastern Transbaikal or Western Siberia in the east 3 24 In China it occurred in the Tarim Manasi River and Lop Nur basins 1 Its former distribution can be approximated by examining the distribution of ungulates in the region 25 Wild boar was the numerically dominant ungulate in forested habitats along watercourses in reed beds and in thickets of the Caspian and Aral Seas Where watercourses penetrated deep into desert areas suitable wild pig and tiger habitat was often linear only a few kilometers wide at most Red and roe deer occurred in forests around the Black Sea to the western side and around the southern side of the Caspian Sea in a narrow belt of forest cover Roe deer occurred in forested areas south of Lake Balkash Bactrian deer lived in the narrow belt of forest habitat on the southern border of the Aral Sea and southward along the Syr Darya and Amu Darya rivers 3 Throughout the late Pleistocene and Holocene the Caspian tiger population was likely connected to the Bengal tiger population through corridors below elevations of 4 000 m 13 000 ft in the Hindu Kush before gene flow was interrupted by humans 26 Local extinction Edit nbsp Tiger killed in northern Iran early 1940sThe demise of the Caspian tiger began with the Russian colonisation of Turkestan during the late 19th century 27 Its extirpation was caused by several factors Tigers were killed by large parties of sportsmen and military personnel who also hunted tiger prey species such as wild pigs The wild pig range underwent a rapid decline between the middle of the 19th century and the 1930s due to overhunting natural disasters and diseases such as swine fever and foot and mouth disease which caused large and rapid die offs 3 The extensive reed beds of tiger habitat were increasingly converted to cropland for planting cotton and other crops that grew well in the rich silt along rivers 27 The tiger was already vulnerable due to the restricted nature of its distribution having been confined to watercourses within the large expanses of desert environment 25 Until the early 20th century the regular Russian army was used to clear predators from forests around settlements and potential agricultural lands Until World War I about 50 tigers were killed in the forests of Amu Darya and Piandj Rivers each year High incentives were paid for tiger skins up to 1929 Wild pigs and deer the prey base of tigers were decimated by deforestation and subsistence hunting by the increasing human population along the rivers supported by growing agricultural developments 28 By 1910 cotton plants were estimated to occupy nearly one fifth of Turkestan s arable land with about one half located in the Fergana Valley 29 Last sightings Edit In Iraq a tiger was killed near Mosul in 1887 1 19 In Georgia the last known tiger was killed in 1922 near Tbilisi after taking domestic livestock 1 30 In China tigers disappeared from the Tarim River basin in Xinjiang in the 1920s 1 30 They reportedly disappeared from the Manasi River basin in the Tian Shan Range west of Urumqi in the 1960s 3 In Turkey a pair of tigers was allegedly killed in the area of Selcuk in 1943 31 Several tiger skins found in the early 1970s near Uludere indicated the presence of a tiger population in eastern Turkey 32 33 Questionnaire surveys conducted in this region revealed that one to eight tigers were killed each year until the mid 1980s and that tigers likely had survived in the region until the early 1990s Due to lack of interest in addition to security and safety reasons no further field surveys were carried out in the area 20 In Azerbaijan the last known tiger was killed in 1932 however there were alleged sightings in the Talysh Mountains in later years 34 In Iran one of the last known tigers was shot in Golestan National Park in 1953 Another individual was sighted in the Golestan area in 1958 7 In Turkmenistan the last known tiger was killed in January 1954 in the Sumbar River valley in the Kopet Dag Range 35 The last record from the lower reaches of the Amu Darya river was an unconfirmed observation in 1968 near Nukus in the Aral Sea area By the early 1970s tigers disappeared from the river s lower reaches and the Pyzandh Valley in the Turkmen Uzbek Afghan border region 3 The Piandj River area between Afghanistan and Tajikistan was a stronghold of the Caspian tiger until the late 1960s The latest sighting of a tiger in the Afghan Tajik border area dates to 1998 in the Babatag Range 28 In Kazakhstan the last Caspian tiger was recorded in 1948 in the environs of the Ili River the last known stronghold in the region of Lake Balkhash 3 In May 2006 a Kazakh hunter claimed to have seen a female Caspian tiger with cubs near Lake Balkash However this sighting remains uncertain and unconfirmed 36 Behaviour and ecology Edit nbsp Mosaic of an elephant attacking a tiger from Roman Syria which occupied parts of what is now Anatolia and Mesopotamia 37 No information is available for home ranges of Caspian tigers In search for prey they possibly prowled widely and followed migratory ungulates from one pasture to another Wild pigs and cervids probably formed their main prey base In many regions of Central Asia Bactrian deer and roe deer were important prey species as well as Caspian red deer and goitered gazelle in Iran Eurasian golden jackals jungle cats locusts and other small mammals in the lower Amu Darya River area saigas wild horses and Persian onagers in the Miankaleh Peninsula Turkmenian kulans Mongolian wild asses and mountain sheep in the Zhana Darya and around the Aral Sea and Manchurian wapiti and moose in the area of Lake Baikal They caught fish in flooded areas and irrigation channels In winter they frequently attacked dogs and livestock straying away from herds They preferred drinking water from rivers and drank from lakes in seasons when water was less brackish 3 Disease Edit Two tigers in southwestern Tajikistan harbored 5 7 tapeworms Taenia bubesei in their small and large intestines 3 Conservation EditIn 1938 the first protected area Tigrovaya Balka Russian Tigrovaya balka lit Tiger dry creek or Tiger arroyo was established in Tajikistan The name was given to this zapovednik after a tiger had attacked two Russian Army officers riding horseback along dried up river channel known in Russian as balka Tigrovaya Balka was apparently the last refuge of Caspian tigers in the Soviet Union and is situated in the lower reaches of Vakhsh River between the Piandj and Kofarnihon Rivers near the border of Afghanistan A tiger was seen there in 1958 38 After 1947 tigers were legally protected in the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics 28 In Iran Caspian tigers had been protected since 1957 with heavy fines for shooting In the early 1970s biologists from the Department of Environment searched several years for Caspian tigers in the uninhabited areas of Caspian forests but did not find any evidence of their presence 7 In captivity Edit nbsp Colour enhanced photo of the captive tiger in Berlin Zoo 1899A tiger from the Caucasus was housed at Berlin Zoo in the late 19th century 1 DNA from a tiger caught in northern Iran and housed at Moscow Zoo in the 20th century was used in the genetic test that established the Caspian tiger s close genetic relationship with the Siberian tiger 5 Reintroduction project Edit Main article Siberian Tiger Introduction Project Stimulated by recent findings that the Siberian tiger is the closest relative of the Caspian tiger discussions started as to whether the Siberian tiger could be appropriate for reintroduction into a safe place in Central Asia where the Caspian tiger once roamed 39 The Amu Darya delta was suggested as a potential site for such a project A feasibility study was initiated to investigate if the area is suitable and if such an initiative would receive support from relevant decision makers A viable tiger population of about 100 animals would require at least 5 000 km2 1 900 sq mi of large tracts of contiguous habitat with rich prey populations Such habitat is not currently available and cannot be provided in the short term The proposed region is therefore unsuitable for the reintroduction at least at the current stage 28 While the restoration of the Caspian tiger has stimulated discussions the locations for the tiger have yet to become fully involved in the planning But through preliminary ecological surveys it has been revealed that some small populated areas of Central Asia have preserved natural habitat suitable for tigers 40 In culture Edit nbsp The Tiger Mosaic in Palmyra nbsp Portal of the Sher Dor Madrasa in Samarkand depicting a tiger In the Roman Empire tigers and other large animals imported from Africa and Asia were used during gladiatorial games 41 In the Taurus Mountains stone traps were used to capture leopards and tigers 42 In the Fables of Pilpay the tiger is described as furious and avid to rule over wilderness 43 The babr Persian ببر tiger features in Persian and Central Asian culture The name Babr Mazandaran is sometimes given to a prominent wrestler 8 A Syrian mosaic in Palmyra depicts the Sassanids as tigers possibly commemorating the victory of the Palmyrene King Odaenathus over Shapur I The inscription on the mosaic conceals an earlier one that read Mrn which is a title used by Odaenathus 44 It possibly celebrates Odaenathus victory over the Persians the archer representing Odaenathus and the tigers the Persians Odaenathus is about to be crowned with victory by the eagle flying above him 45 See also EditTiger populations Mainland Asian populations Bengal tiger Indochinese tiger Malayan tiger Siberian tiger South China tiger Sunda island populations Bali tiger Bornean tiger Javan tiger Sumatran tiger Prehistoric tigers Panthera tigris soloensisPanthera tigris trinilensisPanthera tigris acutidens Holocene extinctionReferences Edit a b c d e f g h Nowell K amp Jackson P 1996 Tiger Panthera tigris Linnaeus 1758 PDF Wild Cats status survey and conservation action plan Gland Switzerland IUCN SSC Cat Specialist Group pp 55 65 a b Kitchener A C Breitenmoser Wursten C Eizirik E Gentry A Werdelin L Wilting A Yamaguchi N Abramov A V Christiansen P Driscoll C Duckworth J W Johnson W Luo S J Meijaard E O Donoghue P Sanderson J Seymour K Bruford M Groves C Hoffmann M Nowell K Timmons Z amp Tobe S 2017 A revised taxonomy of the Felidae The final report of the Cat Classification Task Force of the IUCN Cat Specialist Group PDF Cat News Special Issue 11 66 68 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r Heptner V G amp Sludskij A A 1992 1972 Tiger Mlekopitajuscie Sovetskogo Soiuza Moskva Vyssaia Skola Mammals of the Soviet Union Volume II Part 2 Carnivora Hyaenas and Cats Washington DC Smithsonian Institution and the National Science Foundation pp 95 202 a b Jackson P amp Nowell K 2011 Panthera tigris ssp virgata IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2011 e T41505A10480967 a b c Driscoll C A Yamaguchi N Bar Gal G K Roca A L Luo S Macdonald D W amp O Brien S J 2009 Mitochondrial Phylogeography Illuminates the Origin of the Extinct Caspian Tiger and Its Relationship to the Amur Tiger PLOS ONE 4 1 e4125 Bibcode 2009PLoSO 4 4125D doi 10 1371 journal pone 0004125 PMC 2624500 PMID 19142238 a b c d e f Mazak V 1981 Panthera tigris Mammalian Species 152 1 8 doi 10 2307 3504004 JSTOR 3504004 a b c d Firouz E 2005 Tiger The complete fauna of Iran London New York I B Tauris pp 66 67 ISBN 978 1 85043 946 2 a b Humphreys P amp Kahrom E 1999 Caspian tiger Lion and Gazelle The Mammals and Birds of Iran Avon Images Publishing pp 75 77 ISBN 9781860642296 Illiger C 1815 Uberblick der Saugethiere nach ihrer Verteilung uber die Welttheile Abhandlungen der Koniglichen Preussischen Akademie der Wissenschaften zu Berlin 1804 1811 39 159 Archived from the original on 2019 06 08 Retrieved 2020 07 15 Satunin K 1906 Die Saugetiere des Talyschgebietes und der Mugansteppe The mammals of the Talysch and the Mugan steppe regions Mitteilungen des Kaukasischen Museums 2 263 394 Schwarz E 1916 Zwei neue Lokalformen des Tigers aus Centralasien Two new local races of the Tiger from Central Asia Zoologischer Anzeiger 47 12 351 354 Pocock R I 1929 Tigers Journal of the Bombay Natural History Society 33 3 505 541 Wozencraft W C 2005 Subspecies Panthera tigris virgata In Wilson D E Reeder D M eds Mammal Species of the World A Taxonomic and Geographic Reference 3rd ed Johns Hopkins University Press p 548 ISBN 978 0 8018 8221 0 OCLC 62265494 a b Kitchener A 1999 Tiger distribution phenotypic variation and conservation issues In Seidensticker J Christie S Jackson P eds Riding the Tiger Tiger Conservation in Human Dominated Landscapes Cambridge University Press pp 19 39 ISBN 978 0 521 64835 6 Archived from the original on 2012 04 23 Wilting A Courtiol A Christiansen P Niedballa J Scharf A K Orlando L Balkenhol N Hofer H Kramer Schadt S Fickel J amp Kitchener A A C 2015 Planning tiger recovery Understanding intraspecific variation for effective conservation Science Advances 11 5 e1400175 Bibcode 2015SciA 1E0175W doi 10 1126 sciadv 1400175 PMC 4640610 PMID 26601191 Li Y C Sun X Driscoll C Miquelle D G Xu X Martelli P Uphyrkina O Smith J L D O Brien S J amp Luo S J 2018 Genome wide evolutionary analysis of natural history and adaptation in the world s tigers Current Biology 28 23 3840 3849 e6 doi 10 1016 j cub 2018 09 019 PMID 30482605 Nowak R M 1999 Walker s Mammals of the World Baltimore Johns Hopkins University Press ISBN 978 0 8018 5789 8 Mazak J H 2010 Craniometric variation in the tiger Panthera tigris Implications for patterns of diversity taxonomy and conservation Mammalian Biology Zeitschrift fur Saugetierkunde 75 1 45 68 doi 10 1016 j mambio 2008 06 003 a b c Kock D 1990 Historical record of a tiger Panthera tigris Linnaeus 1758 in Iraq Zoology in the Middle East 4 11 15 doi 10 1080 09397140 1990 10637583 a b Can O E 2004 Status conservation and management of large carnivores in Turkey PDF Strasbourg Convention on the conservation of European wildlife and natural habitats Hatt R T 1959 The mammals of Iraq Ann Arbor Museum of Zoology University of Michigan Masseti M 2009 Carnivores of Syria In E Neubert Z Amr S Taiti B Gumus eds Animal Biodiversity in the Middle East Proceedings of the First Middle Eastern Biodiversity Congress Aqaba Jordan 20 23 October 2008 pp 229 252 doi 10 3897 zookeys 31 170 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a journal ignored help Faizolahi K 2016 Tiger in Iran historical distribution extinction causes and feasibility of reintroduction Cat News Special issue 10 5 13 Seidensticker J Christie S amp Jackson P 1999 Preface Riding the Tiger Tiger conservation in human dominated landscapes Cambridge U K Cambridge University Press pp XV XIX ISBN 978 0 521 64835 6 a b Sunquist M Karanth K U amp Sunquist F 1999 Ecology behaviour and resilience of the tiger and its conservation needs In Seidensticker J Christie S amp Jackson P eds Riding the Tiger Tiger conservation in human dominated landscapes Cambridge U K Cambridge University Press pp 5 18 ISBN 9780521648356 Cooper D M Dugmore A J Gittings B M Scharf A K Wilting A amp Kitchener A C 2016 Predicted Pleistocene Holocene range shifts of the tiger Panthera tigris Diversity and Distributions 22 11 1199 1211 doi 10 1111 ddi 12484 a b Johnson P 1991 The birth of the Modern World Society 1815 1830 New York Harper Collins Publishers ISBN 978 0 06 016574 1 a b c d Jungius H Chikin Y Tsaruk O amp Pereladova O 2009 Pre Feasibility Study on the Possible Restoration of the Caspian Tiger in the Amu Darya Delta PDF WWF Russia Archived from the original PDF on 22 October 2016 Retrieved 19 August 2016 Brower D R 2003 Turkestan and the fate of the Russian Empire London Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 29744 8 a b Ognev S I 1935 Carnivora Fissipedia Mammals of the U S S R and adjacent countries Vol 2 Washington D C National Science Foundation Johnson K 2002 The Status of mammalian carnivores in Turkey PDF Endangered Species Update 19 6 232 237 Baytop T 1974 La presence du vrai tigre Panthera tigris Linne 1758 en Turquie Saugetierkundliche Mitteilungen 22 3 254 256 Kumerloeve H 1974 Zum Vorkommen des Tigers auf turkischem Boden Saugetierkundliche Mitteilungen 22 4 348 350 Novikov A G 1962 Khishchnye mlekopitayushchie fauny SSSR Carnivorous mammals of the fauna of the USSR Israel program for scientific translations OCLC 797893515 Ministry of Forest of Turkmenistan 1999 The Red Data Book of Turkmenistan Vol 1 2nd ed Turkmenistan Publishing House Rossi L Scuzzarella C M Angelici F M 2020 Extinct or Perhaps Surviving Relict Populations of Big Cats Their Controversial Stories and Implications for Conservation In Angelici F M Rossi L eds Problematic Wildlife II Cham Springer International Publishing pp 393 417 doi 10 1007 978 3 030 42335 3 12 ISBN 978 3 030 42335 3 S2CID 218943307 Sicker M 2001 Between Rome and Jerusalem 300 years of Roman Judaean relations Westport Greenwood Publishing Group ISBN 9780275971403 Retrieved 26 July 2012 Dybas C L 2010 The Once and Future Tiger BioScience 60 11 872 877 doi 10 1525 bio 2010 60 11 3 S2CID 83471382 Luo S J Johnson W E amp O Brien S J 2010 Applying molecular genetic tools to tiger conservation Integrative Zoology 5 4 351 362 doi 10 1111 j 1749 4877 2010 00222 x PMC 6984346 PMID 21392353 Driscoll C A Chestin I Jungius H Pereladova O Darman Y Dinerstein E Seidensticker J Sanderson J Christie S Luo S J Shrestha M Zhuravlev Y Uphyrkina O Jhala Y V Yadav S P Pikunov D G Yamaguchi N Wildt D E J L D Smith L Marker P J Nyhus R Tilson D W Macdonald amp O Brien S J 2012 A postulate for tiger recovery the case of the Caspian Tiger Journal of Threatened Taxa 4 6 2637 2643 doi 10 11609 jott o2993 2637 43 Auguet R 1994 The hunts of the amphitheatre Cruelty and civilization the Roman games Psychology Press pp 81 106 ISBN 978 0 415 10453 1 Sekercioglu C H Anderson S Akcay E Bilgin R Can O amp Semiz G 2011 Turkey s Globally Important Biodiversity In Crisis Biological Conservation 144 12 2752 2769 doi 10 1016 j biocon 2011 06 025 S2CID 18094317 Kashifi H V 1854 The Anvari Suhaili or the Lights of Canopus Being the Persian version of the Fables of Pilpay or the Book Kalilah and Damnah rendered into Persian by Husain Va iz U L Kashifi Translated by Eastwick E B Hertford Stephen Austin Gawlikowski M 2005 L apotheose d Odeinat sur une Mosaique Recemment Decouverte a Palmyre Comptes Rendus des Seances de l Academie des Inscriptions et Belles Lettres in French 149 4 1293 1304 doi 10 3406 crai 2005 22944 Gawlikowski M 2006 Palmyra Current World Archaeology 12 32 Further reading EditAbbott J 1856 A Narrative of a journey from Heraut to Khiva Moscow and St Petersburgh Vol 1 Khiva James Madden p 26 Schnitzler A Hermann L 2019 Chronological distribution of the tiger Panthera tigris and the Asiatic lion Panthera leo persica in their common range in Asia Mammal Review 49 4 340 353 doi 10 1111 mam 12166 S2CID 202040786 External links Edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Panthera tigris virgata nbsp Wikispecies has information related to Panthera tigris virgata Caspian tiger Panthera tigris virgata IUCN Cat Specialist Group The Great Cats of Asia Caspian Tiger wildtiger org Archived from the original on 2013 10 04 The Caspian Tiger lairweb org nz Turanian tiger reintroduction World Wildlife Fund Russia Richard Freeman November 2018 Animals amp Men reddit Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Caspian tiger amp oldid 1176602855, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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