Environmental Sciences, asked by satvikburnwal, 11 months ago

Why tigers cannot live in prairie?

Answers

Answered by saritaaadya
0

Answer:

Lions, leopards and tigers are all part of the Felidae family of cats, which originated in Africa and share a common ancestor. At some point, probably around 2 million years ago, one offshoot of Felidae migrated east toward Asia, and those cats evolved into the orange-, black-, and white-striped beasts we know today. Once established in Asia, however, tigers never returned to Africa, although scientists aren't exactly sure why.

Answered by JoshuaFerns
0

Answer:

This is because the prairies are entirely unsuitable as nice and cozy niche for a tiger.

Tigers need a camouflaging environment, something which the prairies do not offer as it is mostly green;

Tigers live in Jungles is because they need Peace, Tranquility, Quietness, Solitude, to Hide themselves, as Tigers are usually Silent Killers, and they rarely Roar or Moan except on a Few occasions like while in search of a Mate, During Mating or when fighting; something which is not present in the prairies either;

Tigers & Tigresses live in Forests & Jungles since they need a Vast Territory to live in and they use their Anal Scent Glands as Pheromones to Demarcate their Territories and lead an Independent Life on their own will, they live by their own rulebooks.

And the reasons can go on and on. They are many reasons as to why the prairies cannot be a suitable niche for tigers and the above are some of the main ones.

Hope it helps, if it does, please mark as brainliest :))

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