Hello Year 5,
I have attached a story and video about very rare white tigers that were born in Liberec here in the Czech Republic. I am interesetd to hear your thoughts on the story? I want you to consider the work we have been doing in class today as well as questions like:
• Would those tigers survive long in the wild?
•- Would they be able to
hunt and eat well in the wild?
•- Would you ever be able to
see them if they were in the wild? (12 sightings in 100 years)
•- So does that make it
right to keep them in a zoo?
By Mr. Bennett
Black and white miracles: Rare white Bengal tiger triplets born in Czech zoo
White tigers are so rare that only one in every 10,000 Bengal tigers is born white with black stripes and a pink nose.
So when triplets were born in captivity in July, the white cubs proved to be a cute, black and white miracle.
The cubs are living with their mother Surya Bara in ZOO Liberec in the Czech Republic and now the public has been asked to name one of them.
Mother and cub: White Bengal tigers are only born one in every 10,000 so triplets born to mother Surya Bara at in a Czech Republic zoo are a cute, black and white miracle
From more than 2200 suggestions, the zoo has narrowed it down to five names - Liam, Samburu, Sigmar, Titan or Woody – for one of the male cubs.
According to Czech news website iDNES.cz, voting polls will open tomorrow.
The other male and female cubs will be named by the zoo keepers.
Name the baby boy: The public has been asked to vote for their favourite name for one of the boy cubs from five choices: Liam, Samburu, Sigmar, Titan or Woody
Babies baptized: The white tiger triplets will be baptized on Saturday in the northern Czech city of Liberec
During a veterinary examination in August, the two males weighed around 15lbs and the female around 14lbs.
The triplets will be baptized on Saturday according to iDNES.cz.
Genetic hiccup: The white tiger is not albino nor a separate subspecies but the result of a rare recessive gene
White Bengal tigers are neither an albino nor a separate subspecies. Instead, they are a result of a rare recessive gene.
In the past century only 12 have been spotted in the wild. Most survive in captivity because they do not survive long in the wild as they struggle to catch prey because their colouration stands out in the jungle.
Males weigh 440-500lbs and grow up to nine feet in length. The females are 285-375lbs and grow up to eight feet long.
Survival in the wild: White Bengal tigers do not survive long in the wild as they struggle to catch their prey because their colouration stands out in the jungle
Video of the cubs here
Here is the wallwisher we made about animals in zoos: