Malayan Tiger
Panthera tigris jacksoni
The Malayan tiger is the tiger population native to Peninsular Malaysia, commonly listed as Panthera tigris jacksoni, though tiger subspecies names have varied among authorities. It was separated from the Indochinese tiger by genetic work in the early 2000s and is now treated in many conservation programs as a distinct, critically endangered form. Like other tigers, it is a solitary striped cat built for ambush hunting, with individual stripe patterns that can be used for photo identification. Wild prey includes deer and wild pigs where intact forest still supports them.
Care and stewardship are limited to accredited zoos, rescue facilities, and field conservation programs; a Malayan tiger is not a private pet or casual attraction. Captive facilities require secure off-exhibit holding, large complex habitats, protected-contact routines, enrichment that encourages stalking and scent investigation, and carefully balanced carnivore diets. Breeding is usually coordinated through regional population plans to preserve scarce genetics. In Malaysia, conservation work centers on anti-poaching patrols, prey recovery, habitat corridors, conflict response near villages and plantations, and genetic or camera-trap monitoring of the remaining wild cats.
Colors: Black, Golden, Golden Tabby, Melanistic, Orange, Orange and Black, Striped, White, White and Black, Wild Type