The hybrids resulting from crossbreeding between lions and tigers are known as tigon (
/ˈtaɪɡən/) and liger (
/ˈlaɪɡər/). The second generation hybrids of liger or tigon are known as liliger, tiliger, litigon and titigon. The tigon (
Panthera tigris X leo), also known as tiglon (
/ˈtaɪɡlən/) is an offspring of a male tiger (
Panthera tigris) and a female lion (
Panthera leo). A liger is distinct from tigon (
Panthera leo X tigris), as a hybrid of female tiger and male lion. Professor Valentine Bail conducted a long observation and recording of some lion-tiger hybrids, those lion-tiger are owned by Mr. Atkins and his zoo: The early record lion-tiger hybrid was mainly tigons, in
At Home In The Zoo (1961), Gerald Iles wrote "For the record I must say that I have never seen a liger, a hybrid obtained by crossing a lion with a tigress. They seem to be even rarer than tigons."
Examples ;Liger :A
liger is the offspring between a male lion and a female tiger, which is larger than its parents because the lion has a growth maximizing gene and the tigress, unlike the lioness, has no growth inhibiting gene. ;Tigon :A
tigon is the offspring of a female lion and a male tiger. ;Litigon :Rudrani, a tigoness from the
Alipore Zoo, mated with Debabrata, a male lion, and gave birth to three litigons. Only one litigon cub, named Cubanacan, survived. ;Tiliger :A tiliger is the offspring of a male tiger and a ligress.. In 2008 a tiliger named Radar was born in Florida and was transferred to Tigerworld Animal Sanctuary in
Rockwell, North Carolina at 15 weeks old. Radar's parents are a male tiger and a female liger. ;Titigon :A titigon is the offspring of a male tiger and a tigoness.
Growth and size Ligers are typically larger and heavier than other existing felids. Some biologists believe that their
gigantism results from the lack of certain genes that limit the growth of lions. The male lion's genes tend to maximize the growth of its progeny, as the larger size represents greater competitiveness. In order to control the size of the offspring within a certain range, the growth-inhibiting gene of the lioness will offset the growth-maximizing gene of the male lion. The genes of a female tiger, however, are not adapted to limiting growth, which allows ligers to grow far larger and heavier than either parent. In general, most ligers grow more than in length and weigh more than . Tigons are a cross between a male tiger and a female lion. The presence of growth-minimizing genes from the lioness causes them to be smaller than either of their parent species; they weigh less than . Tigons also have growth
dysplasia (however, inversely). A tigon is approximately twice as light as liger.
Appearance Ligers and tigons look similar to their parents, only bigger or smaller. Their teeth are about two inches long. They have the genetic components of tigers and lions; therefore, they may be very similar to their parent species and can be difficult to identify. Their coloring ranges from gold to brown to white, and they may have spots or stripes. Adult male ligers usually have smaller manes than male lions.
Longevity A liger called Samson died at the age of thirteen in 2006. Shasta, a female liger, was born in the Hogle Zoo in Salt Lake City in 1948, and died in 1972. She lived for 24 years. Many claim that ligers are short-lived, but according to the survey, such a conclusion is still uncertain. A male tigon owned by Atkins born on July 19, 1833, lived for 10 years.
Fertility Guggisberg said ligers and tigons were thought to be invariably
sterile. The first hybrid of a hybrid, a cub mothered by a liger, was discovered at the Munich-Hellabrunn Zoo in 1943. The birth of a second generation of hybrids proved that the biologists were wrong about tigons' and ligers' fertility; it now seems that only male lion-tiger hybrids are sterile. == Zoo animals ==