White Tiger Facts

ZoologicallyDepraved

Well-Known Member
Very interesting website about the history of white tigers, though it does contain some personal opinions on conservation value. I learned some things that I had not previously known.

(By linking this website I am not condemning nor promoting the breeding of white tigers.)

White Tiger Information Center
 
This website is utter bullsh*t, claims like this disqualify it immediately:

The Royal White Tiger is one of the most valuable conservation tools that zoos and theme parks have in their education arsenal on the visitor level today.

How on earth would an inbred hybrid mutation be a great conservation tool when they have 0 conservation value...
 
This website is utter bullsh*t, claims like this disqualify it immediately:

The Royal White Tiger is one of the most valuable conservation tools that zoos and theme parks have in their education arsenal on the visitor level today.

How on earth would an inbred hybrid mutation be a great conservation tool when they have 0 conservation value...
That did raise my eyebrows. They do address the inbreeding issue, however I don't know how accurate it is as they're active advocates FOR this type of breeding.
 
That did raise my eyebrows. They do address the inbreeding issue, however I don't know how accurate it is as they're active advocates FOR this type of breeding.

Nearly everything on there is entirely BS and/or manipulated. A lot of it is the same nonsense shared by the Tiger King, etc crowd (there was a lot of this stuff on the Wynnewood website, some of it may even be copy/pasted from it). These are not "facts".
 
Oh, lord, this website is ridiculous. Which roadside zoo operator made this? Plenty of zoos get by just fine without having white tigers. It's not like orange tigers are any less spectacular to look at.
I honestly prefer looking at orange tigers more for the same reason I like more naturalistic zoo enclosures. Man-made things just aren't to my taste typically.
 
I honestly prefer looking at orange tigers more for the same reason I like more naturalistic zoo enclosures. Man-made things just aren't to my taste typically.

White tigers were ruined for me when I learned about the heavy inbreeding. But I've also developed more preference for the natural. Orange is nice and vibrant anyway. Especially when you see a Sumatran tiger in person! Gorgeous!
 
I remember I once went to Olmense Zoo / Pakawi Park or DierenPark Amersfoort as a teenager to see white tigers. The royal Bengal white tiger, a very rare color variant like they said. They were one of my favorite animals. And then I learned they are just a color morph and inbred by humans. That doesn’t change the fact I still think they are beautiful, but it’s not natural anymore. So at Pairi Daiza I still take a lot of pictures of them.
 
I believe that all color morphs and domestic species have a right to exist in captivity, even if they might not have any conservation value to the wild. They can provide fascinating insight into how genetics work, along just the fact that they are gorgeous (though I usually prefer the wild type) and having a population of such animals can allow a one-time mutation that usually don't live long in the wild to thrive and be preserved by humans. But claiming that they are so divinely important is so damn silly I'm sorry:p
 
I recall recently I was reading a book written about Sigfried and Roy, which had interviews inside... going into reading it I was of the position that S&R were the two men of prime responsibility for the public idea that the white tiger is endangered in a separate manner from the tiger species.

And I think the book strengthened my position... the story went that one of the men had dreams featuring a white tiger.. he later finds out that there really are white tigers.. adopts a few cubs from Cincinnati... the rest is history. He comes to the conclusion that the white tiger evolved separate from the orange tiger, its white coat adapted to the snowy backdrop of the Nepalese himalayas.
At first I almost saw the logic... with how the snow leopard, which lives in the himalayas, does have a grey-white coat. But then the logic slipped away... where the snow leopard evolved on the rocky outcrops, the tiger evolved for the lowland forests ... and so it's unlikely a white coat would be beneficial anywhere should the tiger want to avoid confrontation or even stalk its own prey. And there are still tigers in Nepal today, but usually in the warmer parts of the country.

[And any white animal that doesn't live at the poles usually moults... white tigers don't!]

And throughout the book the white tiger is confusingly referred to as a separate species... which becomes particularly odd when the book talks about breeding heterozygous orange cubs with the white gene. But then from what I have seen, neither Roy nor Sigfried were the most logical of men... and somehow by luck their manner of being served them....until it didn't. But at least now I have closure as to where at least some of the ideas come from.
 
He comes to the conclusion that the white tiger evolved separate from the orange tiger, its white coat adapted to the snowy backdrop of the Nepalese himalayas.
That idea was from Willard Price's Tiger Adventure which was published in 1979, and wherein the boys went to the Himalayas to capture the rare white tiger which evolved in the snowy mountains. Willard Price's animal-collecting book series were best-sellers through the 70s and 80s.
 
That idea was from Willard Price's Tiger Adventure which was published in 1979, and wherein the boys went to the Himalayas to capture the rare white tiger which evolved in the snowy mountains. Willard Price's animal-collecting book series were best-sellers through the 70s and 80s.

He should have read E.P. Gee's The Wildlife Of India for an accurate background as to where White Tigers really come from and how they first entered captivity. Another book by the (then) director of Delhi Zoo( Tiger! by Kalesh Sankala?) gives an even more detailed account of the early breedings in India.
 
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