From the Auckland news thread discussion;
I think Orana was quite keen on keeping Reggie knowing he was quite a valuable male - and was therefore guaranteed to receive a breeding recommendation. As we know recommendations are difficult to come by these days.
Anyhow, it's great that Reggie will finally have the opportunity to breed. At nine years old, he isn't getting any younger and being the valuable male that he is, he needs time on his side. He'll hopefully soon have the opportunity to sire countless litters.
It's possible that the lack of current breeding recommendations by the region as a whole is taking into account these future pairings who will likely have more than one litter, and therefore there'll likely be a good surplus.
I heard similar regarding Orana wanting to retain Reggie. As we know, it’s very much a consultative process and their wishes were clearly considered. The only downside is it duplicated the match at Adelaide Zoo.
With Reggie now receiving a mate, that leaves Taronga Zoo and Australia Zoo as the top candidates for receiving mates for their tigers from the next litter of Ramah and Zayana. The Taronga siblings will be seven before Auckland’s prospective cubs are even born, so I suspect this was the rationale behind retained Pemanah at Taronga Zoo. As a male, he’ll have a longer reproductive life than his sister who will be at least 10 years old before a mate can be sourced.
Australia Zoo are arguably in the same scenario, albeit with females a year young. My guess is Taronga would take preference for receiving a female; and if there wasn’t a second female for Australia Zoo, they’d consider acquiring a male to attempt breeding with their (by then) 9-10 year old females.
Alternatively, Zayana may well transfer to one of these facilities as per what Auckland Zoo told me about being open to transferring her out (as opposed to Ramah who would be retained long term).