I wrote down an anecdote from my experience, I have no intention of criticizing the people mentioned in the article, Just watch it for fun.
1. Many Koreans pride themselves on being a "Tiger Nation," but unfortunately, few people know real tigers well.
For the most serious example, I can see a person at some local zoos in Korea who calls a lion a "tiger" whenever I forget. If the child did, I would simply pass it on as a mistake, but most of those people I saw were parents with children. So I had no choice but to worry about their children.
In a recent absurd example, on Oct. 5, about a male lion named "Laon" at Dalseong Park Zoo. He has a ruffled face and a crooked nose, probably as a result of the terrible inbreeding at Everland. But apart from his appearance, he enjoys sitting close to the moat with his mate, lioness "huchu," looking curiously at the visitors.
That day, Laon was sitting on the edge of the moat, and a three-member family of father, mother and child came to Lion exhibit. Among them, my father arrived the latest, and when he saw Laon's face, he laughed and said:
"It looks a fool!" and It wasn't long before he told his wife, who had taken laon's picture on his cellphone,
"Send me that 'tiger' picture."

2023. 10. 05.
Laon's face at the moment
when the family's father saw him and called him a fool.
I don't know anything else, but it's clear that there was one "fool" in the place at that moment. I try not to say this, but I can't stop myself from thinking like this.
But the funny thing is, I've rarely seen people calls tigers to lions. Maybe, they remember "lion has no stripe" better than "a tiger has a stripe." Perhaps I should say "just a little bit relieved" that they know half exactly?
2. In the waterfowl aviary at Seoul Children's Grand Park, there is a pair of great white pelicans, which are very big and very pink.
Late last year, perhaps on November 30, I could see a young woman look at that two pelicans and utter admiration as if she were amazed. Soon after, she explained to her boyfriend, who had followed her, in a voice of great exultation, the wonder she felt at the sight of the pelican.
...Just like this:
"Flamingo!"
3. Maybe it was winter of early 2022, when I was birdwatching on a telephoto lens in the riverside, an old woman asked me, pointing to a bunch of birds in the river.
"Is that things are birds or ducks over there?"
I didn't know what to answer. There were eurasian coots, mallards, falcated duck, gadwalls, and eurasian wigeon, and I answered
"It's duck" because the proportion of ducks was higher.
Then she asked me again:
"A duck, not a bird?" I had no choice but to answer like this.
"...Duck is a bird," and the old woman left with a smile.