Dreamworld New Bengal Tiger import for Dreamworld

jones

Well-Known Member
Not sure if this has been noted in another thread but Dreamworld has announced that they have imported the largest female tiger in Australia - a 200kg Bengal from a polish zoo. She is to be paired with a male (I'm assuming either Taj, Sultan or Rama) and hopes are to have cubs ASAP. I couldn't see here age, name or specific zoo she came from but it looks as if Dreamworld will hold a naming competition for her.
 
there's an article here (no mention of which Polish zoo though): Dreamworld's new tiger arrives from Poland Local Gold Coast News | goldcoast.com.au | Gold Coast, Queensland, Australia
THE largest female tiger ever recorded in Australia has arrived at Dreamworld's Tiger Island and could produce cubs in the next year.

The 200kg tiger arrived on the Gold Coast from Poland last Saturday and Dreamworld handlers hope she breeds with one of the park's male tigers.

She weighs just 10 kilograms less than Australia's largest male tiger, Sultan, who also lives at Tiger Island.

The new tiger is completely unrelated to all other tigers in Australia and is an important addition to the Tiger Island group of big cats which is having a significant impact on the conservation of tigers and their habitats all around the world through the Dreamworld Wildlife Foundation.

Dreamworld's Life Sciences general manager Al Mucci said the tigress was a unique animal.

``She's here and her sole purpose is a) she's the largest tigress in Australia and b) it's to choose a mate with one of our male tigers,'' he said.

``She'll be treated as a queen.

``We're just proud and privileged to be part of such an acquisition and that we had the support of the global zoos community and acquire her.

``When I saw her December last year, it was the middle of Winter, snow everywhere in Europe, and her coat was so thick.''

The new female tiger can be seen by Dreamworld guests at The Lair where she will initially be kept under quarantine.
 
the tiger came from Krakow
hmm, interestingly enough the articles I found which said the tiger "came from Poland's Krakow Zoo" have now all changed their wording to simply "a zoo in Poland", and one article in particular (on NZ's Voxy site) appears to have actually vanished altogether. Very odd. There's a cut and paste of that article on Peter Dickinson's zoo page though which retains the Krakow reference.

It should be noted also that Krakow hold pure Siberians and generic tigers, and Dreamworld's new female is one of the latter not a pure Bengal (hence her very large size, from Siberian genes).
 
No pure-bred Bengal tigers exist in Europe. What is their is just hopscotch zoo mix or the infamous .. grrrr ... white tigers. :D
 
on their facebook page there is a link (on June 20) to a video from the local morning chat-show which features the tiger. I can't get it to play, but the still-shot shown has a caption along the bottom saying "New Big Cat. Meet the Siberian tiger who's arrived in Australia"....?

https://www.facebook.com/dreamworld

Can an Australian watch that and see what the story is?
 
on their facebook page there is a link (on June 20) to a video from the local morning chat-show which features the tiger. I can't get it to play, but the still-shot shown has a caption along the bottom saying "New Big Cat. Meet the Siberian tiger who's arrived in Australia"....?

https://www.facebook.com/dreamworld

Can an Australian watch that and see what the story is?

It just says how great having new genes is for their conservation programme, and that the new female is still in quarantine acclimatising to sunny Australia, which is a big change from the Siberian winters she is used to... :D

The reporter regularly uses the word Siberian, but I don't think the staff do, and I think she is a standard hybrid tiger who is big because of her Siberian genes, and maybe that's where the idea that she's a Siberian came from.

It does say that she has had two previous litters, the last one she raised succesfully.
 
Its a female from Cracow Zoo. Its mixed siberian with sumatrian subspiecies.
ah, there's the Sumatran bit ;)

@Kalat, does Krakow have pure Siberians as well as hybrids (that is what I gathered from Zootierliste)?
 
The new tigress has been named "Nika"

I've read an update from October 2013 saying Dreamworld were planning to introduce her to Sultan and Rama. Has any progress been made on this, or with any other introductions?

If Nika is a hybird, then any cubs she has are not going to contribute to the global breeding programme or enhance the genetics of the region etc. However I'm aware that Dreamworld raise a large amount of money for conservation, so indirectly the income from admissions to see her offspring may well prove valuable to conservation efforts.
 
A single tiger cub has been born at Dreamworld - here is some info that has been released by the park;

Name: Unnamed / Unknown
Sex: Male
DOB: 25/07/2015
Origin: Dreamworld
Dame: Nika - Siberian/Bengal/Hybrid - (born in Apr 2006) Imported in June 2013 from Poland.
Sire: Raja - Sumatran - (born in Dec 2003) Imported in Nov 2005 from Germany.

Personally i'm surprised they bred her with Raja instead of bengals Rama or Sultan.
 
Last edited:
Personally I still feel disconnected with the notion that breeding and hand-raising these hybrids will somehow improve conservation efforts. This cub has been bred for profit and nothing else IMO.
 
Personally I still feel disconnected with the notion that breeding and hand-raising these hybrids will somehow improve conservation efforts. This cub has been bred for profit and nothing else IMO.

Without getting back into the old argument, it is important to point out that Dreamworld gives significantly more money to tiger conservation than any other Australasian zoo, and their programme is incredibly engaging.

At least the Sumatrans are kept as part of the managed regional breeding programme, so they do contribute usefully to that as well.
 
Without getting back into the old argument, it is important to point out that Dreamworld gives significantly more money to tiger conservation than any other Australasian zoo, and their programme is incredibly engaging.

At least the Sumatrans are kept as part of the managed regional breeding programme, so they do contribute usefully to that as well.

Fair enough and I know they make significant financial contributions to tiger conservation in general. However, on the home front where this pertains to maintaining tigers there is no argument whatsoever to retain or (attempt) to breed hybrid / mutant gene tigers over maintaining and breeding the real wild article. Hence, I and a few others too will continue to be at liberty to disagree. Needless to say, it is sad that a serious conservation zoo feels the need to go to this length …, as pure-bred tiger subspecies are just as impressive, be it all the more significant as all ssp. are endangered …

Out of sheer statistical interest: how many Sumatran tigers are currently held? How many have been bred in recent times? How many Sumatrans have been exchanged within the ZAA region where Dreamworld Sumatrans were involved?
 
Back
Top