Malayan Tiger
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| Panthera tigris jacksoni Luo et al., 2004 |
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Range map
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The Malayan tiger (Panthera tigris malayensis, Malay: Harimau Belang), exclusively found in the southern part of the Malay Peninsula, until 2004 was not considered a subspecies in its own right. The new classification came about after a study by Luo S-J et al. from the Laboratory of Genomic Diversity, part of the U.S. National Cancer Institute.
Recent counts showed there are 600-800 Malayan tigers in the wild, making it the largest tiger population other than the Bengal and Indochinese tigers. It is, nevertheless, still an endangered sub-species.
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[edit] Physical Characteristics
The Malayan tiger, along with the Sumatran tiger, is perhaps the smallest subspecies of tiger. Its stripe pattern is similar to the Indochinese tiger but its size is closer to the Sumatran tigers with average weight of 120 kg for adult males and 100 kg for females. [1] Male Malayan tigers measures around 237cm in length from head to tail and female Malayan tigress around 200cm in length.
[edit] Diet and biology
Malayan tigers prey on sambar deer, barking deer, wild boar and livestock. Tigers in Taman Negara also prey on sun bear. Whether their principal prey includes gaur and tapir is unknown. Tigers occur at very low densities 1.1-1.98 tigers per 100km² in the rainforest as a result of low prey densities, thus in order to maintain viable tiger populations of minimum of 6 breeding females, reserves need to be larger than 1000km². Biological/ecological research on the Malayan tiger is still in infancy. For example, information on dietary preference, morphological measurements, demographic parameters, social structure, communication, home range sizes, dispersal capabilities are all lacking.[2]
[edit] Captive
A genetic analysis of the phylogeny of tigers in 2004 split the IndoChinese subspecies into two distinct subspecies: the IndoChinese tiger and the Malayan tiger and the authors argue that the captive populations for these two subspecies should be managed in a similar way to the other recognized subspecies but it is unclear how this information will be used by the zoo community..
[edit] Naming controversy
When the Malayan tiger was accepted as a sub-species of the tiger family, the news was warmly received in Malaysia. However, there was soon debate over the scientific naming of the Malayan tiger. Researchers proposed a name to recognize the work by Peter Jackson (zoologist) with big cats: Panthera tigris jacksoni.
However, the Malaysian Association of Zoological Parks and Aquaria (MAZPA) and the Government of Malaysia protested, arguing that Malaysia should have been consulted over the naming of its national icon.[3] Malaysia holds that the naming should reflect the geographical region, Malaysia. In Malaysia, therefore, the Malayan tiger is known as Panthera tigris malayensis.
[edit] Malaysian national icon
The Malayan tiger is a national icon in Malaysia, appearing on its coat of arms and in logos of Malaysian institutions such as Maybank, Proton and FAM. It symbolizes bravery and strength to Malaysians. The tiger has been given various nicknames by Malaysians, notably "Pak Belang," which literally means "Striped Sir." Pak Belang features prominently in folklore as one of Sang Kancil's ("The Mouse Deer's") adversaries.
See also national personification
[edit] References
- General references
- Luo SJ, Kim JH, Johnson WE, Walt Jvd, Martenson J, et al. (2004) Phylogeography and Genetic Ancestry of Tigers (Panthera tigris). PLoS Biol 2(12): e442. Available online
[edit] External links
- Malayan Tiger Description and Conservation - Save The Tiger Fund
- 21st Century Tiger - Fundraising for tiger conservation

