History of Ligers
A liger is a hybrid cross that occurs between a male lion and a tigress, and differs from a tigon which is a lioness and male tiger cross. It has the head and tail of a lion (minus the mane) and the body of a tiger, and has faint tiger striped patterns on its body and rosettes on its head.
The history of ligers stretches back almost 200 years to the late 18th century, with several engravings and paintings depicting their existence. The Gir Forest in India is the only place in the world where the territories of lions and tigers overlap, and there are reports that a liger was born in this region in 1799- a single painting is the only proof of this.
Officially, the 1st liger ever recorded was in Asia (in the India-Pakistan region) in 1824. During this period in history India was ruled by the British, and ligers were often presented as gifts to the royal family. In 1837 two liger cubs were bestowed upon King William IV and his heir Queen Victoria. 60 years later (in 1897) a number of liger cubs were born in Hamburg at the Hagenback’s Tierpark. In 1935, 4 liger cubs from 2 litters were bred in Bloemfontein, South Africa at the zoological gardens. 3 of these ligers survived to adulthood, and in 1953 (at the age of 18) the sole male liger weighed in at 750 lbs and was nearly half a meter taller than all the full grown lions when measured at the shoulder.
In 2007, a tigress in China named Huan Huan became famous after giving birth to a record 12 ligers over a period of nearly 5 years. These liger cubs included a set of twins and a set of quadruplets, and out of the 12 cubs 10 survived infancy.
Housing Ligers in Captivity
Ligers only exist in captivity, and there has never been evidence that suggests that their habitat ever existed in the wild. They are active animals that have a gentle and docile demeanor, but this may be due to the fact that they are born in captivity and are therefore tamed. There are about 100 ligers in the world, and 30 of these live in the USA. Though it is not illegal in some states to breed these hybrids, zoo policy expressly forbids this practice-even though a liger may sometimes be conceived by accident.
Baby ligers are often kept as pets, but their owners often transfer them to sanctuaries when they grow too big. A non-obese male liger can reach to between 3 and 3.5 m in length and 900 lbs in weight(larger than the Siberian male tiger), and the female liger can reach to 3.05 m in length and 705 lbs in weight. These animals often live to between 15 and 20 years, though the USA’s first female liger- Shasta, lived to 24 years of age.