Do ligers exist?

Discussion in 'Biology & Genetics' started by cooljayman, Mar 9, 2005.

  1. cooljayman Hangover's Best Friend Registered Senior Member

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    I found a picture of a liger (lion tiger cross) on the internet and my science teacher said it was bred in a zoo or something (although my science teacher really is stupid). The big question is, do they exist? Or was that picture photoshopped? hmmm....

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  3. Communist Hamster Cricetulus griseus leninus Valued Senior Member

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    Yeah, ligers exist, but they are sterile.
     
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  5. cooljayman Hangover's Best Friend Registered Senior Member

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    Really? There are so many crosses these days. Take the Zebroid (I think that's what its called) for example...
     
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  7. zyncod Registered Senior Member

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    No, just tigons (betcha didn't see that coming - ha ha... ha.) Yes they do but like most hybrids, they're sterile. I don't know what the name of it is, but about a year ago a friend of mine showed me a site about how ligers are the bane of Earth today and how they all must be destroyed. It was pretty funny.
     
  8. Roman Banned Banned

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    There are both ligers and tigons.
    But they aren't usually bred for their magical abilities. Unless sterility is considered magical.
     
  9. vslayer Registered Senior Member

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    ligers just like mules, are perfectly real, but due to the slight DNA difference, they are sterile and you will need to keep a horse and a donkey or a tiger and a lion
     
  10. Hercules Rockefeller Beatings will continue until morale improves. Moderator

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    Okay everyone, I think we have established that ligers are sterile.

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  11. Buckaroo Banzai Mentat Registered Senior Member

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    off topic, but yet on hybrids... what about that "new species", supposedly a hybrid of chimpanzees and gorillas? I've read about that some time ago, seen some pictures (I couldn't tell whether it was fake or not)... does someone knows something new? Was a hoax? There was a viable population or just a few individuals, or even a single one?

    I think that they are being too hurry to say that it's a new species, even if the hybrids are real (which I also don't know)... but perhaps only the journalists have referred to the hybrids as new species, what wouldn't be a surprise.
     
  12. Buckaroo Banzai Mentat Registered Senior Member

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    About ligers and tigons, I found extremely interesting the differences between both hybrids of the same species.
    Ligers (result of a mate of a tigress and a lion) are larger and heavier than siberian tigers, and pretty much healthy (despite of males being infertile), while tigons (mate of male tiger and a lioness) are smaller than lionesses, weak and short-lived...
     
  13. Roman Banned Banned

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    The have a 'cama' or camel llama, which is not sterile. Which is big news or some such.
    The gorilla/chimp crossbreeding was not a hoax. There is evidence of a hybrid, but they aren't sure if it's a hyrbid. It's defnitely a different species, but they're unsure (as with a lot of primates) where it fits on the evolutionary charts.
     
  14. Emmveepee Registered Senior Member

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    Mules aren't always sterile

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  15. rGEMINI Fallen Entity Registered Senior Member

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    just out of complete intrest... could you possible collect a lot of rat sperm and inject it into a, say... A fremale non sterile Alpaca
     
  16. pilpaX amateur-science.com Registered Senior Member

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    well of course you could but it would be stupid, hybrids born from relatively close(DNA) species and they are mostly rare.
     
    Last edited: Mar 16, 2005

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