Tigers Reproduce Like Rabbits But Barely Survive

A Royal Bengal tiger at the Dhaka zoo in Bangladesh, in a 2003 photo. AP Photo/Pavel Rahman

Tiger populations in a national park in India are stable despite relentless poaching because the wild cats breed like rabbits.

A nine-year study conducted in India's Nagarhole National Park found that an average of 23 percent of the park's tigers either moved away or died each year from natural causes or from poaching by hunters who kill the animals for their body parts. Yet, despite the loss, the park's tiger population remained stable because the wild cats are fast breeders, with females giving birth to three to four cubs per litter every three to four years.

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