A typical male Amur tiger, the largest of the tiger subspecies, may weigh more than 250kg and measure nearly 3m from nose to tip of tail. Once found in the taiga and boreal forests of the Russian Far East, China and the Koreas, the Amur tiger -- also known as the Siberian tiger -- is now restricted to the Sikhote-Alin range in Russia's Primorski and Khabarovski provinces, and possibly to small pockets in the border areas of China and North Korea.
Amur tiger populations have been severely reduced by poaching, poaching of prey and habitat destruction. The 2005 Amur tiger survey revealed less than 420 of this sub-species remain in the wild.
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Amur tiger