Lifespan
8 to 10 years in the wild & up to 18-20 years in zoos
The Sea Lion and Penguin habitats will be closed from 15 Jul 2024 – 2027.
The Leopard exhibit is closed for upgrading.
The Douc Langur exhibit will be closed from 9 – 13 Sep 2024 and 16 – 19 Sep 2024 for maintenance.
The Serval exhibit will be closed from 23 – 24 Sep 2024 for upgrading works.
Inbound and outbound travel on the Mandai Khatib Shuttle will be chargeable at $2.50 each way from 1 Oct 2024.
8 to 10 years in the wild & up to 18-20 years in zoos
Mainly hoofed animals such as deer
Forests, swamps, scrubland
Peninsular Malaysia
Tigers are at the apex of the food chain. These solitary hunters can handle animal prey up to a ton in weight. A healthy adult has the strength of 30 men!
Sadly, man has turned the tables on them. Mercilessly poached to satisfy the insatiable demand for tiger parts, wild tigers are being hunted to extinction. In 2012 alone, tiger parts from at least 22 tigers were seized in Kedah. NGOs continue to report snares and illegal camp sites, even in protected areas.
The Malayan tiger used to roam the forests of Singapore in bygone era. When their habitats were converted to plantations around 1825, human-tiger encounters escalated. In 1850, tigers were reported to be claiming human lives daily — improbable given the low tiger numbers to start with. Seen as vermin, tigers were shot on sight. Shooters were rewarded with money.
By the 1870s, tigers were all but gone. The last tiger in Singapore was shot in 1930 in Choa Chu Kang.
Critically Endangered
At extremely high risk of extinction in the wild
Critically Endangered
At extremely high risk of extinction in the wild
Critically Endangered
At extremely high risk of extinction in the wild
Critically Endangered
At extremely high risk of extinction in the wild
The IUCN Red List of Threatened Species is widely recognized as the most comprehensive, objective global approach for evaluating the conservation status of plant and animal species.
Unknown risk of extinction
At relatively low risk of extinction
Likely to become vulnerable in the near future
At high risk of extinction in the wild
At very high risk of extinction in the wild
At extremely high risk of extinction in the wild
Survives only in captivity
No surviving individuals in the wild or in captivity