@whitehollow1 Tigers are well adapted to fight on their heavily built hind legs i herd, You see a lot off Tigers play boxing each over on their hind quarters, and its amazing to watch the animals balance. I usually notice when Tigers fight in combat they brawl meaning slam into each over and roll around the ground. Does the Jaguar have a similar kind of fighting style?
@TheCustom41 yes the tigers spine is very flexible, making him very agile. but the jaguar also has a very flexible spine. according to wikipedia, agility describes the capabilitiy to change the body position in a fight without losing the balance. tigers seem to have much balance.
jag vs sum tiger, i still go with the tiger. the sumatran tiger is the smallest living tiger subspecies, but they are still larger than the largest jaguar subspecies, the pantanal jaguar (140 kg vs 100 kg or so).
@whitehollow1 Hence my question about the Tigers agility, Their limbs look extremely heavy and slow. How do you reckon a Tiger is so agile? Is it something to do with their flexible spine? Tigers always appear very top heavy and they have quite a slouched stance. What about a Jag vs a Sumatran Tiger? What do you reckon about that?
@TheCustom41 i dont know if a jaguar would be more agile in similar weights. and this discussion about weight parity is useless, because only immature tigers are the size of a jaguar.
@whitehollow1 Hmmm possibly. Tigers im guessing would not be that fast in a fight? They look like they are on steroids most of the Tigers i see. There heads look small when compared with their tank sized body. Jags appear to be well balanced in build and not as top heavy as Tiger. I think a Jaguar would also be more agile at similar weights too and maybe stronger??? Hmmm i dont know...
@TheCustom41 i would favor a jaguar over any extant cat at size parity. jaguars are pound for pound the strongest big cat, and they have relative to body size the strongest bite force.
Does not mean if you have shorter snout then you are stronger. How come the crocs have long snout while humans have short.
jsvalino 1 week ago
cheetahs have around 500 lbs of bite force because of their thick jaw bone and short muzzle
Cheetree1 6 months ago
@TheCustom41 unfortunately i dont know. i have never seen a video of two jaguars fighting each other so i honestly cant tell you.
whitehollow1 7 months ago
@whitehollow1 Tigers are well adapted to fight on their heavily built hind legs i herd, You see a lot off Tigers play boxing each over on their hind quarters, and its amazing to watch the animals balance. I usually notice when Tigers fight in combat they brawl meaning slam into each over and roll around the ground. Does the Jaguar have a similar kind of fighting style?
TheCustom41 7 months ago
@TheCustom41 yes the tigers spine is very flexible, making him very agile. but the jaguar also has a very flexible spine. according to wikipedia, agility describes the capabilitiy to change the body position in a fight without losing the balance. tigers seem to have much balance.
jag vs sum tiger, i still go with the tiger. the sumatran tiger is the smallest living tiger subspecies, but they are still larger than the largest jaguar subspecies, the pantanal jaguar (140 kg vs 100 kg or so).
whitehollow1 7 months ago
@whitehollow1 Hence my question about the Tigers agility, Their limbs look extremely heavy and slow. How do you reckon a Tiger is so agile? Is it something to do with their flexible spine? Tigers always appear very top heavy and they have quite a slouched stance. What about a Jag vs a Sumatran Tiger? What do you reckon about that?
TheCustom41 7 months ago
@TheCustom41 i dont know if a jaguar would be more agile in similar weights. and this discussion about weight parity is useless, because only immature tigers are the size of a jaguar.
yes tigers look very bulky and stocky.
whitehollow1 7 months ago
@whitehollow1 Hmmm possibly. Tigers im guessing would not be that fast in a fight? They look like they are on steroids most of the Tigers i see. There heads look small when compared with their tank sized body. Jags appear to be well balanced in build and not as top heavy as Tiger. I think a Jaguar would also be more agile at similar weights too and maybe stronger??? Hmmm i dont know...
TheCustom41 7 months ago
@TheCustom41 i would favor a jaguar over any extant cat at size parity. jaguars are pound for pound the strongest big cat, and they have relative to body size the strongest bite force.
whitehollow1 7 months ago
@Leny1777
man you are just a fan .
you are not interest by facts, that even a dog(turkish kangal) can bit stronger than a lion,idiot
Super2run 7 months ago