I read that in a live setting, a tiger's roar produces certain tones that when heard by human ears, paralysis overcomes the human's brain and entire body for a minimum of a couple seconds, and often longer.
It produces a certain "frequency" of sound known as infrasound. It is a low frequency sound that cannot be heard by humans but it can be felt and it has a paralyzing effect because of shock.
@@randomrainbow8423 Yeah, that's it. Check out these two Amur's sparring, and crank up the volume. But not too loud, unless you want to be paralyzed. ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-76vIefYKPSE.html
@@Serpent947 lol, it's the other way around. Lions don't produce infrasounds because in open grasslands, sound wavelength need not be shorter for it to reach it's destination. In dense jungles on the other hand, you need shorter wavelengths (elephants also do this). A tiger's roar is heard by a human in the range of couple of kilometres while another tiger can hear it several kilometres away.
That is not a roar. That is a growl. The Lion growl is much deeper. The tiger growl is sharp. Tiger growl is more like a sports car engine while the Lion is more like a diesel engine.
Beatiful beasts, their growls and roar are amazing and scary, such a shame that they're in captivity, tigers are born to stay in the wild free to run, not in a cage to be looked for the pleasure of selfish humans
These tigers unble to hunt they don't know how to kill the prey bcoz these tigers born and grown in zoos only .one thing I will agree these two tigers should have more space
says the guy that watches them for pleasure on a screen and internet connection. More Space? Well we could ask India to slow their population growth down.
@@lofficer11 You should instead have asked the British to not exterminate them for profiteering. Even with increasing population, Indian tiger numbers are on the rise.