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Performance Task in Math, Science, and English

The tiger (Panthera tigris) is the largest living cat species and a member of the genus


Panthera. It is most recognisable for its dark vertical stripes on orange fur with a white
underside. It is territorial and generally a solidarity but social predator, requiring large
contiguous areas of habitat, which support its requirements for prey and rearing of its
offspring. Their 7 types of tigers in world which are: Sumatran Tiger, Siberian tiger,
Indian Tigers, South China Tiger, Malayan Tiger, Indo-Chinese Tiger, Sumatran
Tiger. Some tigers are extinct like the Bali Tiger, Javan tiger, and the Caspian Tiger.
And for more information tiger’s population is decreasing what tigers are now an
endangered species.
Scientific Name: Panthera tigris
Conservation Status: Endangered (Population decreasing) 
Lifespan: 8 – 10 years (In the wild)
Order: Carnivore
Mass: 90 – 310 kg (Adult), 65 – 180 kg (Adult)

Tigers love to swim and play in the water Unlike the domestic cats, its larger version
enjoys spending time in the water and they love to swim for hours. Since cubs, female
Tigers encourage or help learn the art of hunting, they even have the ability to kill in
the water. And as adults, it is said that they can swim for several kilometres and even
have reported one to swim for 30 km in just a day. Tigers prefer to hunt by an ambush
One of the most common knowledge to any wildlife lovers, wild animals enjoy a
surprise kill but not as much as Tigers

Tigers can live in a range of environments, including the Siberian taiga, swamps,
grasslands, and rainforests. They can be found anywhere from the Russian Far East
to parts of North Korea, China, India, and Southwest Asia to the Indonesian island of
Sumatra. Wild tigers live in Asia. Larger subspecies, such as the Siberian tiger, tend to
live in northern, colder areas, such as eastern Russia and north-eastern China.
Smaller subspecies live in southern, warmer countries, such as India, Bangladesh,
Nepal, Bhutan, Myanmar, Laos, Cambodia, Vietnam, Malaysia and Indonesia.

Across their range, tigers face unrelenting pressures from poaching, retaliatory


killings, and habitat loss. They are forced to compete for space with dense and often
growing human populations. Tigers are globally listed as “Endangered” on the
International Union for the Conservation of Nature (IUCN) Red List of Threatened
Species. The Malayan and Sumatran sub-species are listed as “Critically
Endangered.”
Coordinates for Cartesian Art

I. (-1, -9) A. (-10, 0) Q. (-9, 7) A1. (-3, 8) I1. (-2, -3) Q1. (-4, 1) A2. (-3, -5) I2. (1, 4) Q2. (-1, 6) A3. (5, 4)
J. (1, -9) B. (10, 0) R. (9, 7) B1. (3, 8) J1. (2, -3) R1. (4, 1) B2. (3, -5) J2. (-2, 4) R2. (5, 6) B3. (6, 2)
K. (-4, -8) C. (-10, 3) S. (-10, 9) C1. (0, 7) K1. (-2, -1) S1. (-5, 1) C2. (-6, 0) K2. (2, 4) S2. (3, 7) C3. (-6, 6)
L. (4, -8) D. (10, 3) T. (10, 9) D1. (-1, -5) L1. (2, -1) T1. (5, 1) D2. (-4, -1) L2. (-5, 3) T2. (1, 7) D3. (-8, 4)
M. (-8, -6) E. (-9, 6) U. (-8, 9) E1. (1, -5) M1. (-3, 0) U1. (-1, -6) E2. (4, -1) M2. (5, 3) U2. (-3, 6) E3. (-8, 1)
N. (8, -6) F. (9, 6) V. (8, 9) F1. (0, -6) N1. (3, 0) V1. (1, -6) F2. (6, 0) N2. (-6, 6) V2. (-5, 5) F3. (-8, -1)
O. (-9, -3) G. (-8, 6) W. (-6, 8) G1. (-2, -5) O1. (-2, 1) W1. (-2, -6) G2. (0, 5) O2. (-5, 7) W2. (-7, 3) G3. (-7, -3)
P. (9, -3) H. (8, 6) Z. ( 6, 8) H1. (2, -5 P1. (2, 1) Z1. (2, -6) H2. (-1, 4) P2. (-3, 7) Z2. (3, 6) H3. (-5, -4)
I3. (5, -4)
J3. (8, -3)
K3. (8, -1)
L3. (8, 1)
M3. (7, 4)

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