He let out a roar and showed everyone why you should never poke a tiger when he’s in a bad mood.

Quick Scoop

When a tiger gets angry, it does not sulk quietly in a corner.

What the tiger did

  • Started with low, warning growls that got louder as he became more irritated.
  • Flattened his ears, stiffened his body, and began twitching his tail in clear annoyance.
  • Bared his teeth, showed his canines, and fixed a hard stare on whatever upset him.
  • Finally, he was ready to charge, swat with his paws, claw, or bite if the threat did not back off.

In simple terms, when he got angry, the tiger warned first , then exploded into action if those warnings were ignored.

Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.