2 reasons why the orange and black striped tiger is well camouflaged

It may baffle some people as to how the tiger's coat can possibly be good camouflage to help it stalk prey. The bright orange background colour and the dense black stripes just look too stark to be good camouflage. And the tiger lives in the jungle doesn't it, and the jungle is green? How can orange be camouflage when the landscape is green? When it can for two reasons. To prey animals the colour is not orange Fairly recently, in 2019, it has been decided that some prey animals - particularly deer a classic prey animal of the tiger - suffer from what humans would regard as colour blindness because they can only detect blue and green light and not red light. Because of this, the bright orange tiger coat looks grey or a green/grey. The images below give us an impression as to how a tiger might look in a jungle environment. How a prey animal might see a tiger as they are colour blind to red. Image: MikeB How a prey animal might see a tiger as they are colour blind to red. Image: D...