Two-tone tiger is half-invisible after taking a mud bath in India

Now you see me, now you don’t! This two-tone tiger is half-invisible after taking a mud bath in India

  • A tiger that tried to cool itself down by taking a mud bath was left half-invisible in Tadoba National Park
  • The Bengal tiger coated half its body in mud to relieve itself from the 113F Indian heat this month
  • The big cat made its rear half seemingly disappear as it bathed in mud at the park in central India
  • The bare and brown trees surrounding the tiger meant it seemed only to have the front half of its body 

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A tiger that tried to cool itself down by taking a mud bath was left half-invisible.

The Bengal tiger coated half its body in mud as it tried to find relief from the scorching 113F (45C) heat this month in India’s Tadoba National Park, Maharashtra.

While a tiger’s stripes usually help with camouflage, this cat made its rear half seemingly disappear.

This two-tone tiger made half its body seemingly disappear after a mud bath in India as it tried to cool itself down

This two-tone tiger made half its body seemingly disappear after a mud bath in India as it tried to cool itself down

The Bengal tiger was having to deal with whopping temperatures in central India of 113F (45C) earlier this month

The Bengal tiger was having to deal with whopping temperatures in central India of 113F (45C) earlier this month

It was spotted jumping into a pool of cool mud before stalking off into the undergrowth.

The bare and brown trees surrounding the tiger meant it seemed only to have the front half of its body.

No two tigers have the exact same stripes and the Bengal variation can grow up to nine feet long and weigh 500 pounds. 

Mud was spotted dripping from the tiger's fur as it stalked away from the pool after it had taken a quick dip

Mud was spotted dripping from the tiger’s fur as it stalked away from the pool after it had taken a quick dip

The tiger's brown and barren surroundings added to the illusion that the rear half of its body had disappeared

The tiger’s brown and barren surroundings added to the illusion that the rear half of its body had disappeared

Photographer Harshal Malvankar, 38, spotted this amusing two-tone tiger as he scouted the national park.

He said: ‘It was extremely hot and the tiger had a mud spa.’

They are the largest big cats in India as well as the most common, although the number of tigers across the world has fallen dramatically over the last 100 years.

Bengal tigers are one of the five remaining subspecies and are at risk of extinction because of deforestation and hunting.

source: dailymail.co.uk