นายเรือ99

firstwedding49
5/1/2550 10:45:52
Size (KB)  :  38 KB
firstwedding50
5/1/2550 10:45:56
Size (KB)  :  69 KB
firstwedding51
5/1/2550 10:45:59
Size (KB)  :  72 KB
firstwedding52
5/1/2550 10:46:03
Size (KB)  :  75 KB
firstwedding53
5/1/2550 10:46:06
Size (KB)  :  97 KB
firstwedding54
5/1/2550 10:46:10
Size (KB)  :  42 KB
firstwedding55
5/1/2550 10:46:12
Size (KB)  :  48 KB
firstwedding56
5/1/2550 10:46:16
Size (KB)  :  61 KB
firstwedding57
5/1/2550 10:46:19
Size (KB)  :  46 KB
firstwedding58
5/1/2550 10:46:23
Size (KB)  :  51 KB
firstwedding59
5/1/2550 10:46:27
Size (KB)  :  37 KB
firstwedding60
5/1/2550 10:46:31
Size (KB)  :  44 KB
firstwedding61
5/1/2550 10:46:35
Size (KB)  :  27 KB
firstwedding62
5/1/2550 10:46:38
Size (KB)  :  63 KB
firstwedding63
5/1/2550 10:46:42
Size (KB)  :  45 KB
firstwedding64
5/1/2550 10:46:45
Size (KB)  :  45 KB
Pages:     1 2 3 4 5
The Malayan tiger (Panthera tigris jacksoni), exclusively found in the southern (Malaysian) part of the Malay Peninsula, was not considered a subspecies in its own right until 2004. The new classification came about after a study by Luo et al. from the Laboratory of Genomic Diversity Study, [9] part of the National Cancer Institute of the United States. Recent counts showed there are 600-800 tigers in the wild, making it the third largest tiger population behind the Bengal tiger and the Indochinese tiger. The Malayan tiger is a national icon in Malaysia, appearing on its coat of arms and in logos of Malaysian institutions, such as Maybank.