In the battle of the grizzly bear vs tiger, a Siberian tiger would win a fight against a grizzly bear. The Siberian tiger is an ambush predator, and it's the only big cat that comes close to the grizzly bear in terms of size and power.
There isn't a single wild terrestrial predator capable of taking down a Kodiak bear in a one-on-one fight, at least without any sort of venom. Wolves, hyenas, lions, tigers, and other bears will be eventually defeated by this bear.
Tigers will eat any large prey they can catch and kill, including bears. Most often, the bears eaten by large tigers are young, female Himalayan bears. Even so, a young bear can put up a fight, so the tiger must take extra precautions when it decides to go after a bear.
No male lion or tiger can win against the kodiak bear. It is the biggest land member of the order Carnivora.
A grizzly bear would win a fight against a lion, probably with a grizzly bear breaking the lion's back or biting through its skull. The lion indeed has an advantage in terms of their skill in hunting, especially if they are attacking in a pack.
A tiger would kill a gorilla in a fight. If a tiger managed to ambush a gorilla, the tiger would immediately kill it. Although the gorilla is strong, the fact is that it could not stop 600 pounds of charging muscle and teeth.
There were numerous reports of tigers preying on both brown bears and Asiatic black bears, but the relationship, it seems, was not that simple; there were also reports of bears killing tigers.
Kodiak bears have few natural predators, although many young bears are killed by other members of their species before they reach independent age or shortly after. Humans have hunted Kodiaks for millennia, although not in any intensive way until recent decades.
The polar bear travels long distances over vast desolate expanses, generally on drifting oceanic ice floes, searching for seals, its primary prey. The polar bear is the largest and most powerful carnivore on land, a title it shares with a subspecies of brown bear called the Kodiak bear.
The average kodiak bear is bigger than the largest gorilla. Pound for pound the gorilla is stronger, but the bear is so much bigger that it doesn't matter. The bear is just too big. Keep in that bears have been known to kill animals much larger than gorillas, and even themselves like bison and moose.
If the grizzly were fighting a wildebeest or moose, it'd only need to land one big bite. But this is a grizzly bear vs. hippo battle, and hippos have thick hides. The grizzly bear must go all out with multiple bites and claw slashes to overpower the thick-skinned hippo.
An elephant would win in a tiger vs elephant fight.
The tiger is strong, but a lone cat can't deal fatal damage to an elephant before the elephant ends the right. An elephant can shake the tiger off and withstand the initial slam of the tiger into its body.
Tigers have an advantage over rhinos because of their speed and agility. However, they are significantly smaller than rhinos, giving them an edge in size and strength.
Neither one will back down; power and aggressiveness can often escalate quickly. The strength of the tiger can also be its greatest weakness. Often the tiger becomes frustrated with more calculating styles and can be forced into making critical errors, or evasive techniques can be used to attack the tiger's endurance.
A tiger would easily win a fight against a wolf. The tiger weighs almost three times as much as a wolf, tipping the scale at 600 pounds. The tiger can run up to 40mph, too, more than enough speed to match or exceed a wolf. Wolves tend to hunt in packs, and they rarely come up against anything as deadly as a tiger.
Predators. Asiatic wild dogs called dholes may prey upon tigers but these rare attacks are usually countered with drastic losses to the dholes' pack. Humans are the greatest threat to all tiger populations.
Dung Beetle
A dung beetle is not only the world's strongest insect but also the strongest animal on the planet compared to body weight. They can pull 1,141 times their own body weight. This is the equivalent of an average person pulling six double-decker buses full of people. Now that's strong!
Strongest Jaws: Jaguar
The jaguar is a type of big cat species and the only native American living member of the Panthera genus. This spotted cat is not only the largest cat species in the Americas but the third-largest in the world. Plus, it is one of the big cats that can kill a tiger.
However, grizzly bears are tougher than polar bears as they possess stronger and longer claws and an elongated skull with sharp and long canines that can completely separate the flesh from bone.
The hippo is larger, stronger, has better offensive powers and a defense that would allow it to last longer in a battle than a polar bear.
Among all bear species, both the grizzly bear and polar bear take the crown as the strongest. Weighing more than around 800 pounds — the maximum recorded size is twice that figure — an individual male grizzly is equivalent to around five humans in strength … and even more when enraged.