@article{MAKHILLJAVA20065121609,
    title = {Larynx Anatomy in a Tiger (<I>Panthera tigris, Linnaeus</I>, 1758)},
    journal = {Journal of Animal and Veterinary Advances},
    volume = {5},
    number = {12},
    pages = {1093-1095},
    year = {2006},
    issn = {1680-5593},
    doi = {javaa.2006.1093.1095},
    url = {https://makhillpublications.co/view-article.php?issn=1680-5593&doi=javaa.2006.1093.1095},
    author = {William Perez,Martin Lima and},
    keywords = {Wildlife anatomy,apparatus respiratorius,vocal folds,laryngeal cartilages},
    abstract = {In this study the anatomy of the larynx of a male, 18 year old tiger that died in a local zoo is described. Topographically, the larynx of the tiger was situated over the median plane, in the cranial half of the neck. It had a length of 10.0 cm when measured from its ventral side. The cartilages that formed it were the classic five cartilages found in the domestic animals. The thyroid cartilage had a caudal notch well demarcated, closed in part by the cricothyroid muscle and by the cricothyroid ligament. The hyoepiglottic muscle was double. The cavity of the larynx had a dorso-ventral diameter measuring 3.5 cm in the glottis and a side to side diameter of 3.0 cm. The anatomy of the larynx in this animal was different from that of the cat.}
    }