Mai the tiger has seen her share of battles.
Born in the wilderness of Pahang province, Malaysia, the Malayan tiger was found with her front left leg ensnared in a poacher's trap. Veterinarians amputated the limb to save her life, and the less than 2-year-old tiger underwent rehabilitation at Malaysia's Malacca (or "Melaka") Zoo before arriving at Omaha's Henry Doorly Zoo and Aquarium in 2003.
Since then, Mai has successfully navigated life on just three legs, raising three litters of cubs on her own and partaking in regular enrichment activities with keepers. According to the zoo's Web site, Mai "has an affinity for fragrant perfumes and playing in beds of hay."
At 18 years old, the tiger is now considered a senior. Though she is unusually friendly for an animal from the wild, she's still known to be more skittish around humans than big cats that grew up in captivity.
It's perhaps these survival instincts that kicked in early Sunday morning, when Jacqueline Eide, 33, managed to get inside Henry Doorly Zoo before it had opened with the intention of petting a tiger, according to a police statement. When she allegedly reached into a cage, a tiger - which zoo officials believe to have been Mai - bit Eide's hand, causing severe trauma.