Tigers from India could be relocated to Cambodia as part of a plan to increase the animal's global population.
The decision to relocate tigers was agreed to in principle at a ministerial meeting in Delhi of 13 Asian nations with tiger populations.
The animals will be moved from countries where they are thriving to nations where they are almost extinct.
The estimated number of wild tigers worldwide has risen for the first time in a century, conservationists say.
The global tiger population is now estimated to be nearly 3,900 - up from 3,200 in 2010.
India alone has more than half the world's tigers with 2,226.
An international campaign aims to double the global population of the big cat by 2022.
Apart from Indian tigers, Amur tigers from Russia could also be relocated to Kazakhstan which has lost all its big cats.





