Maduru Oya National Park is a national
park of Sri Lanka, established under the Mahaweli development project and also
acts as a catchment of the Madura
Oya Reservoir. The park was designated on 9
November 1983. Providing a sanctuary to wildlife, especially for
elephants and protecting the immediate catchments of five reservoirs are the
importance of the park. A community of Vedda
people, the indigenous ethnic group of Sri Lanka
lives within the park boundary in Henanigala. The park is situated 288 kilometres (179 mi)
north-east of Colombo.
Maduru Oya National Park is one of the
four national parks designated under the Mahaweli Development Project. The other three are Wasgamuwa, Flood
Plains, and Somawathiya. An
ancient sluice on the old ruptured earthen bund of the Maduru Oya was discovered
in the 1980s. The sluice made up of stone slabs and bricks, is about 30
feet (9.1 m) high, 30 feet (9.1 m) wide and 219 feet (67 m)
long. The upper sluice was built in two phases, the first of which dates to
before the 6th century BC. The lower sluice is believed to be older than that.
Buddhist ruins of shrines, temples, dagobas, statues, and hermitages are found in Henanigala,
Kudawila, Gurukumbura, Ulketangoda, and Werapokuna belonging to various periods
of Sri Lankan
history. Early Brahmi
inscriptions from first to third century AD have been discovered in
Kandegamakanda. Vedda people, the indigenous
people of Sri Lanka, numbering less than a thousand people, live in
Kandeganwela, Kotatalawa, Dambana and other places before the declaration of the park. The temple of Mahiyangana of great importance to the Veddas is situated outside the
park. The Veddas, said to be descended from King Vijaya and Queen Kuveni, were living in Sri Lanka long before the arrival of the Sinhalese people from India 543 BC. They are traditionally hunters and gatherers and have increasingly relied on small cultivation for
their livelihood. Although the community living in Dambana have preserved their
traditional lifestyle to some degree.
The park is lying entirely in dry zone
although the parks southern boundary borders on the intermediate zone. The climax community of the
area is tropical
dry mixed evergreen forests characterized
by Drypetes
sepiaria, Chloroxylon
swietenia, Manilkara hexandra,Pterospermum
canescens, Wood apple Feronia
limonia, Cassia fistula, and Dimorphocalyx glabellus. However a majority portion of the forests within the park
had been severely exploited previously for shifting
cultivation. This has effected in secondary forests and vast stretches of open plains dominated by grasses.
The herbaceous stage is succeeded by shrubs and the thicket stage is
characterized byTrema rientalis. Among the first trees to appear is Pterospermum
canescens, Drypetes
sepiaria, and Manilkara
hexandra. Maduru Oya Dam is
surrounded by parkland, kept by periodic fires. Number of woody plants occurs around the reservoir.
A rare and endemic treeVatica obscura,
the only Dipterocarpaceae species to occur in the dry zone, is found in limited
locations on the banks of the Maduru Oya and Gallodai Aru. Exotic teak Tectona grandis is included
in the north-eastern region of the park.
The importance of the park's fauna
species is its richness, which includes a number of endemic species. Threatened mammal species include elephant Elephas maximus, of which there were 150-200 before the
establishment of the park, Sloth
Bear Melursus ursinus, leopard Panthera pardus, and Water Buffalo Bubalus bubalis. Other mammals are Toque
Monkey Macaca sinica, Common Langur Presbytis entellus, jackal Canis aureus, Fishing Cat felis viverrina, wild boar Sus scrofa, Indian
Muntjac Muntiacus muntjak, spotted deer Cervus axis, and sambar C. unicolor. Smalls mammals
include Porcupine Hystrix indica, Black-naped Hare Lepus nigricollis, Indian Pangolin Manis crassicaudata, squirrels, rats
and mice. European Otter Lutra lutrais also has been reported from park. Maduru Oya National Park is one of the
recorded habitats of the Grey
Slender Loris Loris lydekkerianus.
The park's diverse aquatic avifauna
includes Painted Stork Mycteria leucocephala, White-bellied Sea Eagle Haliaeetus leucogaster, Grey Pelican Pelecanus philippensis, Great Cormorant Phalacrocorax carbo , and Little Cormorant P. niger. Notable forest
species are endemic Sri
Lanka Junglefowl Gallus lafayetii, the rare Broad-billed Roller Eurystomus glaucurus (possibly the
only dry zone haunt), Common
Tailorbird Orthotomus sutorius, Shama Copsychus malabaricus, Black-hooded Oriole Oriolus xanthornus, and Woodpecker Dendrocopos nanus. Endemic Red-faced
Malkoha Phaenicophaeus
pyrrhocephalus is also occurs. The reservoir harbors several
species of bird flocks including Oriental Darter Anhinga melanogaster, Spot-billed Pelican Pelecanus philippensis, Asian Open bill Anastomus oscitans, Black-headed Ibis Threskiornis melanocephalus, and Eurasian
Spoonbill Platalea leucorodia.
Park reptiles include Geochelone
elegans, Common Monitor Varanus bengalensis, Water monitor Varanus salvator, black-tailed python Python molurus, krait Bungarus spp.,common
cobra Naja naja, Mugger crocodile Crocodylus palustris, and estuarine crocodile Crocodylus porosus. Other reptiles associated with aquatic
habits are Indian
Black Turtle Melanochelys trijuga and Indian Flap-shelled
Turtle Lissemys punctata. Of fish’s barbs barbus spp., Giant gourami Osphronemus goramy, Snakeheads Channa spp, Catfish (Siluriformes)
and exotic tilapia Tilapia mossambica are the
predominant in the reservoirs
Encroachment of the wetland area, poaching, illegal timber felling are serious problems within the national park. The park has been invaded by alien species Lantana camara. The Nilgala jungle
corridor has been proposed to link Maduru Oya National Park with Gal Oya National Park which would provide a more contiguous wildlife habitat.
Unplanned colonisation of land in the park by persons expecting to obtain land
deeds to land under the Mahaweli development project is showing an increase this has resulted in a considerable
disturbance to the wildlife of the park. Since then the squatter number about 1500 has been resettled in established
Mahaweli settlements. As part of Mahaweli Project Vedda people from several villages have been resettled in Henanigala.
The removal of Veddas has been widely publicised. Feared effects of the
Accelerated Mahaweli Development Programme include conflicting interests
between wildlife and settlers in the areas of the park that are bordering the
development area: elephants and wild boars raid and damage crops, while cattle
and other domesticated animals tress into the park. Constructing dam, tunnels
and roads has caused badly scattered landscapes in few villages. Maduru Oya
reservoir is covered with the harmful floating weed Salvinia
molesta.
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