Sri Lanka is one of the smallest, but biologically
diverse countries in Asia. Consequently it is recognized as a Biodiversity
hotspot of global and national importance. Its varied climate
and topographical conditions have given rise to this rich species diversity,
believed to be the highest in Asia in terms of unit land area.
Much of the species are endemic, a reflection of
the island's separation from the Indian subcontinent since the late Mesozoic.
This is especially relevant for mammals, amphibians, reptiles and flowering
plants. These species are distributed in a wide range of ecosystems which can
be broadly categorized into forest, grassland, aquatic, coastal, marine and
cultivated. The diversity of ecosystems in the country has resulted in a host
of habitats, which contain high genetic diversity.
Biodiversity includes species diversity, genetic
diversity and ecosystem diversity.
Species
diversity - fauna and flora.
An interesting feature of
the species diversity in Sri Lanka is its high degree of endemism, which is
observed in several taxonomic groups. Even more interesting is distribution of
endemics. A large proportion is found in the wet zone in the south western
region of the island.
Flora - Twenty three percent of the flowering plants are
endemic and most of them are confined to the wet evergreen and wet montane
forests of the central and southwest part of the country.
Vegetational analysis has resulted in the
identification of fifteen different floristic regions with the great majority
being found in the wet and intermediate zones. The presence of many floristic
regions within a relatively small area is a reflection of the high level of
ecosystem diversity in the country.
Fauna - The fauna of Sri Lanka is as diverse as the flora.
While sharing common features with the neighboring subcontinent, the fauna
exhibits very high endemism among the less mobile groups. With taxonomical
revisions and descriptions of new species the number of species in each group
keeps changing.
For endemic species, the distribution patterns
are similar to the flora: the wet zone has many more endemic species than the
dry zone. In terms of mammals, birds and fishes, the three major groups that
are well studies in Sri Lanka, each group has a different distribution pattern.
Generic diversity
Genetic diversity is the
component of biodiversity that this least documented. Almost all of the
available information is confined to economically important agricultural crops.
The Plant Genetic Resource Centre (PGRC) at Gannuoruwa, Peradeniya has
collected and preserved propagative material of a large number of species from
various agro-climatic zones of the country. For example PGRC has germoplasm
materials of 3194 traditional varieties and cultivars, and 17 wild relatives of
Rice (Oryza sativa).
For fauna, there have been some studies on
elephants (Elephas
maximus) and leopards (Panthera pardus), which indicate a decrease in genetic diversity as a
consequence of natural isolation from Indian sub-continent.
Ecosystem
diversity
There is a wide range of
ecosystem diversity in the island. The major natural ecosystems in the country
are forests, grasslands, inland wetlands, and coastal and marine ecosystems. It
also includes agricultural ecosystems.
Forests varying from wet evergreen forests (both
lowland and montane), dry mixed evergreen forests to dry thorn forests.
Grasslands are found in montane and low country inland wetlands include a
complex network of rivers and freshwater bodies. Marine ecosystems include
sea-grass beds, coral reefs, estuaries and lagoons and mangrove swamps.
Sri Lanka: One of 25 world’s
biodiversity hot spots
Sri Lanka has been
identified by the environment activist group Conservation International (CI) as
one of 25 biodiversity hot spots in the world.
These hot spots could have maximum benefit by
preservation efforts, the magazine said in a cover story titled "Heroes
for the Planet: Earth Angles". The U.S.-based CI said that together with
Western India, Sri Lanka, the island in the Indian ocean, accounts for 2,180
plant species that are unique to each hot spot. Sri Lanka's tropical rain
forest ecosystem is considered as an area which is disturbed by human activity,
but still exceptionally rich in animal and plant species found nowhere else.
No comments:
Post a Comment