Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Pride and protection must go hand in hand

Being just one of two remaining ‘island-living’ leopards on earth, Sri Lanka’s Big Cat needs ‘stepping stones’ to ensure its survival, a new study conducted at Wilpattu National Park has found

- By Kumudini Hettiarach­chi

Sri Lanka is very proud of its one and only Big Cat and apex predator – the magnificen­t leopard. The most important measure to safeguard our unique Panthera pardus kotiya for posterity is to provide a high-level of protection within the country’s National Parks (NPs) as is happening now and crucial connectivi­ty to forests adjacent to NPs so that they can roam from one to the other without danger.

This has been establishe­d through solid research by a team which has hunkered down in Wilpattu, Sri Lanka’s oldest and Asia’s second oldest formally-declared Protected Area (PA), to study the leopard. Covering an area of 131,693 hectares, this NP on the north-western coast comprises dry lowland forest with a cluster of villus, which are naturally-formed rain-fed water bodies.

Before we delve into the study, we digress and lead author Dinal J.S. Samarasing­he of the Environmen­tal Foundation Limited (EFL) describes how they were awed by the long travels of a big handsome male. “We saw him on a series of camera traps, the ‘master’ of all he surveyed, going from the Talawila area to the Mannar Road and also close to the western mangroves.”

Sri Lanka’s leopard is of special significan­ce because it is just one of two

remaining ‘island-living’ leopards on earth, the other being the Javan leopard. Examples of large felid extinction­s (wild mammals of the cat family) on islands from across the world include two island population­s of tigers ( Panthera tigris sondaica) from the islands of Bali and Java and the extinction of the African leopard ( Panthera pardus pardus) from Zanzibar. The contributo­ry factors have been loss of habitat due to human expansion, the direct killing of the tigers and also their prey.

“It is important to understand the densities, distributi­on and dynamics of large carnivore population­s to develop effective conservati­on strategies across landscapes, particular­ly in island environmen­ts,” explains Dinal.

The study titled ‘Evidence for a critical leopard conservati­on stronghold from a large protected landscape on the island of Sri Lanka’ has been published end-May in the peer-reviewed journal ‘Global Ecology and Conservati­on’ published by Elsevier.

Dinal and his team had conducted a single season camera trap survey from May 6 to September 16, 2018, with 3,406 camera nights yielding interestin­g evidence. It has found that Wilpattu has a high density of leopards and that high levels of protection like the landscape at Wilpattu supported this high density. But that alone was not adequate. These leopards also needed safe ‘stepping stones’ to move from very well protected Wilpattu to adjacent areas, be it another protected or even an unprotecte­d area such as Other State Forests – OSFs.

Leopards are very adaptable and can live in environmen­ts where there are people. This is why the ‘stepping stones’ should be without disturbanc­e or stress which would hinder their movements.

“This is critical to maintain their genetic integrity as otherwise in an island environmen­t they could face higher extinction risks due to genetic isolation and loss of their finite (limited) habitat,” stresses Dinal, adding that Sri Lanka’s leopards could be an important model for the challenges of island species conservati­on in the 21st century.

This study can also provide guidance based on scientific evidence to the authoritie­s, the Department of Wildlife Conservati­on (DWC) and Forest Department (FD) on the way forward, as the leopard represents a critical species for the country’s ecosystem functional­ity as an apex pred

ator and also revenue-generator for tourism.

The track record in Sri Lanka though has not been too good – human expansion has encroached on essential territory needed for the survival of animals, decreasing and fragmentin­g forest cover, from 44% in 1956 to an estimated 29.7% in 2021.

Even though, the Wilpattu NP is important for biodiversi­ty conservati­on as it is connected to a PA complex of reserves under the DWC and FD, there have been pressures and government policies triggering deforestat­ion, encroachme­nt, road developmen­t, degazettem­ent and downsizing.

This study gives unshakeabl­e proof that not only PAs but their surroundin­g forests need to be safeguarde­d.

The study team also comprised EFL’s Eric D. Wikramanay­ake; Arjun M. Gopalaswam­y of Carnassial­s Global, India; Rukshan Jayewarden­e & Jehan Kumara of the Leopard Trust; Javana Fernando of Kulu Safaris; Kithsiri Gunawarden­e of LOLC Holdings; Justine Shanti Alexander of the Snow Leopard Trust of USA & Alexander Braczkowsk­i of the School of Environmen­tal Science and Engineerin­g, Southern University of Science and Technology, Shenzhen, China.

 ?? ?? On the prowl: The large male leopard. Photos courtesy of Dinal Samarasing­he
On the prowl: The large male leopard. Photos courtesy of Dinal Samarasing­he
 ?? ?? Dinal Samarasing­he
Dinal Samarasing­he

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