Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-8bhkd Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-16T15:33:02.776Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Ecology of the Asian Elephant in lowland dry zone habitats of the Mahaweli River Basin, Sri Lanka

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  10 July 2009

Natarajan Ishwaran
Affiliation:
Department of Zoology, University of Peradeniya, Sri Lanka, and Department of Fisheries & Wildlife, Michigan State University, East Lansing, USA

Abstract

The ecology of the Sri Lankan elephant in the Wasgomuwa Strict Nature Reserve and its environs is reported for the first time. Seasonal changes in the availability of grazing sites influenced changes in the home range of elephants. Availability of such sites in the wet season was limited by agricultural activities. Paddylands, after the harvest of the rice crop in the late wet season, became important dry season grazing sites. In the Reserve and areas outside its southern boundary on the left bank of the Mahaweli River, (a) female herds were seen more often than solitaries (b) female herds were larger and had a higher than expected number of juveniles in the dry than in the wet season (c) about 45% of the individuals were juveniles and (d) 7.4% of adult and sub-adult females had calves. Conflict between elephants and farmers will be most intense along the southern and eastern boundaries of the Wasgomuwa National Park, established in 1984 by the addition of new areas predominantly to the northern part of the Wasgomuwa Strict Nature Reserve.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1993

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

LITERATURE CITED

Brohier, R. L. 1974. Food and the people. Lake House Investment Limited, Colombo, Sri Lanka. 200 pp.Google Scholar
Bandaranayake, W. M., Sultanbawa, M. U. S., Weerasekara, S. C. & Balusubramaniam, S. 1974. A glossary of Sinhala and Tamil names of the plants of Sri Lanka. The Sri Lanka Forester XI:67149.Google Scholar
Conover, W. J. 1980. Practical non-parametric statistics. Second edition. John Wiley & Sons. 493 pp.Google Scholar
Deraniyagala, P. E. P. 1955. Some extinct elephants, their relatives and the two living species. National Museum, Colombo, Sri Lanka. 161 pp.Google Scholar
Douglas-Hamilton, I. 1972. On the ecology and behaviour of the African elephant. PhD Thesis. University of Oxford.Google Scholar
Eisenberg, J. F. 1981. The mammalian radiations: an analysis of trends in evolution, adaptation and behaviour. University of Chicago Press. 610 pp.Google Scholar
Eisenberg, J. F. & Lockhart, M. 1972. An ecological reconnaissance of Wilpattu National Park, Ceylon. Smithsonian contributions to Zoology. No. 101. 118 pp.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Eisenberg, J. F., Santiapillai, C. V. M. & Lockhart, M. 1970. The study of wildlife populations by indirect methods. Ceylon Journal of Science (Biological Sciences) 8:5362.Google Scholar
Erdelen, W. 1988. Forest ecosystems and nature conservation in Sri Lanka. Biological Conservation 43:115135.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Field, C. R. & Ross, I. C. 1976. The savannah ecology of Kidepo Valley National Park. II. Feeding ecology of the elephant and giraffe. East African Wildlife Journal 14:116.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Geiser, U. & Sommer, M. 1983. Up-to-date information on Sri Lanka's forest cover. Loris 16:6669.Google Scholar
Gunatilleke, C. V. S. & Gunatilleke, I. A. U. N. 1983. A forestry case study of the Sinharaja rainforest in Sri Lanka. Pp. 289357 in Hamilton, L. S. (ed.). Forest and watershed development and conservation in Asia and the Pacific. Westview Press, Boulder, Colorado.Google Scholar
Guy, P. R. 1976. The feeding behaviour of elephant (Loxodonta africana) in the Senegwa area, Rhodesia. South African Journal of Wildlife Research 6:5563.Google Scholar
Haberman, S. J. 1973. The analysis of residuals in cross-classified tables. Biometrics 29:205220.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ishwaran, N. 1979. Ecological studies on populations of elephants in the Gal Oya area in relation to distribution, habitat preference, competition and food availability. MSc Thesis. University of Peradeniya, Sri Lanka. 350 pp.Google Scholar
Ishwaran, N. 1981. Comparative study on elephant populations in Gal Oya, Sri Lanka. Biological Conservation 26:255270.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ishwaran, N. 1983. Elephant and woody-plant relationship in Gal Oya, Sri Lanka. Biological Conservation 21:303313.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ishwaran, N. 1984. The ecology of the Asian elephant (Elephas maximus. L.) in Sri Lanka. PhD Thesis. Michigan State University, East Lansing, USA. 144 pp.Google Scholar
Ishwaran, N. & Punchi Banda, A. 1982. The conservation of the Sri Lankan elephant – planning and management of the Wasgomuwa-Maduru Oya-Gal Oya complex of reserves. Final report on Project 1783 to WWF/IUCN Gland, Switzerland. 48 pp.Google Scholar
Ishwaran, N., Santiapillai, C., Amerasinghe, F. P. & Ekanayake, U. B. 1980. On the significance and importance of the elephant corridor between the proposed Maduru Oya National Park and the Wasgomuwa Strict Nature Reserve. University of Peradeniya, Sri Lanka (unpubl. mscript). 36 pp.Google Scholar
IUCN. 1990. IUCN Directory of South Asian protected areas. Compiled by Green, M. J. B.World Conservation Union (IUCN), Gland, Switzerland. 294 pp.Google Scholar
Johnson, B. L. C. & Scrivenor, M. Le. M. 1981. Sri Lanka: land, people and economy. Heinemann, UK. 154 pp.Google Scholar
Kurt, F. 1974. Remarks on the social structure and ecology of the Ceylon elephant in Yala National Park. Pp. 618634 in Geist, V. & Walther, F. (eds). The behaviour of ungulates and its relation to management. IUCN Publication Series No. 24.Google Scholar
Laws, R. M., Parker, I. S. C. & Johnstone, R. C. B. 1975. Elephants and their habitats: the ecology of elephants in North Bunyoro, Uganda. Clarendon Press, Oxford. 376 pp.Google Scholar
Lewis, D. M. 1986. Disturbance effects on elephant feeding: evidence for compression in Luangwa valley, Zambia. African Journal of Ecology 24:227241.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mckay, G. M. 1973. Behaviour and ecology of the Asiatic elephant in southeastern Ceylon. Smithsonian contributions to Zoology. No. 125. 112 pp.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mckay, G. M. & Eisenberg, J. F. 1974. Movement patterns and habitat utilisation of ungulates of Ceylon. Pp. 708721 in Geist, V. & Walther, F. (eds). The behaviour of ungulates and its relation to management. IUCN Publication New Series No. 24.Google Scholar
Moss, C. 1988. Elephant memoires: thirteen years in the life of an elephant family. Elm Tree Books, London. 336 pp.Google Scholar
Nettasinghe, A. P. W. 1973. The inter-relationship of livestock and elephants at Thammankaduwa Farm with special reference to feeding and environment. MSc Thesis. University of Peradeniya, Sri Lanka.Google Scholar
NPS. 1986. Master plan: Wasgomuwa National Park. US National Park Service/Department of Wildlife Conservation, Colombo, Sri Lanka. 43 pp.Google Scholar
Olivier, R. C. D. 1978. On the ecology of the Asian elephant. PhD Thesis. University of Cambridge, UK.Google Scholar
Petrides, G. A. & Swank, W. G. 1991. Herd composition in a dense African elephant population. Pp. 8487 in Kayanja, F. I. B. & Edroma, E. L. (eds). African wildlife: research and management. International Council of Scientific Unions, Paris.Google Scholar
Pilgram, T. & Western, D. 1986. Inferring hunting patterns on African elephants from tusks in international ivory trade. Journal of Applied Ecology 23:503514.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Santiapillai, C., Chambers, M. R. & Ishwaran, N. 1984. Aspects of the ecology of the Asian elephant Elephas maximus maximus L., in the Ruhunu National Park, Sri Lanka. Biological Conservation 29:4761.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Shoshani, J. & Eisenberg, J. F. 1982. Elephas maximus. Mammalian species 182:18.Google Scholar
Sikes, S. K. 1971. Natural history of the African elephant. American Elsevier, New York.Google Scholar
TAMS. 1980a. Environmental Assessment: Accelerated Mahaweli Development Program. Vol II. Topic Report A. Climate and Hydrology. US AID, Colombo, Sri Lanka.Google Scholar
TAMS. 1980b. Environmental Assessment: Accelerated Mahaweli Development Program. Vol. II. Topic Report M. Economics. US AID, Colombo, Sri Lanka.Google Scholar
Vancuylenberg, B. W. B. 1974. The feeding behaviour of the Asiatic elephant in southeastern Ceylon. MSc Thesis. University of Peradeniya, Sri Lanka.Google Scholar
Vancuylenberg, B. W. B. 1977. The feeding behaviour of the Asiatic elephant in southeast Sri Lanka in relation to its conservation. Biological Conservation 12:3354.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Western, D. 1986. The pygmy elephant: a myth and mystery. Pachyderm. Newsletter of the African elephant and rhino specialist group. IUCN, Gland, Switzerland. 12 1986:45.Google Scholar
Wittenberger, J. F. 1981. Animal social behaviour. Duxbury Press, Boston. 722 pp.Google Scholar