Madhu Road National Park Explained

Madhu Road National Park
Alt Name:Tamil: மடு றோட் தேசிய பூங்கா
Sinhala; Sinhalese: මඩු පාර ජාතික වනෝද්‍යානය
Iucn Category:II
Map:Sri Lanka Northern Province#Sri Lanka
Label:Madhu Road National Park
Label Position:bottom
Location:Northern Province
Nearest City:Mannar
Coords:8.9306°N 80.2139°W
Area:630.6739km2
Established: (sanctuary)
(national park)
Administrator:Department of Wildlife Conservation
Owner:Government of Sri Lanka

Madhu Road National Park (Tamil: மடு றோட் தேசிய பூங்கா|translit=Maṭu Ṟōṭ Tēciya Pūṅkā; Sinhala; Sinhalese: මඩු පාර ජාතික වනෝද්‍යානය|translit=Maḍu Pāra Jātika Vanōdyānaya) is a national park in northern Sri Lanka, approximately 250NaN0 east of Mannar.

History

The Madhu Road area was designated as a sanctuary on 28 June 1968 under the Fauna and Flora Protection Ordinance (No. 2) of 1937.[1] [2] The sanctuary had an area of 26677ha.[1] [2]

Following the end of the Sri Lankan Civil War the government announced plans to convert various sanctuaries in the Northern Province into national parks.[3] [4] The sanctuary was subject to illegal sand excavation, tree felling and unplanned development by the government.[5] [6] An Integrated Strategic Environmental Assessment of Northern Province produced by the government with the assistance of United Nations Development Programme and United Nations Environment Programme and published in October 2014 recommended that Madhu Road sanctuary, excluding developed areas, and the surrounding state-owned forests be upgraded to a national park.[7] The recommendation would see the sanctuary's area grow from 26677ha to 63067.39ha as a result of absorbing state-owned forests nearby.[8] The Shrine of Our Lady of Madhu would be located inside the national park.[8] [9]

In May 2015 the government announced that Madhu Road, along with Adam's Bridge, Chundikkulam and Delft would be designated national parks.[9] Madhu Road sanctuary became a national park on 22 June 2015 with an area of 63067.39ha.[10]

Flora and fauna

Numerous varieties of birds are found in Madhu Road including Alexandrine parakeet, ashy-crowned sparrow-lark, ashy prinia, ashy woodswallow, Asian koel, Asian palm swift, baya weaver, black drongo, black-hooded oriole, black-rumped flameback, black-winged kite, blue-faced malkoha, brahminy kite, brown-headed barbet, changeable hawk-eagle, common emerald dove, common iora, common myna, common tailorbird, common woodshrike, coppersmith barbet, crested honey buzzard, crimson-fronted barbet, greater coucal, greater racket-tailed drongo, Asian green bee-eater, green imperial pigeon, grey-breasted prinia, house crow, house sparrow, Indian paradise flycatcher, Indian peafowl, Indian robin, Indian roller, Jerdon's bush lark, Jerdon's leafbird, jungle crow, jungle prinia, large cuckooshrike, Malabar pied hornbill, orange-breasted green pigeon, oriental magpie-robin, paddyfield pipit, plain prinia, Sri Lanka green pigeon, purple sunbird, red-rumped swallow, red-vented bulbul, red-wattled lapwing, rock dove, rose-ringed parakeet, scaly-breasted munia, shikra, small minivet, spotted dove, Sri Lanka grey hornbill, Sri Lankan junglefowl, tawny-bellied babbler, white-bellied sea eagle, white-browed bulbul, white-browed fantail, white-rumped munia, white-rumped shama, yellow-billed babbler, yellow-eyed babbler and Zitting cisticola.[1] Mammals found in the park include Asian elephant, bear, chevrotain, chital, golden jackal, grey langur, grizzled giant squirrel, Indian grey mongoose, Indian hare, Indian palm squirrel, leopard, muntjac, purple-faced langur, ruddy mongoose, toque macaque, water buffalo and wild boar.[1] [8]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Clean Energy and Network Efficiency Improvement Project - Initial Environmental Examination. Asian Development Bank. 24–25. October 2014.
  2. Book: Green, Michael J. B.. IUCN Directory of South Asian Protected Areas. 1990. International Union for Conservation of Nature. 2-8317-0030-2. 194.
  3. News: New Wildlife Parks In The North. The Sunday Leader. 1 June 2010. 16 January 2016. https://web.archive.org/web/20160128213356/http://www.thesundayleader.lk/2010/06/01/new-wildlife-parks-in-the-north/. 28 January 2016. dead.
  4. News: Ladduwahetty . Ravi . Elephant experts predict miserable failure . . 28 July 2014 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20160126040611/http://www.ceylontoday.lk/51-69133-news-detail-elephant-experts-predict-miserable-failure.html . 26 January 2016 .
  5. News: Kannangara. Nirmala. Sanctuaries Threatened By Excavations And Deforestation. The Sunday Leader. 9 September 2012. 16 January 2016. https://web.archive.org/web/20170202005930/http://www.thesundayleader.lk/2012/09/09/sanctuaries-threatened-by-excavations-and-deforestation/. 2 February 2017. dead.
  6. Web site: Kuruwita. Rathindra. Madhu forest sanctuary in Mannar District being systematically destroyed through excavating sand and felling trees. dbsjeyaraj.com/Lakbima News. 21 April 2012. 16 January 2016. https://web.archive.org/web/20190115234142/http://dbsjeyaraj.com/dbsj/archives/5748. 15 January 2019. dead.
  7. Book: Mallawatantri. Ananda. Marambe. Buddhi. Skehan. Connor. Integrated Strategic Environment Assessment of the Northern Province of Sri Lanka. October 2014. Central Environmental Authority, Sri Lanka and Disaster Management Centre of Sri Lanka. 978-955-9012-55-9. 75. 2016-01-16. https://web.archive.org/web/20160126150200/http://203.115.26.10/ISEA_North_final.pdf. 2016-01-26. dead.
  8. News: Abhayagunawardena. Vidya. Will conservation boom in the north?. The Sunday Times (Sri Lanka). 29 March 2015.
  9. News: Rodrigo. Malaka. Wild north gets Govt’s helping hand at last. The Sunday Times (Sri Lanka). 10 May 2015.
  10. PART I : SECTION (I) — GENERAL Government Notifications THE FAUNA AND FLORA PROTECTION ORDINANCE (CHAPTER 469) Order under Subsection (4) of Section 2 . 22 June 2015 . The Gazette of the Democratic Socialist Republic of Sri Lanka Extraordinary . 1920/03 .