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Sri Lankan elephant

The Sri Lankan elephant (Elephas maximus maximus) is native to Sri Lanka and one of three recognised subspecies of the Asian elephant. It is the type subspecies of the Asian elephant and was first described by Carl Linnaeus under the binomial Elephas maximus in 1758.[1] The Sri Lankan elephant population is now largely restricted to the dry zone in the north, east and southeast of Sri Lanka. Elephants are present in Udawalawe National Park, Yala National Park, Lunugamvehera National Park, Wilpattu National Park and Minneriya National Park but also live outside protected areas. It is estimated that Sri Lanka has the highest density of elephants in Asia. Human-elephant conflict is increasing due to conversion of elephant habitat to settlements and permanent cultivation.[2]

Sri Lankan elephant
Male tusker
Female and juveniles in Yala National Park
Scientific classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Mammalia
Order: Proboscidea
Family: Elephantidae
Genus: Elephas
Species:
Subspecies:
E. m. maximus
Trinomial name
Elephas maximus maximus
Range of the Sri Lankan elephant
Head of a male without tusks

Characteristics edit

 
A herd of elephants in Yala National Park

In general, Asian elephants are smaller than African elephants and have the highest body point on the head. The tip of their trunk has one finger-like process. Their back is convex or level. Females are usually smaller than males. 90% of tuskless males are called makhnas. Some males have tusks.[3]

Sri Lankan elephants are the largest subspecies reaching a shoulder height of between 2 and 3.5 m (6.6 and 11.5 ft), weigh between 2,000 and 5,500 kg (4,400 and 12,100 lb), and have 19 pairs of ribs. Their skin colour is darker than of indicus and of sumatranus with larger and more distinct patches of depigmentation on ears, face, trunk and belly.[4] Only 7% of males bear tusks. Average adult elephant tusks grow up to about 6 feet. It can weight up to 35 kg (77 lb).[5] Longest tusks of 7 feet 6 inches long was found in Millangoda Raja (1938-30 July 2011).[6][7]

The Sri Lankan subspecies designation is weakly supported by analysis of allozyme loci,[8] but not by analysis of mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) sequences.[9][10][11]

In July 2013, a dwarf Sri Lankan elephant was sighted in Udawalawe National Park. It was over 1.5 m (5 ft) tall but had shorter legs than usual and was the main aggressor in an encounter with a younger bull.[12]

Distribution and habitat edit

Sri Lankan elephants are restricted mostly to the lowlands in the dry zone where they are still fairly widespread in north, south, east, north-western, north-central and south-eastern Sri Lanka. A small remnant population exists in the Peak Wilderness Sanctuary. They are absent from the wet zone of the country. Apart from Wilpattu and Ruhuna National Parks, all other protected areas are less than 1,000 km2 (390 sq mi) in extent. Many areas are less than 50 km2 (19 sq mi), and hence not large enough to encompass the entire home ranges of elephants that use them. In the Mahaweli Development Area, protected areas including Wasgomuwa National Park, Flood Plains National Park, and Somawathiya National Park have been linked, resulting in an overall area of 1,172 km2 (453 sq mi) of contiguous habitat for elephants. Nevertheless, about 65% of the elephant's range extends outside protected areas.[13]

Former range edit

In the historical past, elephants were widely distributed from sea level to the highest mountain ranges. They occurred in the dry zone, in the lowland wet zone as well as in the cold damp montane forests. During the colonial period from 1505 to 1948, the wet zone was converted to commercially used fields and became heavily settled. Until 1830, elephants were so plentiful that their destruction was encouraged by the government, and rewards were paid for any that was killed. In the first half of the 19th century, forests in the montane zone were cleared large-scale for the planting of coffee, and afterward tea. The elephant population in the mountains was extirpated.[5][13] During the British rule, many bull elephants were killed by trophy hunters. One of the British army majors is credited with having shot over 1,500 elephants, and two others are reputed to have shot half that number each. Many other sportsmen have shot about 250–300 animals during this time.[14] Between 1829 and 1855 alone, more than 6,000 elephants were captured and shot under order of colonial British Empire.[15]

By the turn of the 20th century, elephants were still distributed over much of the island.[13] The area currently known as Ruhuna National Park was the Resident Sportsmen's Shooting Reserve, an area reserved for the sporting pleasure of British residents in the country.[16] In the early 20th century, mega reservoirs were constructed in the dry zone for irrigated agriculture. Ancient irrigation systems were rehabilitated and people resettled. This development gathered momentum after the independence in 1948. As a result, elephant habitat in the dry zone was severely fragmented.[17]

Population trend edit

The size of wild elephant populations in Sri Lanka was estimated at:

  • 19,500 in the early 19th century;[18]
  • 10,000 in the early 20th century;[19]
  • 7,000 to 8,000 in around 1920;[citation needed]
  • between 1,745 and 2,455 individuals in 1969;[20]
  • between 2,500 and 3,435 in 1987;[20]
  • 1,967 in June 1993 that were fragmented in five regions;[21]
  • between 3,150 and 4,400 in 2000;[22]
  • 3,150 in 2006;[citation needed]
  • 2,900–3,000 in 2007;[citation needed]
  • 5,879 in 2011, on the basis of counting elephants at water holes in the dry season.[2]
  • 7,500 in 2019;[23]
Important protected areas for the elephant in Sri Lanka[24]
Name of the park Size in sq.km Number of elephants
Wilpattu 1,316.9 100–150
Ruhuna (Yala) 1,267.8 300–350
Gal Oya 629.4 150–200
Maduru Oya 588.5 150–200
Victoria–Randenigala 400.8 40–60
Somawathiya 377.6 50–100
Wasgomuwa 377.1 150–200
Madhu road 346.8 100–200
Udawalawe 308.2 150–200
Peak Wilderness 223.8 50–60
Flood Plains 173.5 50–100
Sinharaja 88.6 10–50
MinneriayGiritale 66.9 300–400
Bundala 62.1 80–100
LahugalaKitulana 15.5 50–100

Ecology and behaviour edit

Elephant feeding on grass in Yala National Park (video)
 
An elephant charging a dog

Elephants are classified as megaherbivores and consume up to 150 kg (330 lb) of plant matter per day. As generalists, they feed on a wide variety of food plants. In Sri Lanka's northwestern region, feeding behaviour of elephants was observed during the period of January 1998 to December 1999. The elephants fed on a total of 116 plant species belonging to 35 families including 27 species of cultivated plants. More than half of the plants were non-tree species, i.e. shrub, herb, grass, or climbers. More than 25% of the plant species belonged to the family Leguminosae, and 19% of the plant species belonged to the family of true grasses. The presence of cultivated plants in dung does not result solely due to raiding of crops as it was observed that elephants feed on leftover crop plants in fallow chenas. Juvenile elephants tend to feed predominantly on grass species.[25]

Food resources are abundant in regenerating forests, but at low density in mature forests. Traditional slash-and-burn agriculture creates optimum habitat for elephants through promoting successional vegetation.[13]

Females and calves generally form small, loosely associated social groups without the hierarchical tier structure exhibited by African bush elephants.[26][27] However, at some locations such as Minneriya National Park, hundreds of individuals aggregate during the dry season, suggesting that grouping behaviour is flexible and depends on season and place.[citation needed]

Like all Asian elephants, the Sri Lankan subspecies communicates using visual, acoustic and chemical signals. At least fourteen different vocal and acoustic signals have been described, which include some low-frequency calls that contain infrasonic frequencies.[28]

Threats edit

During the Sri Lankan Civil War, Sri Lankan elephants were maimed or killed by land mines. Between 1990 and 1994, a total of 261 wild elephants died either as a result of gunshot injuries, or were killed by poachers and land mines. Several elephants stepped on land mines and were crippled.[29]

Poaching for ivory is not a major threat, given the rarity of tuskers. Some ivory trade still goes on, particularly in Kandy. Human population growth and demand for land is a greater threat today, and the range of elephants continues to decline as irrigation and development projects lead to the conversion of natural land to irrigated agriculture and settlements.[13]

Between 1999 and the end of 2006, nearly 100 wild elephants were killed every year to protect crops and houses. During drought seasons many elephants damage agricultural land for food. Nearly 80 elephants were killed in northwestern Sri Lanka, 50 in south and east and another 30 in other parts of the country, totaling 160 elephant deaths in 2006 alone. Sri Lanka has thus become the country with the highest elephant mortality rate worldwide.[30] The Sri Lankan Department of Wildlife Conservation official records showed that 407 elephants were killed in 2019. The next three years after that showed 328, 375, and 439 elephant fatalities, respectively.[23][31][32]

Number of elephant deaths since 2010[33][32]
Year 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 2021 2022 Total
Deaths 227 255 250 206 239 205 279 256 258 407 328 375 439 3724

Conservation edit

 
Elephants at the Elephant Orphanage near Kandy

Elephas maximus is listed on CITES Appendix I.[34]

The elephant conservation strategy of the Department of Wildlife Conservation aims at conserving as many viable populations as possible in as wide a range of suitable habitats as is feasible. This means protecting elephants both within the system of protected areas and as many animals outside these areas that the land can support and landholders will accept, and not restricting elephants to the protected area network alone.[13]

Culture and symbolism edit

 
Sri Lankan elephants at the Esala Perahera

Elephants were a common element in Sinhalese and Sri Lankan Tamils heraldry for over two thousand years and remained so through British colonial rule. The coat of arms and the flag of Ceylon Government from 1875 to 1948 included an elephant and even today many institutions use the Sri Lankan elephant in their coat of arms and insignia. An important cultural symbiosis has continued to exist between the elephant and humans for over two thousand years – no religious procession was complete without its retinue of elephants, and many large Buddhist temples and Hindu Temples in Sri Lanka had their own elephants.

 
Millangoda Raja, tusker with longest tusks

Since time immemorial, elephants have been domesticated for uses as work elephants and war elephants in Sri Lanka by the ancient kings. Elephants were exported from the island for hundreds of years and into the Portuguese and Dutch colonial era. The British did not export elephants, instead took to hunting wild elephants and capture of wild for domestication as work elephants continued. Elephant Kraals were organised to capture large herds of elephants in the late nineteenth and early twentieth century. The capture of wild elephants were regulated under the Fauna and Flora Protection Ordinance in 1937, with the issuance of permits to capture of wild elephants. This practice stopped following the last Elephant Kraal in 1950 by Sir Francis Molamure. A census of the domesticated elephant population in 1970 indicated 532 elephants among 378 owners, while this number had dropped 344 in 1982. These domesticated elephants were used mainly as work elephants and for cultural pageants, the chief of which is the annual Kandy Esala Perahera. In recent years, the domesticated elephant population has dropped further with the need for their labour dropping widespread use of tractors.

However, they remain in use in terrain inaccessible by vehicles for logging and used for tourism. Ownership of elephants are highly prestigious among Singhalese as a status symbol and calls have been made for permission to capture wild elephants or release of orphaned wild elephants in government care to Temples to take part in pageants. Captive breeding in private ownership does not take place due to the long period of unemployability associated with it.[35]

Legal reforms pertaining to the captive elephant population was introduced in 2021, just as a landmark case into dozens of calves being stolen from their herds in a ten-year period collapsed with the Attorney General's Department dropping charges and releasing the elephants to their former owners.[36]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Linnaeus, Carl (1760). "Elephas maximus". Systema naturæ per regna tria naturæ, secundum classes, ordines, genera, species, cum characteribus, differentiis, synonymis, locis [System of nature through the three kingdoms of nature, according to classes, orders, genera and species, with characters, differences, synonyms, places] (in Latin). Vol. 1. Halle an der Saale: Typis et sumtibus Io. Iac. Curt. p. 33.
  2. ^ a b Fernando, Prithiviraj; Jayewardene, Jayantha; Prasad, Tharaka; Hendavitharana, W.; Pastorini, Jennifer (2011). "Current Status of Asian Elephants in Sri Lanka" (PDF). Gajah. 35: 93–103. (PDF) from the original on 1 September 2022. Retrieved 3 September 2013.
  3. ^ Shoshani, J.; Eisenberg, J. F. (1982). "Elephas maximus". Mammalian Species (182): 1–8. doi:10.2307/3504045. JSTOR 3504045.
  4. ^ Shoshani, J. (2006). "Taxonomy, Classification, and Evolution of Elephants". In Fowler, M. E.; Mikota, S. K. (eds.). Biology, medicine, and surgery of elephants. Wiley-Blackwell. pp. 3–14. ISBN 0813806763. from the original on 20 October 2022. Retrieved 4 June 2020.
  5. ^ a b Jayewardene, J. (1994). The elephant in Sri Lanka. Colombo: Wildlife Heritage Trust of Sri Lanka.
  6. ^ Haviland, Charles (4 August 2011). "'Longest tusked' elephant in Asia dies in Sri Lanka". BBC News. from the original on 12 August 2011. Retrieved 22 August 2011.
  7. ^ "An elegy to Millangoda Raja". archives.dailynews.lk. from the original on 20 October 2022. Retrieved 15 March 2022.
  8. ^ Nozawa, K.; Shotake, T. (27 April 2009). "Genetic differentiation among local populations of Asian elephant". Journal of Zoological Systematics and Evolutionary Research. 28 (1): 40–47. doi:10.1111/j.1439-0469.1990.tb00363.x.
  9. ^ Vidya, T. N. C.; Fernando, P.; Melnick, D. J.; Sukumar, R. (January 2005). "Population differentiation within and among Asian elephant ( Elephas maximus ) populations in southern India". Heredity. 94 (1): 71–80. doi:10.1038/sj.hdy.6800568. PMID 15454948. S2CID 18442650.
  10. ^ Fernando, Prithiviraj; Vidya, T. N. C; Payne, John; Stuewe, Michael; Davison, Geoffrey; Alfred, Raymond J; Andau, Patrick; Bosi, Edwin; Kilbourn, Annelisa; Melnick, Don J (18 August 2003). "DNA Analysis Indicates That Asian Elephants Are Native to Borneo and Are Therefore a High Priority for Conservation". PLOS Biology. 1 (1): e6. doi:10.1371/journal.pbio.0000006. PMC 176546. PMID 12929206.
  11. ^ Fleischer, Robert C.; Perry, Elizabeth A.; Muralidharan, Kasinathan; Stevens, Ernest E.; Wemmer, Christen M. (September 2001). "Phylogeography of the Asian Elephant (Elephas Maximus) Based on Mitochondrial DNA". Evolution. 55 (9): 1882–1892. doi:10.1111/j.0014-3820.2001.tb00837.x. PMID 11681743. S2CID 7223168.
  12. ^ "A Dwarf Elephant With Outsized Attitude". WBUR's The Wild Life. 22 December 2014. from the original on 5 April 2019. Retrieved 6 April 2019.
  13. ^ a b c d e f Santiapillai, Charles; Fernando, Prithivirai; Gunewardene Manori (2006). "A strategy for the conservation of the Asian elephant in Sri Lanka" (PDF). Gajah. 25: 91–102. (PDF) from the original on 29 October 2013. Retrieved 3 March 2011.
  14. ^ Jayewardene, J. (2012). "Elephants in Sri Lankan History and Culture". Living Heritage Trust. from the original on 3 March 2016. Retrieved 2 August 2012.
  15. ^ Sukumar, R. (1992). The Asian Elephant: Ecology and Management. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-43758-5.[page needed]
  16. ^ Katugaha, H. I. E. (1997). "Tuskers of Ruhuna National Park, Sri Lanka" (PDF). Gajah. 18 (67–68). (PDF) from the original on 29 October 2013. Retrieved 2 August 2012.
  17. ^ Fernando, P. (2006). "Elephant conservation in Sri Lanka: Integrating scientific information to guide policy". In Groom, M. J.; Meffe, G. K.; Carroll, C. R. (eds.). Principles of Conservation Biology. Sunderland: Sinauer Associates. pp. 649–652. ISBN 978-0-87893-518-5.
  18. ^ "Elephants in Sri Lanka". eleaid. from the original on 26 February 2021. Retrieved 29 August 2015.
  19. ^ Wanigasundara, M. (1991). "Sri Lanka – Elephants slaughtered in civil war" (PDF). Gajah. 6: 16–17. (PDF) from the original on 25 July 2011. Retrieved 3 March 2011.
  20. ^ a b Kotagama, S. (1991). "Sri Lanka – Enhancing the survival of elephants" (PDF). Gajah. 6: 24. (PDF) from the original on 20 October 2022. Retrieved 3 March 2011.
  21. ^ Hendavitharana, W.; Dissanayake, S.; de Silva, M.; Santiapillai, C. (1994). "The Survey of elephants in Sri Lanka" (PDF). Gajah. 12 (1–30). (PDF) from the original on 25 July 2011. Retrieved 3 March 2011.
  22. ^ Kemf, E.; Santiapillai, C. (2000). Asian elephants in the wild. Gland, Switzerland: WWF.[page needed]
  23. ^ a b "Sri Lanka elephants: 'Record number' of deaths in 2019". BBC News. 11 January 2020. from the original on 24 April 2021. Retrieved 24 April 2021.
  24. ^ Important protected areas for the Asian elephant in Sri Lanka. Department of Wildlife Conservation. 2003.
  25. ^ Samansiri, K. A. P.; Weerakoon, D. K. (2007). "Feeding Behaviour of Asian Elephants in the Northwestern Region of Sri Lanka" (PDF). Gajah. 2: 27–34. (PDF) from the original on 18 November 2016. Retrieved 3 March 2011.
  26. ^ de Silva, Shermin; Wittemyer, George (October 2012). "A Comparison of Social Organization in Asian Elephants and African Savannah Elephants". International Journal of Primatology. 33 (5): 1125–1141. doi:10.1007/s10764-011-9564-1. S2CID 17209753.
  27. ^ de Silva, Shermin; Ranjeewa, Ashoka DG; Kryazhimskiy, Sergey (2011). "The dynamics of social networks among female Asian elephants". BMC Ecology. 11 (1): 17. Bibcode:2011BMCE...11...17D. doi:10.1186/1472-6785-11-17. PMC 3199741. PMID 21794147.
  28. ^ de Silva, Shermin (2010). "Acoustic communication in the Asian elephant, Elephas maximus maximus". Behaviour. 147 (7): 825–852. doi:10.1163/000579510X495762.
  29. ^ Alahakoon, J.; Santiapillai, C. (1997). "Elephants: Unwitting victims in Sri Lanka's civil war" (PDF). Gajah. 18: 63–65. (PDF) from the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 3 March 2011.
  30. ^ "Sri Lanka ranks as the country which killed the largest number of Elephants in the world – COPA". EconomyNext. 2020. Retrieved 11 December 2020.
  31. ^ "Sri Lanka records highest elephant deaths in world". Hindustan Times. 13 December 2020. from the original on 23 April 2021. Retrieved 24 April 2021.
  32. ^ a b "238 elephants killed in Sri Lanka so far this year, more than 1 daily". Efe. 19 July 2023. Retrieved 3 January 2024.
  33. ^ Supun, T. G.; Prakash, Lahiru; Wijeratne, A. W.; Fernando, Prithiviraj (2020). "Human-elephant conflict in Sri Lanka: Patterns and extent" (PDF). Gajah. 51: 16–25. (PDF) from the original on 24 April 2021. Retrieved 24 April 2021.
  34. ^ Williams, C.; Tiwari, S. K.; Goswami, V. R.; de Silva, S.; Kumar, A.; Baskaran, N.; Yoganand, K. & Menon, V. (2020). "Elephas maximus". IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. 2020: e.T7140A45818198. doi:10.2305/IUCN.UK.2020-3.RLTS.T7140A45818198.en. Retrieved 15 January 2022.
  35. ^ Jayewardene, Jayantha. "The care and management of domesticated Asian elephants in Sri Lanka". fao.org. Food and Agriculture Organization. from the original on 25 August 2021. Retrieved 14 September 2021.
  36. ^ Gu, Vanessa. "Sri Lanka prohibits handlers from 'drunk driving' on elephants, bans putting baby elephants to work". insider.com. from the original on 20 October 2022. Retrieved 14 September 2021.

External links edit

  Media related to Elephas maximus maximus at Wikimedia Commons

lankan, elephant, elephas, maximus, maximus, native, lanka, three, recognised, subspecies, asian, elephant, type, subspecies, asian, elephant, first, described, carl, linnaeus, under, binomial, elephas, maximus, 1758, population, largely, restricted, zone, nor. The Sri Lankan elephant Elephas maximus maximus is native to Sri Lanka and one of three recognised subspecies of the Asian elephant It is the type subspecies of the Asian elephant and was first described by Carl Linnaeus under the binomial Elephas maximus in 1758 1 The Sri Lankan elephant population is now largely restricted to the dry zone in the north east and southeast of Sri Lanka Elephants are present in Udawalawe National Park Yala National Park Lunugamvehera National Park Wilpattu National Park and Minneriya National Park but also live outside protected areas It is estimated that Sri Lanka has the highest density of elephants in Asia Human elephant conflict is increasing due to conversion of elephant habitat to settlements and permanent cultivation 2 Sri Lankan elephantMale tuskerFemale and juveniles in Yala National ParkScientific classificationDomain EukaryotaKingdom AnimaliaPhylum ChordataClass MammaliaOrder ProboscideaFamily ElephantidaeGenus ElephasSpecies E maximusSubspecies E m maximusTrinomial nameElephas maximus maximusLinnaeus 1758Range of the Sri Lankan elephantHead of a male without tusks Contents 1 Characteristics 2 Distribution and habitat 2 1 Former range 2 2 Population trend 3 Ecology and behaviour 4 Threats 5 Conservation 6 Culture and symbolism 7 See also 8 References 9 External linksCharacteristics edit nbsp A herd of elephants in Yala National ParkIn general Asian elephants are smaller than African elephants and have the highest body point on the head The tip of their trunk has one finger like process Their back is convex or level Females are usually smaller than males 90 of tuskless males are called makhnas Some males have tusks 3 Sri Lankan elephants are the largest subspecies reaching a shoulder height of between 2 and 3 5 m 6 6 and 11 5 ft weigh between 2 000 and 5 500 kg 4 400 and 12 100 lb and have 19 pairs of ribs Their skin colour is darker than of indicus and of sumatranus with larger and more distinct patches of depigmentation on ears face trunk and belly 4 Only 7 of males bear tusks Average adult elephant tusks grow up to about 6 feet It can weight up to 35 kg 77 lb 5 Longest tusks of 7 feet 6 inches long was found in Millangoda Raja 1938 30 July 2011 6 7 The Sri Lankan subspecies designation is weakly supported by analysis of allozyme loci 8 but not by analysis of mitochondrial DNA mtDNA sequences 9 10 11 In July 2013 a dwarf Sri Lankan elephant was sighted in Udawalawe National Park It was over 1 5 m 5 ft tall but had shorter legs than usual and was the main aggressor in an encounter with a younger bull 12 Distribution and habitat editSri Lankan elephants are restricted mostly to the lowlands in the dry zone where they are still fairly widespread in north south east north western north central and south eastern Sri Lanka A small remnant population exists in the Peak Wilderness Sanctuary They are absent from the wet zone of the country Apart from Wilpattu and Ruhuna National Parks all other protected areas are less than 1 000 km2 390 sq mi in extent Many areas are less than 50 km2 19 sq mi and hence not large enough to encompass the entire home ranges of elephants that use them In the Mahaweli Development Area protected areas including Wasgomuwa National Park Flood Plains National Park and Somawathiya National Park have been linked resulting in an overall area of 1 172 km2 453 sq mi of contiguous habitat for elephants Nevertheless about 65 of the elephant s range extends outside protected areas 13 Former range edit In the historical past elephants were widely distributed from sea level to the highest mountain ranges They occurred in the dry zone in the lowland wet zone as well as in the cold damp montane forests During the colonial period from 1505 to 1948 the wet zone was converted to commercially used fields and became heavily settled Until 1830 elephants were so plentiful that their destruction was encouraged by the government and rewards were paid for any that was killed In the first half of the 19th century forests in the montane zone were cleared large scale for the planting of coffee and afterward tea The elephant population in the mountains was extirpated 5 13 During the British rule many bull elephants were killed by trophy hunters One of the British army majors is credited with having shot over 1 500 elephants and two others are reputed to have shot half that number each Many other sportsmen have shot about 250 300 animals during this time 14 Between 1829 and 1855 alone more than 6 000 elephants were captured and shot under order of colonial British Empire 15 By the turn of the 20th century elephants were still distributed over much of the island 13 The area currently known as Ruhuna National Park was the Resident Sportsmen s Shooting Reserve an area reserved for the sporting pleasure of British residents in the country 16 In the early 20th century mega reservoirs were constructed in the dry zone for irrigated agriculture Ancient irrigation systems were rehabilitated and people resettled This development gathered momentum after the independence in 1948 As a result elephant habitat in the dry zone was severely fragmented 17 Population trend edit The size of wild elephant populations in Sri Lanka was estimated at 19 500 in the early 19th century 18 10 000 in the early 20th century 19 7 000 to 8 000 in around 1920 citation needed between 1 745 and 2 455 individuals in 1969 20 between 2 500 and 3 435 in 1987 20 1 967 in June 1993 that were fragmented in five regions 21 between 3 150 and 4 400 in 2000 22 3 150 in 2006 citation needed 2 900 3 000 in 2007 citation needed 5 879 in 2011 on the basis of counting elephants at water holes in the dry season 2 7 500 in 2019 23 Important protected areas for the elephant in Sri Lanka 24 Name of the park Size in sq km Number of elephantsWilpattu 1 316 9 100 150Ruhuna Yala 1 267 8 300 350Gal Oya 629 4 150 200Maduru Oya 588 5 150 200Victoria Randenigala 400 8 40 60Somawathiya 377 6 50 100Wasgomuwa 377 1 150 200Madhu road 346 8 100 200Udawalawe 308 2 150 200Peak Wilderness 223 8 50 60Flood Plains 173 5 50 100Sinharaja 88 6 10 50Minneriay Giritale 66 9 300 400Bundala 62 1 80 100Lahugala Kitulana 15 5 50 100Ecology and behaviour edit source source source source source source source source Elephant feeding on grass in Yala National Park video nbsp An elephant charging a dogElephants are classified as megaherbivores and consume up to 150 kg 330 lb of plant matter per day As generalists they feed on a wide variety of food plants In Sri Lanka s northwestern region feeding behaviour of elephants was observed during the period of January 1998 to December 1999 The elephants fed on a total of 116 plant species belonging to 35 families including 27 species of cultivated plants More than half of the plants were non tree species i e shrub herb grass or climbers More than 25 of the plant species belonged to the family Leguminosae and 19 of the plant species belonged to the family of true grasses The presence of cultivated plants in dung does not result solely due to raiding of crops as it was observed that elephants feed on leftover crop plants in fallow chenas Juvenile elephants tend to feed predominantly on grass species 25 Food resources are abundant in regenerating forests but at low density in mature forests Traditional slash and burn agriculture creates optimum habitat for elephants through promoting successional vegetation 13 Females and calves generally form small loosely associated social groups without the hierarchical tier structure exhibited by African bush elephants 26 27 However at some locations such as Minneriya National Park hundreds of individuals aggregate during the dry season suggesting that grouping behaviour is flexible and depends on season and place citation needed Like all Asian elephants the Sri Lankan subspecies communicates using visual acoustic and chemical signals At least fourteen different vocal and acoustic signals have been described which include some low frequency calls that contain infrasonic frequencies 28 Threats editMain article Human elephant conflict in Sri Lanka During the Sri Lankan Civil War Sri Lankan elephants were maimed or killed by land mines Between 1990 and 1994 a total of 261 wild elephants died either as a result of gunshot injuries or were killed by poachers and land mines Several elephants stepped on land mines and were crippled 29 Poaching for ivory is not a major threat given the rarity of tuskers Some ivory trade still goes on particularly in Kandy Human population growth and demand for land is a greater threat today and the range of elephants continues to decline as irrigation and development projects lead to the conversion of natural land to irrigated agriculture and settlements 13 Between 1999 and the end of 2006 nearly 100 wild elephants were killed every year to protect crops and houses During drought seasons many elephants damage agricultural land for food Nearly 80 elephants were killed in northwestern Sri Lanka 50 in south and east and another 30 in other parts of the country totaling 160 elephant deaths in 2006 alone Sri Lanka has thus become the country with the highest elephant mortality rate worldwide 30 The Sri Lankan Department of Wildlife Conservation official records showed that 407 elephants were killed in 2019 The next three years after that showed 328 375 and 439 elephant fatalities respectively 23 31 32 Number of elephant deaths since 2010 33 32 Year 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 2021 2022 TotalDeaths 227 255 250 206 239 205 279 256 258 407 328 375 439 3724Conservation edit nbsp Elephants at the Elephant Orphanage near KandyElephas maximus is listed on CITES Appendix I 34 The elephant conservation strategy of the Department of Wildlife Conservation aims at conserving as many viable populations as possible in as wide a range of suitable habitats as is feasible This means protecting elephants both within the system of protected areas and as many animals outside these areas that the land can support and landholders will accept and not restricting elephants to the protected area network alone 13 In the Pinnawala Elephant Orphanage in Kegalle injured elephants are treated and orphaned baby elephants cared for Nearly 70 elephants live here Captive breeding is also going on The Udawalawe Elephant Transit Centre in Udawalawe National Park is a rehabilitation centre where orphaned elephant calves are being kept until they can be released into the wild Culture and symbolism editThis article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Sri Lankan elephant news newspapers books scholar JSTOR January 2024 Learn how and when to remove this template message nbsp Sri Lankan elephants at the Esala PeraheraElephants were a common element in Sinhalese and Sri Lankan Tamils heraldry for over two thousand years and remained so through British colonial rule The coat of arms and the flag of Ceylon Government from 1875 to 1948 included an elephant and even today many institutions use the Sri Lankan elephant in their coat of arms and insignia An important cultural symbiosis has continued to exist between the elephant and humans for over two thousand years no religious procession was complete without its retinue of elephants and many large Buddhist temples and Hindu Temples in Sri Lanka had their own elephants nbsp Millangoda Raja tusker with longest tusksSince time immemorial elephants have been domesticated for uses as work elephants and war elephants in Sri Lanka by the ancient kings Elephants were exported from the island for hundreds of years and into the Portuguese and Dutch colonial era The British did not export elephants instead took to hunting wild elephants and capture of wild for domestication as work elephants continued Elephant Kraals were organised to capture large herds of elephants in the late nineteenth and early twentieth century The capture of wild elephants were regulated under the Fauna and Flora Protection Ordinance in 1937 with the issuance of permits to capture of wild elephants This practice stopped following the last Elephant Kraal in 1950 by Sir Francis Molamure A census of the domesticated elephant population in 1970 indicated 532 elephants among 378 owners while this number had dropped 344 in 1982 These domesticated elephants were used mainly as work elephants and for cultural pageants the chief of which is the annual Kandy Esala Perahera In recent years the domesticated elephant population has dropped further with the need for their labour dropping widespread use of tractors However they remain in use in terrain inaccessible by vehicles for logging and used for tourism Ownership of elephants are highly prestigious among Singhalese as a status symbol and calls have been made for permission to capture wild elephants or release of orphaned wild elephants in government care to Temples to take part in pageants Captive breeding in private ownership does not take place due to the long period of unemployability associated with it 35 Legal reforms pertaining to the captive elephant population was introduced in 2021 just as a landmark case into dozens of calves being stolen from their herds in a ten year period collapsed with the Attorney General s Department dropping charges and releasing the elephants to their former owners 36 See also editSri Lankan ivories List of mammals of Sri LankaReferences edit Linnaeus Carl 1760 Elephas maximus Systema naturae per regna tria naturae secundum classes ordines genera species cum characteribus differentiis synonymis locis System of nature through the three kingdoms of nature according to classes orders genera and species with characters differences synonyms places in Latin Vol 1 Halle an der Saale Typis et sumtibus Io Iac Curt p 33 a b Fernando Prithiviraj Jayewardene Jayantha Prasad Tharaka Hendavitharana W Pastorini Jennifer 2011 Current Status of Asian Elephants in Sri Lanka PDF Gajah 35 93 103 Archived PDF from the original on 1 September 2022 Retrieved 3 September 2013 Shoshani J Eisenberg J F 1982 Elephas maximus Mammalian Species 182 1 8 doi 10 2307 3504045 JSTOR 3504045 Shoshani J 2006 Taxonomy Classification and Evolution of Elephants In Fowler M E Mikota S K eds Biology medicine and surgery of elephants Wiley Blackwell pp 3 14 ISBN 0813806763 Archived from the original on 20 October 2022 Retrieved 4 June 2020 a b Jayewardene J 1994 The elephant in Sri Lanka Colombo Wildlife Heritage Trust of Sri Lanka Haviland Charles 4 August 2011 Longest tusked elephant in Asia dies in Sri Lanka BBC News Archived from the original on 12 August 2011 Retrieved 22 August 2011 An elegy to Millangoda Raja archives dailynews lk Archived from the original on 20 October 2022 Retrieved 15 March 2022 Nozawa K Shotake T 27 April 2009 Genetic differentiation among local populations of Asian elephant Journal of Zoological Systematics and Evolutionary Research 28 1 40 47 doi 10 1111 j 1439 0469 1990 tb00363 x Vidya T N C Fernando P Melnick D J Sukumar R January 2005 Population differentiation within and among Asian elephant Elephas maximus populations in southern India Heredity 94 1 71 80 doi 10 1038 sj hdy 6800568 PMID 15454948 S2CID 18442650 Fernando Prithiviraj Vidya T N C Payne John Stuewe Michael Davison Geoffrey Alfred Raymond J Andau Patrick Bosi Edwin Kilbourn Annelisa Melnick Don J 18 August 2003 DNA Analysis Indicates That Asian Elephants Are Native to Borneo and Are Therefore a High Priority for Conservation PLOS Biology 1 1 e6 doi 10 1371 journal pbio 0000006 PMC 176546 PMID 12929206 Fleischer Robert C Perry Elizabeth A Muralidharan Kasinathan Stevens Ernest E Wemmer Christen M September 2001 Phylogeography of the Asian Elephant Elephas Maximus Based on Mitochondrial DNA Evolution 55 9 1882 1892 doi 10 1111 j 0014 3820 2001 tb00837 x PMID 11681743 S2CID 7223168 A Dwarf Elephant With Outsized Attitude WBUR s The Wild Life 22 December 2014 Archived from the original on 5 April 2019 Retrieved 6 April 2019 a b c d e f Santiapillai Charles Fernando Prithivirai Gunewardene Manori 2006 A strategy for the conservation of the Asian elephant in Sri Lanka PDF Gajah 25 91 102 Archived PDF from the original on 29 October 2013 Retrieved 3 March 2011 Jayewardene J 2012 Elephants in Sri Lankan History and Culture Living Heritage Trust Archived from the original on 3 March 2016 Retrieved 2 August 2012 Sukumar R 1992 The Asian Elephant Ecology and Management Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 43758 5 page needed Katugaha H I E 1997 Tuskers of Ruhuna National Park Sri Lanka PDF Gajah 18 67 68 Archived PDF from the original on 29 October 2013 Retrieved 2 August 2012 Fernando P 2006 Elephant conservation in Sri Lanka Integrating scientific information to guide policy In Groom M J Meffe G K Carroll C R eds Principles of Conservation Biology Sunderland Sinauer Associates pp 649 652 ISBN 978 0 87893 518 5 Elephants in Sri Lanka eleaid Archived from the original on 26 February 2021 Retrieved 29 August 2015 Wanigasundara M 1991 Sri Lanka Elephants slaughtered in civil war PDF Gajah 6 16 17 Archived PDF from the original on 25 July 2011 Retrieved 3 March 2011 a b Kotagama S 1991 Sri Lanka Enhancing the survival of elephants PDF Gajah 6 24 Archived PDF from the original on 20 October 2022 Retrieved 3 March 2011 Hendavitharana W Dissanayake S de Silva M Santiapillai C 1994 The Survey of elephants in Sri Lanka PDF Gajah 12 1 30 Archived PDF from the original on 25 July 2011 Retrieved 3 March 2011 Kemf E Santiapillai C 2000 Asian elephants in the wild Gland Switzerland WWF page needed a b Sri Lanka elephants Record number of deaths in 2019 BBC News 11 January 2020 Archived from the original on 24 April 2021 Retrieved 24 April 2021 Important protected areas for the Asian elephant in Sri Lanka Department of Wildlife Conservation 2003 Samansiri K A P Weerakoon D K 2007 Feeding Behaviour of Asian Elephants in the Northwestern Region of Sri Lanka PDF Gajah 2 27 34 Archived PDF from the original on 18 November 2016 Retrieved 3 March 2011 de Silva Shermin Wittemyer George October 2012 A Comparison of Social Organization in Asian Elephants and African Savannah Elephants International Journal of Primatology 33 5 1125 1141 doi 10 1007 s10764 011 9564 1 S2CID 17209753 de Silva Shermin Ranjeewa Ashoka DG Kryazhimskiy Sergey 2011 The dynamics of social networks among female Asian elephants BMC Ecology 11 1 17 Bibcode 2011BMCE 11 17D doi 10 1186 1472 6785 11 17 PMC 3199741 PMID 21794147 de Silva Shermin 2010 Acoustic communication in the Asian elephant Elephas maximus maximus Behaviour 147 7 825 852 doi 10 1163 000579510X495762 Alahakoon J Santiapillai C 1997 Elephants Unwitting victims in Sri Lanka s civil war PDF Gajah 18 63 65 Archived PDF from the original on 4 March 2016 Retrieved 3 March 2011 Sri Lanka ranks as the country which killed the largest number of Elephants in the world COPA EconomyNext 2020 Retrieved 11 December 2020 Sri Lanka records highest elephant deaths in world Hindustan Times 13 December 2020 Archived from the original on 23 April 2021 Retrieved 24 April 2021 a b 238 elephants killed in Sri Lanka so far this year more than 1 daily Efe 19 July 2023 Retrieved 3 January 2024 Supun T G Prakash Lahiru Wijeratne A W Fernando Prithiviraj 2020 Human elephant conflict in Sri Lanka Patterns and extent PDF Gajah 51 16 25 Archived PDF from the original on 24 April 2021 Retrieved 24 April 2021 Williams C Tiwari S K Goswami V R de Silva S Kumar A Baskaran N Yoganand K amp Menon V 2020 Elephas maximus IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2020 e T7140A45818198 doi 10 2305 IUCN UK 2020 3 RLTS T7140A45818198 en Retrieved 15 January 2022 Jayewardene Jayantha The care and management of domesticated Asian elephants in Sri Lanka fao org Food and Agriculture Organization Archived from the original on 25 August 2021 Retrieved 14 September 2021 Gu Vanessa Sri Lanka prohibits handlers from drunk driving on elephants bans putting baby elephants to work insider com Archived from the original on 20 October 2022 Retrieved 14 September 2021 External links edit nbsp Media related to Elephas maximus maximus at Wikimedia Commons Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Sri Lankan elephant amp oldid 1206991772, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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