Hiyare Reservoir Rainforest
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One of the most beautiful stretches of rainforest in Sri Lanka is the rainforest
bordering the Hiyare Reservoir, about 18 km (approximately half an hour’s
drive) from Galle. Visitors to the Hiyare Biodiversity and Education Center
have a rare opportunity to see two Hog Deer. This extremely wary and nocturnal
deer is rarely seen in the wild by naturalists. Its is confined to western
seaboard. W. W. A. Phillips in his Manual of the Mammals of Ceylon published
in 1935 gave its distribution as being from a few kilometers North of Kalutara
to Kottawa in Galle. It is found in a band which ranges from 10 to 30 kilometers
inland. The Hog Deer is believed to spend the day in forested patches and
come out at night to feed in swamps, paddy fields, etc. Its hooves are specially
modified to spread out slightly when it walks, to distribute its weight on
swampy ground. Hog Deer are free living in the wild in Sri Lanka, and are
considered by many authors to be a native species, despite a curiously disjunct
distribution in South Asia. W. W. A. Phillips writing in the first edition
of Manual of the Mammals of Ceylon commented of a traditional belief that
it was introduced by the Dutch or the Portuguese. However this comment was
removed from the 1980 revised edition. The nominate species is found in tall
grasslands and swamp forest in Northern India from Uttaranachal to Assam,
Mizoram and Manipur. It is possible that DNA analysis may shed some clues
as to the origin of the sub-species of Hog Deer in Sri Lanka.

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The Hiyare Rainforest as it is popularly referred to, is an extension
of the Kottawa Khombala Forest Reserve. This stretch of rainforest is scenically
situated around the Hiyare Reservoir. The reservoir and the land surrounding
it is administered by the Galle Municipal Council, whereas the much larger
forest reserve is administered by the Forest Department. The reservoir ceased
to supply water to the town of Galle in 2002 and in 2003 the Galle Municipal
Council opened it to the public. It has also encouraged and facilitated
the Wildlife Conservation Society of Galle (WCSG) which runs a field center
there. The WCSG engages in education, conservation and research. The initiative
by the Galle Municipal Council is a benchmark for other local authorities
to engage with the public and to support conservation and education.
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Thanks to the Galle Municipal Council’s Hiyare Reservoir Rainforest
and the Forest Department’s Kottawa Rainforest and Arboretum, residents
and visitors to Galle have superb and easy access to rainforests. Galle
is the rainforest capital of Sri Lanka and is the richest of Sri Lanka’s
districts in bio-diversity. In the first week of October I travelled to
the Lighthouse Hotel in Galle to join Sharmini Serasinghe who is producing
and presenting Discover Sri Lanka, a new travel series for Rupavahini. Together
with Lighthouse Hotel Naturalist Anoma Algaiyawadu, I was to assist her
in showcasing Galle as the Rainforest Capital of Sri Lanka. On my way South,
I travelled through stretches of the A2, where I had swamps on my left right.
The swamps reminded me that I had not yet seen a Hog Deer and I thought
my only chance lay in an injured specimen been taken captive for treatment.
A few days later, with Sharmini and her Rupavahini crew, I arrived at the
education center of the Wildlife Conservation Society of Galle in Hiyare
to film the rainforest. Imagine my surprise and delight when Sameera Akmemana
and Sampath Gunasinghe of the society pointed out two Hog Deer under its
care. The Ruapavahini crew also filmed some of freshwater fish such as the
Striped Rasbora and the endemic Sinhala Barb. The latter is easily seen
in the reservoir. The word Hiyare originates from an expression which means
a hundred streams. Over thirty species of freshwater fish have been recorded
by the Wildlife Conservation Society in the rainforest streams of which
several are endemic.

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An enclosure presently has an injured Hog Deer fawn which has had the
end of one of its feet bitten off by dogs. An un-related adult female has
also been brought in. The female has bonded with the fawn. The female had
been kept as a pet and it cannot therefore be released as it is trusting
towards people and may be hunted. According to Sameera Akmemana and Sampath
Gunasinghe of the Wildlife Conservation Society of Galle, these two Hog
Deer take the number of Hog Deer brought to the center to a total of eight.
For photographers and naturalists, this is a superb opportunity to view
and photograph Hog Deer.
To enter the Hiyare Reservoir Rainforest, and the Kottawa Rainforest and
Arboretum, a nominal fee is levied for tickets. To get to Hiyare, from Galle,
take the Udugama Road (B 129). A hundred meters past the 9 km post of the
B 129, take the road to the right. 4.4 km later you come to a big bridge,
take the dirt track immediately to your left which leads to the Hiyare Reservoir,
a hundred meters away.
For the Kottawa Rainforest and Arboretum, continue along the B 129. Just
past the km. 13 post on the B 129, on the right, is the Kottawa Information
Center. Buy your entrance tickets here. Further along the road before the
14 km post are gates to the left and a large yellow sign board "Kottawa
Arboretum Wet Evergreen Forest Kottawa Khombala". Enter the forest
from here. Follow the wide trail that runs parallel to the road until it
rejoins it about a km away.
Gehan de Silva Wijeyeratne (gehan@fetwing.lk) is CEO of Jetwing Eco Holidays.
He has a penchant for researching and breaking stories to popularise wildlife
and to position destinations. Free downloads of natural history publications
are available on www.jetwingeco.com.
by Gehan de Silva Wijeyeratne
The Island
, 2008 November 30
Created March 21, 2009
Updated
March 21, 2009
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