Horton Plains : Sri Lanka's cloud-forest national park
Material type: TextPublication details: Colombo : Wildlife Heritage Trust, 2012.Description: 320 pages : illustrations (chiefly color), color mapsISBN:- 9789559114413
- 9559114417
- 581.526420913 HOR
Item type | Current library | Collection | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Sri Lanka Collection | Main Library Sri Lanka Collection | Reference | 581.526420913 HOR (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Not for loan | 013035 |
"Tokyo Cement Group".
With an average elevation of 2,100 metres (r,900 feet), Horton Plains is Sri Lanka's loftiest national park. It is also part of the recently-declared UNESCO Central Highlands World Heritage Site. Bordered by Kirigalpotta and Totupolakanda, Sri Lanka's second and third-highest peaks, the Park offers unparalleled scenery and opportunities for trekking through a pristine tropical montane cloud forest. Despite its small size (just 31 square kilometres - 12 square miles), its unique landscape and attractions such as the World's End escarpment and Baker's Falls, have made it Sri Lanka's most-visited national park. Horton Plains, however, offers more than just scenery. Its is a centre of remarkable biological richness and endemism even within Sri Lanka, which itself is part of a Global Biodiversity Hotspot. Dozens of plants and animals found here can be seen nowhere else. Although big-game abounds (night-time sightings of leopards are commonplace), what make the site special are its smaller, more subtle rarities both plant and animal. Embellished with almost 500 photographs and 100 specially commissioned drawings, this book is intended to help you identify all the animals and most of the plants you are likely to see in and around Horton Plains, and to find others that demand more effort or keener eyes. It is also intended to help readers understand the history of this remarkable plateau and the fragility of its ecosystem; and appreciate the urgent need for science-based conservation actions that alone can save it from the multitude of threats that confront it. The twelve authors each bring their own specialisations and years of experience in exploring aspects of the biodiversity of the plains, whether the ecology of its cloud frests, biodiversity, climate of history. Many of the plants and animals illustrated here had never been photographed before.
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