斯里兰卡
斯里兰卡是南亚的一个岛国,以其丰富的文化遗产、多样的自然景观和丰富的野生动物而闻名。古老的寺庙、纯净的海滩、郁郁葱葱的茶园以及充满活力的节日等景点都值得一看。独特的多元文化交融、热情好客的民风和美味佳肴,使其成为一个令人向往的旅游目的地。
Freshwater Piscifauna
Sri Lanka though a small island has a varied climate and topography and this has resulted in a rich biodiversity distributed within a wide range of ecosystems. This array of ecosystems is home to the Freshwater Piscifauna of Sri Lanka. These together with the freshwater habitats of rivers, streams, lakes, ponds, marshes, tanks, paddyfields, coastal and marine wetland ecosystems such as sea-grass beds, coral reefs, estuaries, lagoons, and associated mangrove swamps constitute the panorama of natural ecosystems in the country.
Sri Lanka has biodiversity richness with a high degree of endemism including endemic genera. Freshwater fish diversity is one of the major components of this rich heritage.
According to the distribution of rainfall, three major climatic zones are recognized in the island; the dry zone (annual rainfall < 1900mm), wet zone (annual rainfall > 2500mm), and the intermediate zone (annual rainfall 1900-2500mm). The rainfall shows seasonal fluctuations. Distribution of freshwater fish depends on those climatic zones.
Many of these species are riverine or marsh dwelling ones that occur mainly in the wet zone streams. Certain species such as Devario pathirana, Puntius bandula, Puntius asoka, Puntius srilankensis, are point endemics. Others such as Puntius martenstyni, Macrognathus pentophthalmos, Devario aequipinnatus, Labeo fisheri, and Labeo lankae, have a very limited distribution.
The wet-forest stream fishes in Sri Lanka exhibit a high morphological diversity and the fish assemblages are structured by ecological processes, especially interspecific competition.
The growing human population in the island has contributed to the loss of biodiversity, mainly due to anthropogenic factors such as habitat degradation/modification, over-exploitation of species, spread of invasive alien species and pollution. Closed natural canopy forests of the island have been reduced to less than 23 %, being least extensive in the wet zone where human population pressure is highest. Large scale deforestation over the past two centuries together with the high human population pressure in this region has led to reamin less than 750 km2 of highly fragmented rainforest cover by today. A recent analysis on the status of fauna and flora in Sri Lanka has revealed that 223 species of vertebrate fauna (33% of total species), and 675 species of angiosperm flora are threatened with extinction and it includes a higher proportion of the endemic taxa.
According to the 2007 National Redlist of Threatened Fauna and Flora of Sri Lanka (IUCN and MOENR, 2007), 28 species (20 endemics) of freshwater fish in Sri Lanka are threatened with extinction. These include 10 species Critically Endangered (CR), 7 species Endangered (EN) and 11 species Vulnerable (VU).
As such, we can see that many endemic spicies of piscifauna of Sri Lanka are disappearing rapidly from the island due to many threats resulted by a number