Your search found 10 records
1 Matsuno, Y. 1998. Potential impact of agriculture and irrigation on the Bundala National Park and plans for monitoring. In Matsuno, Y.; van der Hoek, W.; Ranawake, M. (Eds.), Irrigation water management and the Bundala National Park: Proceedings of the Workshop on Water Quality of the Bundala Lagoons, held at IIMI, in Colombo, Sri Lanka, 03 April 1998. Colombo, Sri Lanka: IWMI. pp.39-44.
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: IIMI 631.7.5 G744 MAT Record No: H023711)
2 Maring, L.; Schuurmans, H. 2000. Wetland versus irrigation: Scenario analysis of water quantity and water quality aspects of the Kirindi Oya Irrigation and Settlement Project and Bundala National Park using simulation modeling. Study carried out at IIMI, during obligatory MSc training period of 24 weeks of the study "Soil water and atmosphere" of Wageningen University, the Netherlands. ix, 54p.
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: IIMI 631.7.1 G744 MAR Record No: H026327)
3 Piyankarage, S. C. 2002. Assessment of drainage water quality from the Kirindi Oya and the Badagiriya Irrigation Schemes and estimation of nitrogen and phosphorus loading to the Bundala wetland. Thesis presented to the Faculty of Graduate Studies in fulfillment of the requirement for the Degree of Master of Philosophy in Chemistry of the University of Kelaniya, Kelaniya, Sri Lanka. xii, 123p.
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: D 631.7.5 G744 PIY Record No: H030487)
4 Amerasinghe, Felix P.; Matsuno, Y.; de Silva, R. I.; Piyankarage, Sujeewa C.; Bambaradeniya, C. N. B.; Mallawatanthri, A. 2002. Impact of irrigation on water quality, fish and avifauna of three coastal lagoons in Southern Sri Lanka. [Abstract only]. In Ali, A.; Rawi, C. S. M.; Mansor, M.; Nakamura, R.;Ramakrishna, S.; Mundkur, T. (Eds.), The Asian wetlands: Bringing partnerships into good wetlands practices. Proceedings of the Asian Wetland Symposium, Penang, Malaysia, 27-30 August 2001. pp.183.
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: IWMI 631.7.5 G744 AME Record No: H034960)
(6.14 MB)
5 Piyankarage, Sujeewa C.; Mallawatantri, A. P.; Matsuno, Y.; Pathiratne, A. S. 2003. Estimation of nitrogen and phosporus fluxes to Embilikala and Malala Lagoons in Southern Sri Lanka. In Ratnasiri, J. (Ed.). Assessment of material fluxes to the coastal zone in South Asia and their impacts: Proceedings of the APN/START/LOICZ South Asia Regional Workshop, Negombo, Sri Lanka, 8-11 December 2002. Colombo, Sri Lanka: Sri Lanka National Committee of IGBP. pp.9-20.
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: IWMI 333.91 G744 PIY Record No: H034961)
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: IWMI 333.91 G744 PIY Record No: H036257)
7 Clemett, A.; Senaratna, S; Banda, R. 2004. Can coastal zone management in Sri Lanka sustain local livelihoods and ecosystems? London, UK: Department for International Development (DFID) v, 67p. (Improving Policy-Livelihood Relationships in South Asia, Policy Process Analysis Paper 2)
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: 574.5 G744 CLE Record No: H036398)
8 Piyankarage, Sujeewa C. 2007. Why development drainage can compromise water quality. Water Matters: news of IWMI research in Sri Lanka, 3:4.
(Location: IWMI HQ Call no: IWMI 577.68 G744 IWM Record No: H040540)
9 Clemett, A.; Senaratna, S; Banda, R. 2004. Can coastal zone management in Sri Lanka sustain local livelihoods and ecosystems? London, UK: Department for International Development (DFID) 67p. (Improving Policy-Livelihood Relationships in South Asia, Policy Process Analysis Paper 2)
(Location: IWMI HQ Call no: 574.5 G744 CLE c2 Record No: H042989)
(0.33 MB)
(Location: IWMI HQ Call no: e-copy only Record No: H051732)
(0.62 MB)
Bundala wetlands are the first to be declared a Ramsar wetland reserve in Sri Lanka. Two wetlands of this complex have transformed from seasonally inundated saline areas into permanent freshwater ecosystems, resulting in spatial and temporal changes that presumably have favoured plant invasions. We hypothesized that climate/rainfall changes and irrigation practices would be the most potential drivers of this change, and the objective of this research is to empirically determine the influence of rainfall and irrigation practices in the catchment on inundation pattern and plant nutrient availability that could potentially change ecology of these wetlands. Monthly rainfall data for the Bundala area (1988–2017) from Sri Lanka's meteorological department were analysed by parametric and nonparametric statistical methods, and a statistically significant change in rainfall was not discernible, confirming climate change is unlikely to be a driver to increase the lagoon water level. Irrigation data analysis revealed that these wetlands receive nearly 1.28 × 107 m3 of irrigation drainage annually from an irrigation scheme in the immediate catchment, which has resulted in decreased salinity, while inundation and plant nutrient content increased, changing the wetlands' ecology and socioeconomic status of the dependent rural communities.
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