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2025-11-17·10 min·ashofthewildConservation

Climate Change and Wilpattu: How Shifting Monsoons Affect Wildlife Patterns

Climate Change and Wilpattu: How Shifting Monsoons Affect Wildlife Patterns

The Villus System — Vulnerable by Design

The villus are the foundation of Wilpattu's ecosystem. And they are fundamentally vulnerable to climate change because they depend entirely on seasonal rainfall.

Why the villus are vulnerable: - No river inlets or outlets — entirely rainwater-dependent - Maximum depth of 2–3 metres, shrinking to 30–80 cm in dry season - A delayed or weakened monsoon means the villus do not fill properly - Insufficient water in the villus cascades through the entire food chain

What scientists are observing: - The northeast monsoon has become less predictable over the past decade - The onset of rains has shifted later in some years (November instead of October) - Extreme rainfall events (flooding) have increased, followed by longer dry spells - The dry season is extending in some years, compressing the green season

The villus are not just water bodies. They are a calendar that every species in Wilpattu reads. When that calendar becomes unpredictable, the entire ecosystem feels it.

Observed Impacts on Wildlife

Leopards: - Extended dry seasons concentrate prey for longer periods — potentially beneficial for leopard viewing in the short term - But extreme drought reduces prey populations (deer, wild boar) through starvation and disease - Reduced water availability may force leopards to range more widely, increasing human-wildlife conflict risk

Sloth bears: - The Palu and Weera fruiting (June trigger for bear activity) is shifting with changing rainfall patterns - Erratic fruiting may reduce the reliable June bear-viewing window - Bears may need to range further for food, increasing encounters with humans

Elephants: - Extended dry seasons concentrate elephants around remaining water — good for viewing initially - But prolonged drought reduces forage quality and quantity - Elephant condition declines in extended dry periods - May increase crop-raiding behaviour in adjacent farmlands

Birds: - Migratory species arrival timings are shifting - Some species arriving earlier or later than historical patterns - Resident species breeding cycles may decouple from food availability

What This Means for Your Safari

Short-term (now–2030): - Wildlife viewing may become more concentrated (good for sightings) as water sources shrink - Dry season viewing should remain excellent - Green season may become more unpredictable for mammal tracking - Bird migration patterns may shift but not dramatically

Medium-term (2030–2050): - Potential for extended dry seasons that stress wildlife populations - Possible reduction in prey species abundance - Leopard and sloth bear populations may face increased pressure - Management interventions (supplementary water sources) may become necessary

What conservation managers are doing: - Monitoring villu water levels and rainfall patterns - Working with the DWC on adaptive management strategies - Supporting research on climate impacts - Educating visitors about the villus system and its vulnerability

The honest truth: Climate change is the single greatest long-term threat to Wilpattu's ecosystem. The park is resilient — it has survived droughts and floods for millennia — but the pace of current change is unprecedented. Every responsible safari visit that supports conservation funding is a contribution to the park's future.

What You Can Do

As a visitor: - Choose operators who prioritise sustainability and conservation - Offset your flight carbon where possible - Support conservation organisations working in Sri Lanka - Be a responsible guest — minimise waste, conserve resources at bungalows

As a photographer: - Document and share the beauty of Wilpattu — images build public support for conservation - Avoid contributing to stress on wildlife through your photography - Use your platform to advocate for climate action and conservation

As a traveller: - Talk about what you learned with friends and family - Support policies that address climate change - Consider donating to conservation programmes focused on Sri Lanka's national parks

The animals of Wilpattu cannot advocate for themselves. But your visit, your choices, and your voice can help ensure they have a future.

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