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Country designation

Browse the atlas of 26 national parks, significant protected lands within Sri Lanka's diverse geography.

Sri Lanka National Parks: Explore Country-Specific Protected Areas and Geography

This page serves as a focused index for Sri Lanka's national parks, presenting a critical designation within the country's broader protected areas network. Engage with detailed geographic information and mapped boundaries for these nationally significant conservation sites, offering a clear view of their distribution across the island's varied terrain and landscape context.

Sri Lanka National Parks: Explore Country-Specific Protected Areas and Geography

Explore Sri Lanka's diverse national park network and the geographic spread of its protected areas

National Parks in Sri Lanka: Mapping Island Protected Areas and Conservation Landscapes

Browse a comprehensive atlas of Sri Lanka's National Parks, spanning diverse landscapes from coastal marine reserves to dry zone forests and elephant habitats. These nationally significant protected areas serve as flagship conservation sites within the island nation, highlighting crucial biodiversity and ecological zones across its varied geography.

National park
Mapped parks26
Share of country parks100%
Largest mapped parkWilpattu National Park1,316.67 km²
Oldest mapped parkWilpattu National Park1,938
Parks in this designationExplore the geographic distribution and diverse conservation landscapes across Sri Lanka's national park network.10 / 26
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Browse Sri Lanka National Parks: Discover Protected Areas by Designation

Browse Sri Lanka's national parks, tracing how these protected areas are distributed across the country's diverse geography. The curated list allows users to compare park characteristics, understand their regional context, and deepen atlas-style discovery of the island's conservation landscapes.

National park

Wilpattu National Park

Explore mapped boundaries and high leopard density geography.

Wilpattu National Park, located in Sri Lanka's northwest coastal lowland dry zone, is the country's largest and one of its oldest national parks. Its landscape is defined by a unique system of nearly 106 natural sand-rimmed water basins, or willu, creating a distinctive wetland environment. The park is globally recognized for its substantial leopard population, representing one of the highest densities recorded in Sri Lanka. Discover the mapped terrain and protected area context of this ecologically vital landscape.

1,316.67 km²1938TropicalModerate access
National parkSouthern Province

Bundala National Park

Explore its unique coastal geography and mapped bird habitats.

Bundala National Park is a critical protected area situated in Sri Lanka's Southern Province, defined by its system of five shallow brackish lagoons, salt pans, and coastal dune ecosystems. Recognized globally as a Ramsar wetland and UNESCO Biosphere Reserve, it serves as a crucial wintering ground for migratory water birds, most famously large flocks of greater flamingos. The park's extremely low-lying coastal terrain, with unique palu tree forests on sand dunes, offers a distinct landscape for geographic discovery and understanding regional protected areas.

33.39 km²1993TropicalAccess unknown
National parkNorth Central Province

Minneriya National Park

Explore mapped boundaries and regional landscape context.

Minneriya National Park is a designated national park offering unique protected landscape exploration within Sri Lanka's North Central Province. This entry provides structured data crucial for understanding the park's geographic features, its defined boundaries, and its significance as a protected area. Dive into the atlas context that illuminates the natural terrain and regional setting of Minneriya National Park.

88.894 km²1997TropicalAccess unknown
National parkNorthern ProvinceMarine

Adam's Bridge Marine National Park

Mapped marine geography and protected island ecosystems.

Adam's Bridge Marine National Park is a protected national park in Sri Lanka's Northern Province, notable for encompassing the legendary Adam's Bridge. This marine protected area safeguards critical shallow-water habitats, including seagrass meadows and sand dunes, which are vital for migratory birds, dugongs, and sea turtles. The park's unique geographic identity as a chain of limestone shoals and islands offers a distinct landscape for atlas-based discovery and understanding of coastal conservation significance.

190 km²2015TropicalII
National parkUva ProvinceMountain

Gal Oya National Park

Explore savannah grasslands, elephant populations, and mapped terrain.

Gal Oya National Park presents a unique protected landscape within Uva Province, Sri Lanka. This national park is defined by its broad savannah grasslands, known as thalawa, interspersed with forested hills and the vast Senanayake Samudraya reservoir. Its varied topography, from lowlands to mountain peaks, offers a rich canvas for geographic exploration and understanding protected-area dynamics. The park's consistent visibility of elephant populations across these diverse terrains makes it a key site for wildlife observation within Sri Lanka's atlas of natural heritage.

259 km²1954TropicalII
National parkNorthern Province

Madhu Road National Park

Explore protected landscapes and mapped geography.

Madhu Road National Park, situated in Sri Lanka's Northern Province, is a significant protected area defined by its dry zone ecosystems, including forests, grasslands, and wetlands. As one of the island's larger national parks, it offers critical habitat for diverse wildlife and represents an important component of northern Sri Lanka's conservation efforts. This page provides detailed atlas-style insights into the park's geography, mapped boundaries, and its ecological context within the region.

631 km²2015TropicalModerate access
National parkNorth Central Province

Flood Plains National Park

Mapping the geography of its unique villus system and Mahaweli River flood plain.

Flood Plains National Park stands as a paramount protected wetland ecosystem in Sri Lanka's North Central Province, critically important as an elephant corridor along the Mahaweli River. The park's landscape is defined by its unique villus system, shallow swampy depressions that support extraordinary biodiversity and serve as vital feeding grounds for Asian elephants and migratory waterfowl. Understanding the mapped park boundaries and its regional geographic context reveals its significance in landscape-level conservation efforts within the Mahaweli basin.

173.5 km²1984TropicalModerate access
National parkEastern Province

Kumana National Park

Mapped boundaries and regional context for this national park.

Delve into the protected landscape of Kumana National Park, a designated national park situated in Sri Lanka's Eastern Province. This dedicated exploration surface provides detailed geographic information, helping you understand the park's mapped boundaries, surrounding terrain, and its significance within the regional context. It is designed for users seeking a structured understanding of protected areas and their place in the broader atlas.

356.64 km²1970TropicalII
National parkNorth Central ProvinceMountain

Angammedilla National Park

Mapped dry evergreen forests and mountainous terrain boundaries.

Angammedilla National Park is a national park in Sri Lanka's North Central Province renowned for its pivotal role in safeguarding the drainage basin for the large Parakrama Samudra reservoir. This protected landscape features significant dry evergreen forest ecosystems and mountainous terrain, contributing to the region's ecological stability and wildlife habitats. Its establishment highlights a commitment to preserving vital natural resources and understanding the complex interplay between protected areas and regional geography.

75.29 km²2006TropicalII
National parkNorth Central Province

Horowpathana National Park

Explore its mapped boundaries and vital wildlife habitat.

Horowpathana National Park is a designated national park in Sri Lanka's North Central Province, covering 2,570 hectares of dry zone forest. Established to protect critical habitats for endangered species like the Sri Lankan elephant and leopard, it plays a vital role in regional wildlife conservation and managing human-wildlife conflict. Its landscape is characterized by dry forest ecosystems situated near the Tawalamham Hammillewa reservoir system, presenting a unique environmental context within the broader mapped geography of the island.

25.7 km²2011TropicalAccess unknown
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Continue Exploring Sri Lanka's National Park Geography and Protected Areas

Delve deeper into the specific mapped boundaries and regional context of Sri Lanka's national parks. Understanding these protected areas offers valuable insights into the country's landscape conservation efforts and its contribution to global protected-area atlases.

Global natural geography