Sri Lanka was originally part of the Deccan land mass, contiguous with Madagascar. The Loris, found only in Sri Lanka and South India, is related to the Lemurs of Madagascar. The connection to India led to a commonality of species, e.g. freshwater fish, the now extinct Sri Lankan Gaur (Bibos sinhaleyus) and the Sri Lankan Lion (Panthera leo sinhaleyus).[5]
The island was connected, off and on at least 17 times in the past 700,000 years, to India.
Sri Lanka's biological richness has exceptional levels of endemism.[7] 43%[8] of indigenous vertebrates animals of Sri Lanka are endemic (excluding marine forms).
According to the U.N. FAO, 28.8% of Sri Lanka was forested in 2010 (about 1,86 million hectares). In 1995, it was 1.94 million hectares or 32.2%[11] of the land area that was classified as dense forests while the balance 0.47 million hectares or 7% the land area classified as open forests.[12]
9.0% (167,000 hectares[13]) of Sri Lanka's forests are classified as primary forest (the most biodiverse and carbon-dense form of forest).
Sri Lanka's forests contain 61 million metric tons of carbon in living forest biomass (in 2010 [14]).
These forests have been largely cleared for agriculture, timber or grazing, and many of the dry evergreen forests have been degraded to thorn scrub, savanna, or thickets. Several preserves have been established to protect some of Sri Lanka's remaining natural areas. The island has three biosphere reserves, Hurulu (established 1977), Sinharaja (established 1978), and Kanneliya-Dediyagala-Nakiyadeniya (KDN) (established 2004).
Sri Lanka is a party to: Biodiversity, Climate Change, Desertification, Endangered Species, Environmental Modification, Hazardous Wastes, Law of the Sea, Nuclear Test Ban, Ozone Layer Protection, Ship Pollution, Wetlands.
It has signed, but not ratified: Marine Life Conservation
Environmental concerns include deforestation; soil erosion; wildlife populations threatened by poaching and urbanization; coastal degradation from mining activities and increased pollution; freshwater resources being polluted by industrial wastes and sewage runoff; waste disposal; air pollution in Colombo