63 
the highly colored leaves just as it does in the autumn at the 
North, and the bursting flower-buds, as it does in the late 
spring in «higher latitudes. 
Ferns, like orchids, were plentiful. About five genera were 
nee s ed by nets and two by terrestrials. The great 
eather-fern ee a e list for size. Gigantic leaves in large 
eee about fifteen ae tall and two to three feet wide, were 
not uncommon. 
The rock of the SS nea named in this instance, 
for every inch of the roadbed from the Biscayne Pineland to the 
Cc 
al Palm Hammock and 
mentioned in a former paper! have for, the most part gradually 
lace and thus naturally eliminated themselves from the 
"ete pete this Jungle Without Peace*—either of mind or 
be 
of body—i well to record that in pean to the epi- 
phytic ae “(Harrisia ) mentioned in a for paper,? two 
additional kinds, a prickly- Aaa A dake Piteni ae the dildoe 
Acanthocereus pentagonus) w t instead 
of on th nd. An oe ees . the flora of the 
Florida mainland was the native wild cotton (Goss: hir- 
sutum), so common on many of the islands of tl 
Flor 
region to Roya! Palm Hammock would show on the Lossman’s 
River limestone the small marshes and hammocks as just de- 
scribed, then more extensive marshes and lower and more 
7 eles of The New York Botanical Garden 17: 41. 1916. 
apologies to Dr. William Beebe. 
oe nal of The New York Botanical Garden 17: 191. 1916, 22: 205. 
1921. The Cape Sable Region of Florida 10. 1919. 
