102 THE CANADIAN FORESTER's 



New Brunswick shows thirty-eight kinds, twenty- 

 seren deciduous and eleven conifers. 



"We find in Nova Scotia thirty-seven varieties, and of 

 these twenty-seven are deciduous and ten conifers. 



Prince Edward's Island presents to our view thirty- 

 four sorts, of which twenty-three are deciduous and 

 eleven conifers ; while Manitoba, the poorest of all the 



91. — Leaves and seed of red-cedar. 



provinces, can only produce thirty-one species, twenty- 

 three belonging to the deciduous kind, and the remain- 

 ing eight to the conifers. 



Thus, from our point of view, the sylvan flora of the 

 Dominion of Canada comprises sixty-one varieties, of 

 which forty-eight shed their leaves in autumn, and the 

 remainder, thirteen in number, are evergreens. 



As a useful table for reference, the following list is 

 appended : — 



