80 
FOURTEENTH REPORT. 
Populus balsamifera. 
SECONDARY SPECIES. 
Primus serotina. 
RELIC SPECIES. 
(A few surviving' 
Pi mis resinosa. 
giants over 100 feet high, standing high above all 
other vegetation . ) 
Pin us strob us. 
INVADING 
Qucrcus rubra. 
(Few fair sized but mostlv small 
•/ 
and more or less depauperate.) 
Acer rubrum. 
(Few old and several small trees, 
but mostly near the shore or in 
low ground.) 
.leer succliarum (seedlings). 
B. Shrubs. 
SPECIES. 
Pinus strobus (numerous seedlings). 
Pinus resinosa (numerous seedlings 
and young trees). 
Pinus banksiana (seedlings and 
small trees east of Pellston). 
Fagus grandifolia (seedlings, mostly 
more or less depauperate) . 
Tilia americana (seedlings, few). 
DOMINANT SPECIES. 
Diervilla lonicera (very abundant Rhus glabra. 
and with Pteris carpeting the 
ground). 
SECONDARY SPECIES. 
dayl ussaeia baccata. 
Vacci ni u ni perms ylva n i cum . 
Va coin imn ea na dense. 
Ealix rostrata. 
tfalix lucida. 
Viburnu m acerifolium. 
P minus virginiana. 
RELIC 
Rubus idaeus aculeatissimus. 
Epigaea repens. 
(Jhamaedaphne cahjculata (in wet 
ground) . 
Gaultheria procumbens (common, 
Rosa blanda. 
Rims toxi code 1 1 d ron. 
A melanchier canadensis. 
Cornus eircinata. 
Rubus spp. 
Ealix discolor. 
C o ry lus ameri cana . 
SPECIES. 
Arctostaphylos uva-ursi (left after 
fire). 
Xcuiopanthcs mucronata. 
Ru b us allegli eniensis. 
a relic of pines). 
C. Herbs. 
DOMINANT SPECIES. 
Pteris aquilina (very abundant and frequently the only species in addi- 
tion to the trees, especially in cleared land; an indication of a tend- 
ency towards the development of oak). 
