231 
In conclusion let me invite attention to a thoughtful paper* in which many 
causes which more or less affect Australian forests are dealt with. 
When this was in type, I noticed an interesting paper, " The Forests of 
Victoria, Part ii. (Destructive Agencies), by A. D. Hardy, Viet. Nat. xxxii., 110 
(December, 1915), which supplements what I have stated, particularly on the 
entomological side. 
* A. G. Hamilton. " On the effect which settlement in Australia has produced uiwn indigenous vegetation." Proc, 
Roy. Soc., X.S.W,, xxvi, 178 (1892), 
PHOTOGRAPHIC ILLUSTRATIONS. 
Fig-tree strangling a Gum-tree. Cambcwarra Range, South Coast, New South Wales. (His Honor 
Judge Docker, photo.) See p. 225. 
Fig-tree growing on a Tea-tree. Unanderra, South Coast, New South Wales. (His Honor 
Judge Docker, photo.) 
Giant Scrub Fig (F icus colossea F.v.M.), which stood close to Mr. S. W. Jackson's camp in the Tinaroo 
Scrubs, south-west of Cairns, North Queensland, November, 1908. (S. W. Jackson, photo.) 
Giant Scrub Fig (Ficus colossea F.v.M.), left standing on cleared scrub land. Note remarkable trunk 
roots. Tinaroo Scrubs, south-west of Cairns, North Queensland, November, 1908. (S. W. 
Jackson, photo.). 
