90 
Indian Forest Records. 
[Vol. vin. 
Tree No. 1 was felled in the edge of a patch of teak in an 1868 planta¬ 
tion, isolated by encroachment of miscellaneous jungle, and was 
surrounded on three sides by high tree growth. No. 2 was a dominant, 
in a well-stocked plantation of 1869 with a fairly thick undergrowth 
of wanwe forming a canopy at 20 feet. No. 62 grew under conditions 
similar to No. 1. No. 9 and No. 170 were surrounded by a fair amount 
of low undershrubs. 
In the girth-beehole graphs the indices for the 49-50 year-old trees 
and the 45 year-old trees are shown separately. It may be noted that 
if combined they would show a mean value practically the same as 
that for Okkyi, Shwegu. 
The annual distribution of dateable beeholes is given in the following 
table. 
i 
t 
t 318 ] 
