INDEX. 
——__— 
NEW ZEALAND FORESTRY, PART I. 
The more important references (and botanical names) are in italics ; the leading 
reference figures in heavy type. 
Acid forest soils in coniferous forest—the Black Forest—remedied by a 10-per-cent. 
admixture of Beech—132. 
Acrim, or timber-production per acre per year :—Term defined—63 ; discussed—91, 159: 
acrim of the Puhipuhi Kauri Forest—63, 175: three typical acrims—viz., 95, 100, 
200—and the acrim for the normal Kauri forest of New Zealand—viz., 100c. ft. 
q.g-—92: 8. I. Clarke and Insignis-pine acrim—161. 
Adams, T. W., of Canterbury—154, 163. 
Adansonia digitata, the tropical Baobab—47. 
* Afforestation ” or “ reafforestation * :—Meaning of the terms—77: cost of a complete 
scheme for New Zealand on present lines £800,000.000—187. 
African forest, of New Zealand class, no longer alienated—177. 
Agathis alba, A. obtusa, A. robusta, A. palmerstoni—27, 28. 
Age-classes and yearly crops: no interest charge involved—112, 113. 
Age of the giant Kauris—50., 
Algeria, French forestry in—2, 
Alienation (forest) without demarcation :—Some 30,000 acres yearly at a cost of from 
£1,000,000 to £3,000,000—172 to 178: what it entails—1I85, 187: its cost—174: 
alienation mnemonic—177: Crown Lands Guide—173. 
Alienation of demarcatable forest in South and East Africa definitely stopped—177: 
less costly to sacrifice the Government timber plantations than to alienate first- 
class Kauri forest—176. 
America :—Tulip tree of—140: resin-tapping in—36: timber-stand one-third of New 
Zealand millable forest—-157: American Short-leaf pine and Kauri compared in 
srowth—138. 
Appalachian forest “‘ stand’ half New Zealand millable forest—s4. 
Apples—54. 
Araucaria brasiliensis :—Valuable tree for both northern and mid New Zealand; nuts 
and timber; finest forests in South America—1l40: A. bidwilli, extreme north only 
nuts as good as acorns for pigs; A. eacelsa the well-known Norfolk Island pine— 
140. 
Arboriculture : exotic trees for northern forests—135 to 144. 
Area (normal forest) of New Zealand, 16,000,000 acres—6, 187. 
Atkinson, Mr., easily protected from fire the Kauri forest called Atkinson Park—119. — 
Auckland :—All forests near the city recklessly destroyed—106: better supply of Kauri 
in the future than ever in the past is still posstble—92. 
Australian trees :—Giant—43: for northern forests—1l41: Australian and New Zealand 
forests compared—147. 
Baden and Black Forest :—Data and statistics of—percentage of planting only 1 per cent. 
of natural regeneration—91, 93, 123, 186: 38 per cent. of its area under permanent 
forest—183. 
Balance-sheet of a normal Kauri forest—95 to 106, 181. = 
Beech, European :—Its girdling---116; its great role sylviculturally, Schlich on—** Beech 
is the successful foster-mother of all forest management in these latitudes *’—132. 
Beech forests of New Zealand: three classes—112, 115. 
Bell, Mr. James, of Reefton, mills regrowth forest—127. 
Big Kauri tree, “* Kairaru,” Cubic contents of the record—49. 
Blackwood—135, 141. 
lue-gum—44, 153. ; ‘ 
Buitanes for forestry work in the north—120. (See also ‘“Waipoua Kauri Forest, 
1918). 
Borer in Kauri—sl. ‘ ' 
Breadwinners of New Zealand settled on the soil: one per 602 acres—186. 
Bushman finds enough natural regeneration—126. 
Bush, No risk with the native—154. 
