114 WILSON EXPEDITION TO CHINA 
The living plants of S. magnifica Hemsley look extremely distinct, scarcely re- 
sembling any other known Willow. 
40. Salix magnifica Hemsley. See p. 44. 
41. Salix ulotricha Schneider. See p. 44. 
42. Salix pella Schneider. See p. 45. 
Sect. 10. ERIOSTACHYAE Schneider, n. sect. 
Frutices mediocres v. alti, ramosi. Folia satis magna, elliptica, ovata, obovata 
v. obovato-oblonga pleraque dentata v. serrata, textura satis firma, nervis paral- 
lelibus subtus satis prominulis et etiam reticulata; petioli distincti, interdum glan- 
duliferi. 'Amenta ramulis plus minusve longis folia normalia gerentibus suffulta, 
5-13 em. longa; flores c? diandri, glandulis 2 separatis; flores 9 ovariis sessilibus 
subsessilibus v. in fructus satis distincte pedicellatis glabris v. tomentellis, stylis 
saepe satis longis plerisque bipartitis v. apice bifidis, stigmatibus brevibus v. 
oblongis bifidis, glandula una ventrali v. interdum etiam glandula parva dorsali 
praediti. 4 
SS. eriostachya Andersson, of which the c^ plant is yet unknown, agrees so wellwith 
the other species of this section that 1 do not hesitate to make this, which is the 
oldest species of the group, the type of my new section. 
43. Salix apatela Schneider. See p. 46. 
44. Salix moupinensis Franchet. See p. 46. 
45. Salix Fargesii Burkill. See p. 47. 
46. Salix Ernesti Schneider. See p. 47. 
47. Salix argyrophegga Schneider. See p. 49. 
48. Salix plocotricha Schneider. See p. 49. 
49. Salix spathulifolia Seemen in Bot. Jahrb. XXXVI. Beibl, LXXXII. al. 
(1905). — Léveillé in Bull. Soc. Bot. France, LVI. 304 (1909). 
CHINA. Shensi: Huon-tou shan, June 18, G. Giraldi (No. 5359, type, 9, & 
Seemen). 
As far as I can judge from the description this species belongs to this (or the fol- 
lowing) section and resembles S. plocotricha Schneider in many respects. The bracts 
are “‘eroso-denticulata”’ at the apex, the leaves are up to 8 em. in length and to 
2.5 cm. in width, and are described as “ spathulata (v. inferiora oblonga)." Not 
having seen the type specimen, I cannot decide whether S. plocotricha Schneider i$ 
only a form of this species or not. 
50. Salix eriostachya Wallich apud Andersson in Svensk. Vetensk. Akad. Handl. 
1850, 493 (1851). — Andersson in Jour. Linn. Soc. 1V. 46 (1860); in De Candolle, 
Prodr. XVI. pt. 2, 270 (1868). — Hooker f., Fl. Brit. Ind. V. 633 (1888). — B 
Ind. T'rees, 637 (1906). 
INDIA. Nepal: “ad Gossain Than," 1821, N. Wallich (No. 3704, type; 9)- 
By the kindness of the Keeper of the Herbarium of the Kew Gardens, 1 have 
been able to examine Wallich's type specimen. It shows the same long foliaceous 
peduncles, the deeply cleft styles and the broad, obovate rather truncate bracts 
nearly enveloping the young ovaries as they do in most of the species of this section. 
The leaves are very indistinctly glandular denticulate or nearly entire, acute e 
the base and hairy on both sides, especially beneath; the petioles are from 3 to 
ram. long and the leaves are up to 6.5 em. in length and 2.3 cm. in width; 
2 or 3 lateral nerves in each cm. of length. 
I Cice de ien 
