134 WILSON EXPEDITION TO CHINA 
rather broad and thick gland seems to be a very characteristic feature in all the 
forms belonging to S. japonica Thunberg. 
95. Salix Fauriei Seemen in Bot. Jahrb. XXX. Beibl. LXVII. 40 (1901); Salic. 
Jap. 49, t. 8, fig. c-& (1903). —? Léveillé in Fedde, Rep. Spec. Nov. U1. 351 (1907). 
JAPAN. Hondo: Yamakita, on rocks, May 8, 1899, U. Faurie (No. 3700; 
9 type, ex von Seemen). : 
This interesting plant has, according to von Seemen, thin, very reddish-brown 
branchlets, narrow and acuminate leaves and very short petioles. The ovaries are 
glabrous and have short pedicels of about the length of the oval gland. I have not 
yet seen a specimen of the 9 plant nor of what is called the male S. Fauriet by 
Léveillé, 1. c. (Hakone, rocks, July 2, 1892, U. Faurie, No. 7691). ` Léveillé says: 
* rhachide rufo-villosa; stamina 3.” 
96. Salix pyrolaefolia Ledebour, Fl. Alt. IV. 270 (1833); Icon. Pl. Fl. Ross. V. 
22, t. 476 (1834); Fl. Ross. III. pt. 2, 613 (1850). — Turczaninow in Bull. Soc. 
Nat. Mose. XXVII. 385 (1854); Fl. Baical.-Dahur. Il. 112 (1856). — Pokorny, 
Oesterr. Holzpfl. 105, t. 21, fig. 289-294 (1864). — Andersson in Svensk. Vetensk. 
Akad. Handl. V1. 169, t. 9, fig. 101 (Monog. Salic.) (1867); in De Candolle, Prodr. 
XVI. pt. 2, 257 (1868). — Herder in Act. Hort. Petrop. XI. 420 (1891). — Wolf in 
Izv. S.-Peterburg Liesn. Inst. V. 106, t. 38, fig. 1-5, t. 44, fig. 14, t. 45 
(Mam. Hsyp. Hes Espon. Poce.) (1900). — Schneider, Il. Handb. Laubholzk. 1, 15, 
fig. 20 z!, 23 n (1904). — Krylov, Ða. Asmaa 1221 (1909). 
Salix alnoides ! Schangin ex Sievers in Pallas, Neu. Nord. Beitr. VII. 347, 349 
(1797?), fide Ledebour. — Georgi, Beschreib. Russ. Reich. pt. III. vol. IV. 
1340 (nomen nudum) (1800). : 
Saliz sabulosa Turczaninow, Pl. Ezsicc. a. 1830, ex Ledebour, Fl. Ross. IIL. pt. 
2, 613 (pro synon.) (1850). 
Salix corylifolia Turczaninow, 1. c. 
DE ARS ASIA. Transbaikalia to Amur and Yakutsk (ex 
erder). 
I have not seen a specimen from our area, and the species is not mentioned by Ko- 
marov (Fl. Mansh.). $ 
Ledebour (FI. Alt. IV. 270 [1833]) describes three varieties: var. ovata, var. orbi- 
culata, and var. cordata, based on the shape of the leaves. Andersson followed him 
in 1867, but in 1868 he called the var. ovata var. alnoides and var. Ma, Var. 
sabulosa. As Turezaninow (l. c.) says, we can find leaves of all the three kinds on 
the same plant. The species is very near S. hastata Linnaeus, but differs from 
it chiefly in the longer petioles and pedicels and in the straight hairs of the silky 
pubescence of the catkins which are more matted in S. hastata Linnaeus. 
97. Salix hastata Linnaeus, Spec. 1017 (1753). — Brandis, Forest Fl. Brit. Ind. 
467 (1874); Ind. Trees, 673 (ut videtur tantum pro parte) (1906). — Hooker f., 
Fl. Brit. Ind. V. 630 (pro parte) (1888). — Herder in Act. Hort. Petrop. X1. 421 
(1891). — Schneider, Ill. Handb. Laubholzk. Y. 51, fig. 230, 24 m-n (1904).— 
Seemen in Ascherson & Graebner, Syn. Mitteleur. Fl. IV. 152 (1909). 
For further literature see Seemen, l. c., and Herder, l. c. 
NORTHEASTERN ASIA. Yakutsk and Maritime prov. (ex Herder). 
I have only seen specimens of the following variety. 
Salix hastata, var. himalayensis Andersson in Svensk. Vetensk. Akad. Handl. VI. 
173 (Monog. Salic.) (1867). 
1 If this is a valid name it would be the oldest. 
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——Óm 
