CHAP. CIII. SALICA CEH. SA‘LIX. 1597 
% 179. S. cerasitro‘L1a Schl. The Cherry-leaved Willow. 
Identification. Schleicher’s Catalogue. 
Description, &c. An ornamental shrub, a native of Switzerland. Introduced in 1824. 
% 180. S.curysa’ntuos Cid. The golden-flowered Norway Willow. 
Identification. Eder in Flora Danica, t. 1057. ; Willd, No. 102. ; Smith in Rees’s Cyclo., No. 127. 
Synonyme. ? S. \anata var. 
Engraving. F\ Dan., t. 1057.° 
Spec. Char., &c. Leaves elliptic, acute at each end, entire, downy on both sides. Stipules ovate, 
entire. Catkins thick, 1} in. long ; the scales clothed with long, shining, gold-coloured hairs. Style 
divided to the base. (Smith.) A native of Finmark, as well as of the Norway alps. A shrub with 
thick crooked branches, and large shaggy leaves. It takes its name from the gold-coloured hairs 
on the scales of the catkin. 
gz 181. S. cinNamo‘mEA Schl. The Cinnamon Willow. 
Identification. Schi. Cat. 
Description, §c. A shrub, a native of Switzerland. Introduced in 1824. 
& 182. S. cLeETHR#FO‘LIA Schl. The Clethra-leaved Willow. 
Identification. Schl. Cat. ; Lodd. Cat., 1836. 
Description, &c. A shrub, a native of Switzerland. Introduced in 1824. There are plants at 
Messrs. diges’s, from which it appears to belong to the group Capree. 
& 183. S.cont’FERA Wangenh. The cone-bearing Willow. 
aremeenticn. Wangenh. Amer., 123. t. 31. f.72.; Miihlenb. in Nov. Act. Soc. Nat. Scrut. Berol., 4. 
. 240.; Willd. Arb., 347., Sp. PL, 4. p.705.; Miihlenb. in Sims et Kon. Ann. of Bot., 2. 67.; 
sh Fi. Amer. Sept., 2. p. 612.; Smith in Rees’s Cyclo., No. 130. 
Synonyme. S.\ongirdéstris Michx. Fl. Bor. Amer., 2. 226. 
he Sexes. A female plant, with this name attached, was flowering in the London Horticultural 
Society’s arboretum in the spring of 1835. 
Engraving. Wangenh. Amer., t. 31. f. 72. 
Spec. Char., &c. Leaves oblong-lanceolate, serrulate with distant teeth ; glabrous on the upper 
surface, even and tomentose on the under one. Stipules lunate, subdentate. Ovaries lanceolate, 
villous. Style elongated. Stamens deeply cleft. (Wélid. and Smith.) Wild in North America, in 
shady woods on a gravelly dry soil, from New York to Carolina, where it flowers in April. The 
~ cone-like excrescence at the ends of the branches, occasioned by an insect, is not unfrequently 
found on S. prindides and its allied species. (Pursh.) Introduced in 1820. 
w 184. S. coru’scans Willd. The glittering Willow. 
Identification. Willd. Sp. PI., 4. p. 681.; Smith in Rees’s Cycl., No. 64.; Eng. Fl, 4. p. 180.; Host 
Sal. Austr., 1. p. 28., who has quoted as identical Jacq. Austr., t. 408. 
Synonymes. illdenow has cited, as identical with this, S. arbGscula Jacg. Austr., t. 408., and 
Host Synops., 527. ; and remarked that it is close akin to S. tenuifdlia Smith ; and Smith has con- 
firmed this relationship in Eng.’ F/.,4. p.180.: yet Koch has cited (Comm., p. 57.) the S. arbascula 
Jacq. Austr., t. 408., as a rude and unfaithful figure of S. Waldsteinia@na Willd., a kind which 
Willdenow has stated (Sp. Pl.) to be closely related to S. Myrsinites Willd. Sp. Pi., and, hence, very 
different from S. tenuifdlia Smith ; and Koch has besides (Comm., p. 45.) mentioned a doubt 
whether S. corfiscans Willd. does not belong to S. arbiscula Wahienb., but that he dares not refer 
it to it, from not having seen an authentic specimen. 
The Sexes. Both sexes are described in Willd. Sp. Pl., 4. p. 681. ; and both are figured in Host Sal. 
Engravings. Jacq. Austr., t. 408.; Host Sal. Austr., t. 94 
+: 185. S. cyponimFo‘LiIaA Schl. The Quince-leaved Willow. 
Identification. Schl. Cat, ; Lodd. Cat., ed. 1836. 
Description, §c. A dwarf shrub, a native of Switzerland. Introduced in 1824, There are plants 
at Flitwick, and in the Goldworth and Hackney arboretums. ¢ 
« 186. S. pu‘s1a Hort. The doubtful Willow. 
Description, §c. There are plants under this name in the arboretum at Flitwick House. 
« 187. S. eria’ntHa Schl. The woolly-flowered Willow. 
Identification. Schl. Cat. 
- Description, &c. A low shrub, a native of Switzerland. Introduced in 1823, and flowering in April! 
as 188. S. racrro‘t1a Waldst. et Kit. The Beech-leaved Willow. 
Identification, Waldstein et Kitaibel’s Pl. Rar. Hung. ; Willd., No. 103.; Smith in Rees’s Cyclo., 
No, 128. 
Spec. Char., &c. Leaves ovate-elliptic, with a glandular point, serrated, entire atthe base; about 
lhin. long; dark green and smooth above, reticulated with hairy veins beneath. Stipules kidney- 
8 , With glandular teeth. Branches brown, downy when young. Catkins not observed. ( Wild.) 
A native of the Croatian Alps. There are plants in the Cambridge Botanic Garden, and at Messrs. 
Loddiges’s ; from the latter of which it appears to belong to the group Cintrex, 
