SALICACEiE. (willow FAMILY.) 4 G3 



ovari) densely silky. — Low meadows and river-banks : common. — A large shrub 

 or small tree, 8° -15° high. Young leaves commonly obtuse and pubescent, 

 at length becoming smooth and whitish-glaucous beneath. Stipules on vigor- 

 ous shoots equalling the petiole, often inconsi)icuous. Young catkins 1 1' long, 

 glossy, blackish with the conspicuous scales, elongating in fruit to 2^'. — S. eri- 

 ocephala, Michx.. admitted in former editions, is of this species. 

 « * Oi:ar)j stalked, silky-hoarij and shining : catkins with a few small leaf-like bracts 

 at their base: leaves Jinelij and evenly serrate, silky-graij or (jiuueoas beneath, 

 drying dark : sliptdes varying from linear to semilunar, toothed, very deciduous. 

 Shrubs, 30-10° high. 



5. S. sericea, Marshall. (Silky W.) Leaves lanceolate, pointed, downy 

 ahovc, grayish underneath with short silky hairs ; sterile catkins small, globular ; 

 the fertile cylindrical, closely flowered ; scales obtuse, round-obovatc, as long as the 

 stalk of the densely sUky ovoid ovary ; stigma sessile. (S. gr'isea, Willd.) — Sandy 

 river-banks : common. Fertile catkins, at length 1' long; the pods not spread- 

 ing or elongating in fruit, thus appearing sessile. 



6. S. petiolaris, Smith. (Petioled W.) Leaves lanceolate, pointed, 

 smooth above, slightly silky beneath ivhen young, at length smooth and glaucous ; fer- 

 tile catkins ovoid-cylindrical; scales acute, very hairy, scarcely as long as the stalk 

 of the silky tapering ovary ; style distinct; stigma 2-clff. (S. rosmarinifolia, and 

 S. fuscata, Pursh.?) — Same situations as the last, which this resembles; but 

 the mature leaves arc not silky beneath, nor so blackish in drying ; the scales 

 not so dark, and clothed with longer white hair; fertile catkins shorter and 

 broader ; the pods spreading and showing the stalks. 



* * * Ovary sessile or almost so : downy : catkins bracted at the base. Small trees. 

 +- Filaments and often the reddish anthers united, so as to appear as one. 



7. S. PL'RPUREA, L. (Purple W.) Leaves oblanceolatc, pointed, smooth, 

 minutely and sparingly toothed ; catkins cylindrical ; scales round and concave, 

 very black ; stigmas nearly sessile ; ovary sessile. (S. Lambcrtiana, Pursh.) — 

 Low grounds. — Twigs olive-colored or reddish. (Adv. from Eu.) 



H- -!- Filaments separate. 



8. S. VIMINA.LIS, L. (Basket Osier.) Leaves linear-lanceolate, very long, 

 (3' -6'), taper-pointed, entire or obscurely crenate, lustrous white and satiny be- 

 neath ; sterile catkins oblong, the fertile cylindrical, silky-hairy ; style elongated ; 

 stigmas linear, mostly entire. — Wet meadows. — Considered the best species 

 for basket-work. — S. Smithiana, IViHd: (thought to be a hybrid of this with 

 some other species), differing principally in the somewhat broader leaves, is 

 also occasionally met with. (Adv. from Eu.) 



§ 2. Catkins latend, with ^-b leafy bracts at the base, appearing ivith or before the 

 leaves in May or June : inner membrane of the scales of flowering buds separating 



from the cartilaginous exterior, sometimes raised on the apex of the bursting cat- 

 kins : ovary slender-stalked, smooth {under a lens granular, ivith occasionally a 



few short hairs at the base) : stamens 2 : scales dark or black, hairy, persistent. 



9. S. cordita, Muhl. (Heart-le.wed AV.) Leaves lanceolate or ovate- 

 lanceolate, heart-shaped, truncate, or even acute at base, taper-pointed, shaqrly 



