LXVm. 5'ALICA CEJE : SfL LIX. 



71 



s 5! 64. iS*. OBTUSIFO^LIA Willd. (Sp. PL, 4. p. 705.) is described in our first 



edition. 



a 65. .S'. ARENA^RiA L. (Sal. Wob., No. 70. ; and /g. 70. in p. 805.) is 

 described in our first edition. 



J: 66. S. obova'ta Pursh (Sal. Wob., No. 144., a leaf; and fig. 144. in 

 p. 818.) is described in our first edition. 



!& 67. S. cane'scens Willd. (Sp. PI., 4. p. 687.) is described in our first 



edition. 



at 68. S. Stvartia'na Smith (Sal. Wob., No. 72. ; and /g. 72. in p. 805.) 

 is described in our first edition. 



-* 69. S. pyrena'ica Gouan (lUustr. 77.) is described in our first edition. 



^ 70. S. Waldstein/^>^ Willd. (Sp. PL, 4. p. 679.) is described in our 



first edition. 



Group XV. Vimindles Borrer. 



Willows and Osiei's. Mostly Trees or large Shrubs, luith long pliant Branches, 

 used for Basket-making. Prin. sp. 72. 75, 76. and 82. 



Stamens 2 to a flower. Ovarj' nearly sessile ; in S. moUfssima Ehrh. sessile, 

 hairy or silky. Style elongated. Stigmas linear, mostly entire. Leaves 

 lanceolate. Plants trees of more or less considerable size, with long pliant 

 branches. (Hook.) 



^ 71. S. SUBALPINA Forbes (Sal. Wob., No. 93. ; and Jig. 96. in p. 808.) 

 is described in our first edition. 



afe 72. S. ca'ndida Willd. The whitish Willow. 



Identification. Willd. Sp. PI., 4. p. 708. ; Pursh FI. Amer. Sept., 2. p. 608. 



The Sexes. The male is described and figured in Sal. Wob. 



Engravings. Sal. Wob., No. 91. ; om Jig. 1460. ; andj?^. 91. in p. 807. l< 



Spec. Char., ^-c. Leaves linear-lanceolate, very long, 

 obscurely toothed ; downy above ; beneath densely 

 downy. Stipules lanceolate, nearly the length of the 

 footstalks. (Willd.) A shrub. North America. 

 Height 5 ft. to 10 ft. Introduced in 1811. Flowers 

 yellow ; February and March. 



; A very handsome species, well deserving a place in 

 shrubberies, both for its ornamental white leaves, and 

 '.very early flowers. 



sk? t 73. S. inca^na Schranck. The hoary-leaved Willow, V or Osier. 



Jdentification. Schranck Baier (Bavar.) Fl., 1. p. 230. ; Koch Comm., p. 32. 



Synonymes. S. riparia lynid. Sp. PI. 4. p. 698. ; S. lavandulaefblia I.apeyr. Abr. p. 601. ; S. an. 



gustifblia Pair, in Bu Ham. Arb. ed. 1.3. t. 29. ; S. rosmarinifdlia Gouan Hart. 501. ; S. viminalis 

 ' Vill. De/ph. 3. p. 785. 

 rhe Sexes. Both are figured in Hayne Abbild. : the male is figured 



in Sal. IVob., where Mr. Forbes has noticed that he had not seen 



the catkins of the other sex. If the kind of Host Sal. Austr. is 

 I identical, both sexes of it are figured in that work. 

 \ngravings. Sal. Wob., No. 90. ; ? Host Sal. Austr., t. 58, 59. ; our 

 'Jk- 1461. ; a.nifig. 90. in p. 807. 



'pec. Char., S;c. Leaves linear-lanceolate, denticu- 

 ! lated, hoary on the under surface with hoary 

 1 tomentum. Catkins arched, slender, almost sessile, 



subtended at the base with small leaves. Capsule 



ovate-lanceolate, glabrous, stalked ; the stalk twice 



the length of the gland. Style elongated. Stigmas 



3 I 2 



1460. S. Candida. 



141 8 inc^na. 



