long 



THUYA 



slender sparingly ramified branches nod ling 



at tlie ti| s partlj 4 angled and clothed with sharply 



poiute 1 leaves A very distinct form somewhat simi 



lar to CT ! »i ( c^;; I i pinfeia var fiUfera Var dumo 



aa Hort (\ir i I c tt t ditm sa (jord ) Dwarf and 



1 t t 1 h it irregular habit in foliage 



t I 1 \ r Ellwangenana Beissn 



(lb A low broad pj ramid 



I 1 with two kinds of foliage 



THUYA 



1803 



tb 



intermedia H 



pendula 



W tl 



1 \ plicata M t ( / / lilt 



/ Bcoth) tMiniml tree diiker 



I type branchletb short n^,! 1 much 



1 tinctly glandular brownish dark 



1 green beneath C f III ''1 'o8 



1 ntroduced from N V\ Alien i b it 



i II I eie Var pimila h i 1) rf 



t 1 Urk green foln" \ pygmasa 



/ till dwarfer with II 1 i i t li 



\ r Eeidu Hort Broid dwirt f rm -nith 

 II hs well retaining its color durii g the winter 

 Sp<ethn P Smith Peculi <r form n ith two kinds 



Gt 4'' p o39 \ AT Vervaeneina Henk &, Hochst Of 

 smaller and denser habit th tn the t\pe branchlets 

 slenderer with yellowish foliage bronzy in winter. 

 Var Wagrnenina Beissn (^ar Veismanm Hort ). 

 Globose foiiu retaining its bright green color during the 



2506. Thuya occidentalis 



of foliage ; the younger and lower branchlets with 

 spreading acicular Ivs. like those of var. ericoides, but 

 thicker in texture; the upper branchlets slender and 

 sparingly ramified much like those of var. Douglasi. 



2507 Thuya 



Winter M D t lb to 1 i \ u Wareina, Beissn (var. 

 robuit! Cirr T C ii, isi a Tit, net and SMtica, 

 H It J P\iamilal tree liwer aid denser than the 

 t\pe with stouter brinchlets foliage bright green. 

 \ erj desiraHe t rm Var Woddwardu, Hort Dense, 

 globose form with deep green foliage 



BB Li tilth It lutiih mailings beneafJi 

 giganUa ^ itt (T jl riti Don T U i es i Dougl. 

 r L bbi Hort ) T 11 tr e att uin., _0I) ft nith short 

 horizontal brand e often yen! il us at the ci Is form- 

 ing a narrow i \iaini 1 tiunk with a mu h 1 uttressed 

 base and clothe 1 with cinnmiou led bark branchlets 

 slender regularly and closely set h s bright green 

 and glossy above dark green beneath and with whitish 

 triangular spots h s of vigorous shoots ovate acumi- 

 nate, glandular, of the lateral bianchlets acute and 

 scarcely glandular : cones cylindric-ovoid, little over 

 K in. long; scales 8-10, elliptic-oblong, usually the 3 

 middle pairs fertile; seeds winged, notched at the apex. 

 Alaska to northern Calif, and Mont. S.S. 10:533. G.C. 

 HI. 21:215. G.B'. 4:116. Var. atirea, Beissn. With yel- 

 lowish foliage. Var. griciliB, Beissn. Smaller tree, 

 with more slender branches and smaller foliage of paler 



Japfinica, Maxim. (T. Stdndishii, Carr. T. gigantea, 

 var. Japi'micii. Pranch. & Sav. Thuydpsis Stdndishi, 

 Gtfrd.). Similar to the preceding but lower, usually 

 only 20-:)0 ft. high: branchlets more irregularly set, 

 thicker and less compressed: Ivs. ovate, obtusish, 

 thickish, lighter green above, darker beneath and with 

 whitish, triangular spots: cones oval, little over % in. 

 long: scales 8, oval, usually the two middle pairs fer- 

 tile. Japan. G.C. III. 21:258. R.H. 1896:160. 

 A.\. Cones upright, the thickened scales with a promi- 

 nent horn-like process below the apex: seeds 

 wingless: branchlets ramified in a vertical 

 plane with both sides alike. {Biota. ) 

 orientilis, Linn. {BiMa orient dlis, Endl.). Pyra- 

 midal or bushy tree, attaining 25 ft., with spreading 

 and ascending branches: branchlets thin: Ivs. rhombic- 

 ovate, acute, bright green, with a small gland on the 

 back: cones globose-ovate, }^-l in. long; usually 6 

 ovate scales, each with a horn-like process, the upper- 

 most pair sterile. Prom Persia to E. Asia, in Japan 

 probably only cult. There are many garden forms, of 

 which the following are the best known: Var. athro- 

 taxoides, Carr. Dwarf, irregularly and not frond-like 

 branching; branchlets nearly quadrangular, slender, 

 dark green. R.H. 1861, p. 230. Var. avirea, Hort. Low, 



