THE RETICULATE WILLOW 187 



TiiK Hkih Ali'INk Willows. 



We are accustomed to tliink of llio Willows 

 (natural order SalicacciXi) as being good-sized trees, 

 as with lis in England. Even in the Alps the Willows 

 manage to hold their own, owing to their marvellous 

 power of adapting themselves to a set of physical con- 

 ditions, entirely different from those met with in the 

 plains. As they ascend the Alps, they discard the 

 tree habit. They gradually become reduced to dwarf 

 shrul3S, and then finally in the High Alpine regions 

 to carpet plants, which are only slightly woody. The 

 gradual dwarfing of a tree-form, as the altitude 

 increases, is well seen in other plants, such as the 

 Juniper and the Mountain Pine, which will be dis- 

 cussed in a later chapter, but nowhere is it found 

 perfected to the degree met with in the High Alpine 

 Willows. 



The carpet-forming Willows do not belong to the 

 same species as those found in the plains, nor are 

 they regarded as varieties of Lowland species, as is 

 the case with Juniper m communis, var. nana, Willd. 

 There are two Carpet Willows confined to the High 

 Alpine region, which we will now compare. 



The Reticulate Willow. 



The Reticulate Willow [Salix reticulata, Linn.) 

 (Plate XXX VIL) is the best known and the 

 handsomest of the Alpine Willows. It is usually 

 very al)undant on old or new moraines of glaciers, 



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