r S U G A 



Tsuga, Carriere, TraiU Conif. 185 (1855); Bentham et Hooker, Gen. PI. lii. 440 (1S80) ; Masters, 



Joum. Linn. Soc. {Bot.) xxx. 28 (1893). 

 Hesperopeuce, Lemmon, Rep. Calif. State Board Forestry, iii. iii (1890). 



Evergreen trees belonging to the natural order Conifera;. Branches horizontal 

 or pendulous, pinnately and irregularly ramified. Buds, one terminal and a few 

 lateral, arising irregularly in the axils of some of the leaves of the current year's 

 shoot, most of the leaves being without buds in their axils. Leaves linear, arising 

 from the branchlets in spiral order, and usually thrown by a twisting of their 

 petioles into a pectinate arrangement, or in one species spreading radially. Petioles 

 short, arising from prominent leaf-bases on the branchlets, appressed against the 

 twigs, a sharp angle being formed by the leaf with the stalk at the point of junction. 

 The leaf has one resin-canal, lying in the middle line between the vascular bundle 

 and the epidermis of the lower surface. The leaves persist for several years ; 

 and all the species have in consequence of this and their numerous and fine 

 branchlets very dense foliage. 



Flowers monoecious. Male flowers in the axils of the leaves of the previous 

 year's shoot near its apex, composed of numerous spirally arranged, short-stalked, 

 two-celled anthers, with glandular- tipped connectives. Female flowers terminal on 

 lateral shoots of the previous year, short-stalked or sub-sessile, erect, composed of 

 spirally arranged, nearly circular scales, and membranous, usually shorter bracts. 

 Ovules, two on each scale. Cones solitary, small, composed of concave woody 

 imbricated scales, which persist on the axis of the cone ^after the escape of the 

 seeds, and of inconspicuous bracts, which, except in one species, are concealed 

 between the scales. The cones, ripening in one season, allow the seeds to fall out 

 in the first autumn or winter, but remain on the tree until the summer or autumn of 

 the second year. The seeds, two on each scale, are minute, furnished with resin 

 vesicles and winged. The seedling has three to six cotyledons, which bear stomata 

 on their upper surface. 



Tsuga is confined to temperate North America, Japan, China, and the Himalayas. 

 The genus consists of nine species, and is divided into two sections : — 



I. Hesperopeuce, Engelmann, in Brewer and Watson, Bot. California, ii. 121 

 (1880). 



Leaves rounded or keeled above, bearing stomata on both surfaces, and radially 

 arranged ; the shorter and lateral branchlets standing in a plane at right angles 



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