898 The Trees of Great Britain and Ireland 



ovate, cuneate at the base, abruptly contracted above into a long cuspidate apex, 

 crenately serrate; upper surface glabrous; lower surface pale green, slightly 

 pubescent on the side of the midrib, elsewhere glabrous. Rachis of the leaf, grooved 

 on its upper side, pubescent at the nodes, glabrous elsewhere. Buds purplish brown, 

 minutely pubescent. Flowers (section Ornus) in terminal and lateral panicles; 

 petals four, narrowly-linear. Fruit about an inch in length, subtended by a 4-toothed 

 calyx, oblanceolate, with a long cuneate base and an obtuse emarginate apex. 



This species is variable as regards the shape of the leaflets ; and two varieties 

 have been noticed, regarded as distinct species by Blume ; one characterised by 

 broad ovate leaflets (terminal leaflet 3 to 3J inches long and 1^ inch broad), with 

 slight pubescence along the midrib beneath ; the other with narrow oblong leaflets 

 (terminal leaflet 3|- to 4 inches long and i to i^ inch wide), glabrous on the under 

 surface ; but, as Franchet points out, there are numerous specimens with inter- 

 mediate characters. 



Fraxinus longicuspis ^ is a native of the mountainous districts of Japan, attain- 

 ing, according to Shirasawa, an elevation of 5000 feet in the central chain of Hondo. 

 It is abundant in Nikko, Chichibu, and Kiso ; and has been collected near Hakodate 

 by Maximowicz, in Akita by Elwes, in the mountains of Yamagata by Faurie, and in 

 the island of Tsu-sima by Wilford. On account of its small size, it is of no economic 

 importance in Japan. It appears to be extremely rare in cultivation in this country, 

 the only specimen which we have seen being a small plant at Kew, about 2 feet 

 high, which was raised from seed sent by Sargent in 1894. (A, H.) 



FRAXINUS NIGRA, Black Ash 



Fraxinus nigra, Marshall, Arb. Am. 51 (1785); Sargent, SilvaN. Amer. vi. 37, tt. 264, 265 (1894), 



and Trees N. Amer. 764 (1905). 

 Fraxinus sambucifolia, Lamarck, Diet ii. 549 (1786) ; Loudon, Arb. et Frut. Brit. ii. 1234 (1838). 



A tree, attaining in America 90 feet in height and 5 feet in girth of stem, with 

 bark divided into large irregular scaly plates. Shoots glabrous. Leaflets (Plate 264, 

 Fig. 19), seven to eleven, 3 to 5 inches long, terminal one petiolulate, lateral leaflets 

 sessile; oblong to oblong - lanceolate, rounded and unequal at the base, long 

 acuminate at the apex, remotely and finely crenulate - serrate ; under surface 

 glabrous, except for long reddish hairs along the nerves and midrib, densest 

 towards the base, where they spread over the surface of the leaflet. Leaf-rachis 

 winged on the upper side, the wings meeting above and not forming a continuous 

 open groove ; glabrous except opposite the insertions of the leaflets, where it is 

 bearded all round with dense rufous hairs. 



The terminal buds are blackish, broadly ovate and acute, with six scales visible 

 externally, of which the outer pair, slightly puberulous, almost enclose the others. 



kno^r^ir'TVeTf '' '''°^''' '^° 'P'"'' '-''■ '"^Sicuspis, called in Japanese osMda or aotago ; and F. SUioldiana. 

 knovm^sAwjz. The lattername may possibly refer to /•. i>><Krtia«a. Cf. p. 897. 



