94<^ The Trees of Great Britain and Ireland 



pubescence. Leaf-scars and stipule-scars as in the common alder. Buds reddish- 

 brown, ovoid, conspicuously stalked, with two external scales, finely pubescent on 

 the surface and only slightly glandular. Pith triangular or three-lobed. 



The grey alder exhibits in the wild state considerable variation in the shape and 

 pubescence of the leaves, and the cones may be sessile or shortly stalked. Many 

 varieties are mentioned by Winkler and Schneider, most of which are scarcely worth 

 discriminating ; but the following are noteworthy : — 



1. Var. argentata, Norrlin. Leaves silvery on both surfaces, and covered with 

 a dense silky pubescence. Observed in Finland, Silesia, Saxony, and Switzerland. 



2. Var. glauca, Regel. Leaves bluish-green and nearly glabrous beneath. 



3. Var. orbicularis, Callier. Leaves small, almost orbicular, with five pairs of 

 lateral nerves, wild in Silesia. This is occasionally cultivated under the name of var. 

 parvifolia ; but var. parvifolia, Regel, which occurs in Sweden and Finland has still 

 smaller leaves, only \ inch in length, and ovate in shape. 



4. Var. acuminata, Regel.^ Leaves (Plate 268, Fig. 9) divided more than half- 

 way to the midrib, into three to six pairs of long, narrow, triangular, serrate segments. 

 This form has been observed wild in Sweden, and has been much confused with 

 another wild variety in the same country, var. pinnatifida, Wahlenberg,^ which 

 resembles in the shape of the leaves A. glutinosa, var. incisa ; and has not been 

 seen by us in cultivation. Var. acuminata is common in gardens, and is usually 

 known as var. incisa or var. pinnatifida. 



5. Var. aurea, Schelle. Leaves and fruit yellow. This variety is growing well 

 at Aldenham, and is striking in appearance. 



6. Var. montrosa, Dippel. A dwarf shrub, with the tips of the branches ribbon- 

 like and fasciated, which originated in Spath's nursery. In cultivation at Aldenham. 



Distribution 



The grey alder is widely distributed throughout the greater part of Europe and 

 the Caucasus. It is also met with in North America, where, however, it is only a 

 shrub, commonly growing in swamps and on river banks, and forming dense thickets 

 rarely more than 10 or 12 feet high, and is spread throughout British territory from 

 Newfoundland to the eastern base of the Rocky Mountains, descending in the 

 United States to New York, Pennsylvania, Wisconsin, and Nebraska. 



Alnus ^ incana is replaced in northern and eastern Asia by two closely 

 allied species : A. hirsuta^ Turczaninow, not in cultivation, a native of Siberia, 

 Kamtschatka, Manchuria, Saghalien, and Japan; and A. tinctoria, Sargent,* which 

 IS confined to Manchuria and Japan. The latter species differs mainly from 

 A. incana, m the larger size and different shape of the leaves, which are broadly 



4 Gw f^ '^^^' P- '°'- ^^""^ '"'"""' ^^^- '^'>^'«. Spach. 



Garden and Forest, a a1i f en irSn^s ai ■ ^t'^wi. 



1-17 (1900) This species is k • T '"""""' ^^'' ^^''""'' ^^rasawa, Icon. Ess. Forest. Japan, t. 19, ff. 



articles in the Hakone mountain,°Tf 'p T^^ ,^' yama-haHnoki, or mountain alder, and is much used for making small 



uuiams. ^^r. Kein, Industries of Japan, 239, 336 (1889). 



