SALICINE.E. (WILLOW FAMILY.) 335 



closely glandular-serrate ; stipules small, roundish ; petioles glandular at the 

 tip : staminate aments densely flowered, oblong-cylindrical. 1 to 2 inches long, 

 obtuse ; fertile rather shorter, erect or spreading, in fruit thick; scales dentate, 

 hairy at base, in the female ament almost glabrous : stamens 5 or more : cap- 

 sules tapering from an ovate base: style short; stigmas bifid. —Banks of 

 mountain streams, frequent. Scarcely distinguished from S. lucida of the 

 Eastern States by the narrower and less glossy leaves. 



* * Stamens 2 : capsules tomentose or glabrous : leaves linear, remotely mucro- 



note-dentate. 



3. S. longifolia, MuhL Leaves varying from linear to lanceolate, long 

 acuminate, tapering at base, sessile or nearly so, 2 to 4 inches long, 1 to 6 lines 

 (usually 2 to 3 lines) wide, margin remotely denticulate with projecting teeth 

 or sometimes entire ; stipules very early deciduous : aments linear-cylindrical, 

 often clustered at the extremity of the branchlets: scales villous, dentate, 

 subdeciduous : capsules oblong-conical, obtuse, shortly pedicelled, tomentose 

 or glabrous : stigmas large, sessile. — From Maine and Maryland across the 

 continent to Oregon and California. Exceedingly variable in foliage, flowers, 

 and fruit. A shrub (within our limits) rooting extensely in alluvial deposits 

 and forming dense clumps. 



§ 2. Aments lateral or terminal with or without bracts : scales persistent, usually 



darker at the tip : stamens 2 ; filaments glabrous. 



* Capsules glabrous. 



4. S. cordata, MuhL Leaves linear- or oblong-lanceolate, acuminate, 

 glandular-serrate, glabrous (usually more or less silky when young) ; those 

 of vigorous barren shoots broadly-lanceolate, rounded or subcordate at base, 

 3 to 4 inches long, 1 to \\ inches wide, rigid,' paler and reticulate-veined be- 

 neath, coarsely serrate, conspicuous stipules ovate or reniform ; those of 

 depauperate growths linear-lanceolate, taper-pointed at both ends, 2 inches 

 long by J inch wide, very finely and closely serrate, scarcely paler beneath, 

 stipules minute : aments more or less bracted, cylindrical, 1 to 3 inches long 

 in fruit ; scales dark at the tip, clothed with long white hairs : capsule lanceo- 

 late, glabrous, green or reddish, long-pedicelled : style medium; stigmas 

 notched. 



Var. Mackenziana, Hook. Leaves obovate-lanceolate, narrowed at 

 base, subentire ; stipules small : aments shortly peduncled ; pedicels long and 

 slender, much exceeding the small, sparsely villous tawny scale. 



Var. vestita, Anders. Recent twigs tomentose; young leaves silky: 

 aments thick, closely sessile, preceding the leaves : scales clothed with long 

 silky hairs. 



Northern States clear across the continent and northward to the Arctic 

 coast. The var. vestita, growing on the banks of the Missouri and Yellow- 

 stone Rivers, L. F. Ward, known as "Diamond Willow" from the peculiar 

 arrest of wood-growth at the base of the atrophied twigs, is said to afford 

 very durable timber. It is altogether incredible, however, that any form of 

 S. cordata ever attains tree-like size. 



5. S. Novae- Anglise, Anders. Leaves obovate-oblong or oval, somewhat 

 obtuse,' closely crenate, green andgalbrous both sides, young drying black, adult 

 rigid, striate-nerved, shining; stipules small or none: aments short, oval-oblong, 



