192 



JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY. 



10. A. grandis, Lindley ; Pinet.' Wohurn. t. 43; Engelmann in 

 Gard. Chron. 1879, p. 684 ; Masters in Gard. Chron. 1881, 179, 

 f. 33-36 ; and in Journ. Linn. Soc. xxii. 174, t. 3, figs. ; Veitch, 97, 

 f. 23, 24, fig. ; Beissner, 477, fig. ; Garden, Sept. 27, 1890 ; Macoun, 

 474. Oregon White Fir of Lemmon. 



Synonyms : — Pinus grandis, Douglas ; Parlatore, 427. Picea 

 grandis, Loudon, Arboretum, iv. f. 2245 ; Encyd. Trees, 1045, f. 1958; 

 Murray in Gard. Chron. 1875, 135, f. 28. 



Vancouver's Island to California, near the coast ; western slopes of 

 Rocky Mountains. Discovered and introduced by Douglas. 



A. grandis, Murray. See Abies amabilis. 



A. Hanhuryana. See Tsuga. 



A . Harryana. See A. homolepis. 



A. holophylla, Maximowicz ; Beissner, 452 = Abies flrma. 



11. A. homolepis, Siebold and Zuccarini, Mor. Jap. ii. p. 17, 



t. 108 ; Masters in Gard. Chron. 1879, p. 823. Sometimes referred to 

 A. jirma, but it differs. 



Synonyms: — Pinus Harryana, MacNab ; Abies Tschonoskiana. 

 For the full synonymy, see Mayr, Abiet. Japan. (1890), 35, t. 2. 



Japan. 



A. Hooheriana. See Tsuga. 



A. Hudsonica, Engelmann ; Sargent, Census Peport, 211. Sup- 

 posed to be an alpine form of A. balsamea, Veitch, 83. The resin 

 canals are sub-epidermal, and there is no hypoderm. The cones are 

 unknown. 



A. jezoe7isis. See Picea Aleoekiana and Keteteeria Fortunei. 

 A. Kaempferii. See Pseudolarix. 



12. A. lasiocarpa, Hooker; Nuttall; Masters in Gard. Chron. 

 Feb. 9, 1889, p. 172, figs. 26, 27, 32 ; Journal of Botany, 1889, May ; 

 Sargent, Garden and Forest, Oct. 16, 1889 (not of gardens). 



Synonyms : — A. (Picea) bifolia, Murray in Gard. Chron. 1875, 465, 

 figs. 96, 97. A. subalpina, Engelmann ; Veitch, 111 ; Masters in Gard. 

 Chron. 1880, 235, figs. 43-45, and in J ourn. Linn. Soc. xxii. 183, fig. ; 

 Beissner, 4()7 ; Macoun, 474. A. subalpina var. fallax, Engelmann. 



Variety : — c^erulescens. 



Alaska, British Columbia. Oregon to Colorado, 4,000-12,000 feet. 

 Discovered by Douglas. 



A. lasiocarpa of gardens. See Abies Lowiana. 

 A. laxa, Koch, Dendrol. ii. 253. See Picea alba. 



13. A. Lowiana, Murray in Proc. Ilort. Soc. London, iii. 317, fig. 38, 

 41 CO ; Masters in Gard. Chron. Dec. 11, 1886, p. 755, f. 148. 

 Gard. Chron. 1890, Dec. 27, p. 750, fig. ; California White Fir of 

 Lemmon. 



