246 JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY. 



R. leptoclada = a state of Cupressus thyoides. 



R. lycopodioides = a state of Cupressus pisifera. 



B. wAdensis = a state of Thuya orientalis. 



R. oMusa = Cupressus obtusa. 



R. pisifera = Cupressus pisifera. 



R. plumosa =■■ a state of Cupressus pisifera. 



% R. pseudo-squarrosa = a form of Cupressus Thyoides. 



R. squarrosa = a state of Cupressus pisifera. 



R. tetragona = a state of Cupressus obtusa. 



R. TrouhetzJwtjana = Cupressus obtusa. 



Red Wood. See Sequoia sempervirens. 

 Savin. See Juniperus Sabina. 



SAXEGOTHEA, Lindley in Journ. Hort Soc. vi. 258 (1851), with 

 fig. ; Bentliam and Hooker, iii. 434 ; Parlatore in DC. Prod. xvi. 2, 

 497 ; Eichler, 103. (Taxace^. Tribe PoDOCARPEiE. ) 



An evergreen shrub or tree, with foliage resembling that of the 

 Yew. Male flowers in stalked cylindrical spikes. Anthers 2-lobed, 

 pollen grains globose, not winged. The scales bearing the seed are 

 much thickened, and the inverted seed springs from a cavity towards 

 the middle. 



1. S. eonspicua, Lindley, 1. c. ; and in Paxton, Flower Garden, 1851 ; 

 Parlatore, 1. c. ; Yeitch, 315 ; Beissner, 195 ; Masters in Gard. Chron. 

 Dec. 3, 1887, p. 684, figs. 130, 131, and June 22, 1889, p. 782, with 

 fig. of small flowers. Prince Albert's Yew. 



Introduced by W. Lobb from Southern Chile, through Messrs. 

 Yeitch, in 1849. 



S. gracilis, hort. See Podocarpus nubigena {Keio Index). 



SCIADOPITYS, Siebold and Zuccarini, Flor. Japan, ii. t. 101; 

 Bentham and Hooker, Genera Plantarum, iii. 437 ; Parlatore in 

 DG. Prod. xvi. 2, 435 ; Gard. Ghron. 1862, p. 23, and 1861, p. 360 ; 

 Masters in Journ. of Botany, April, 1884; and in Journ. Linn. Soc. 

 xviii. 502 ; for details of structure, Eichler, 85, fig. (Tribe Taxodie^.) 



Eemarkable in the verticillate rays of "cladodes" or foliage of 

 peculiar structure. Male spikes terminal, anther-lobes 2, Bracts and 

 scales united into a thick lobulated mass, with 7-9 2- winged seeds to 

 each. Cotyledons 2, leafy. Primary leaves oblong, linear. 



1. S. verticillata, Siebold and Zuccarini, 1. c. ; Murray, Pines and 

 Firs of Japan, p. 109, fig. ; Parlatore, 1. c. ; Lindley in Gard. GJiron. 

 1861, pp. 22, 360, fig. ; Masters in Journ. Linn. Soc. 1. c. ; Yeitch, 201, 

 fig. ; Beissner, 203, with fig. ; Garden, Nov. 29, 1890, fig. The Umbrella 

 Pine of Japan. 



Introduced in 1861 by J. G. Yeitch, and also by Fortune. Nine- 

 teen feet in height in 1889, at Bagshot Park, 



