^54 JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY. 



^ORREYA, Arnott ; Bentham and Hooker, Genera Plantarum, 

 iii. 431 ; Parlatore in DC. Prod. xvi. 2, 504 ; Eichler, 108. (Taxa- 

 Tribe SALiSBURiEiE. ) 

 Evergreen trees, with linear leaves in two ranks* Seed erect, the 

 size of a walnut, green and fleshy externally when ripe, with aril 

 undeveloped. Albumen ruminate, like that of a nutmeg. 



1. T. calif ornica, Torrey in New York Journ. Pharmacy, iii. 49 ; 

 Parlatore, 506 ; Beissner, 188 ; Lemmon, Third Report, n. 29 ; Gard. 

 Chron. June 29, 1889, fig. 



Synonym : — T. Myristica, Hook. Bat. Mag. t. 4780 ; Gard. Chron. 

 Nov. 29, 1884 ; Veitch, 1. c. 311. 



Introduced from California by W. Lobb in 1851. 



2. T. grandis, Fortune in Gordon Pinetum, p. 326 ; Parlatore, I. c. 

 505 ; Veitch, L c. 311 ; Beissner, 185. 



Introduced from the mountains of Northern China in 1847 by 

 Fortune. 



T. Humholdtii, Knight. See Podocarpus taxifolia. 

 T. montana. See T. taxifolia. 

 T. Myristica. See T. californiea. 



3. T. nucifera, Siebold and Zuccarini, , Flor. Japan, ii. t. 129 ; 

 Parlatore, 1. c. 505 ; Veitch, 1. c. 311 ; Beissner, 186. 



Japan. 



4. T . taxifolia, Arnott ; Parlatore, 505 ; Hooker, Icones, t. 232, 

 233 ; Loudon, Encycl. p. 944, figs. ; Veitch, 1. c. 311 ; Hoopes, Ever- 

 greens, 387, f. 62 ; Beissner, 186, fig. 46. 



Western Florida. 



TStJGA, Carriere; Benth. efc Hook. iii. 440; Eichler, 70. 

 PiNUS, sect. TsuGA, Endlicher ; Parlatore (excl. syn. Keteleeria). 

 PicEA, sect. 2, Link. Micropeuce, Gordon. The Hemlock Spruces. 

 Hesperopeuke, Lemmon. (Tribe Abietine^.) 



Evergreen trees, with flat or angular, stalked leaves proceeding 

 from prominent cushions (as in Picea), generally spreading, disti- 

 chous or apparently so, but erect and in many rows in T. Pattoniana. 

 One resin canal runs through each leaf beneath the midrib. Buds 

 scaly. Male flowers lateral. Stamens on stalked heads. Anthei's 

 crested, opening lengthwise. Pollen two-lobed (discoidal in Patton- 

 iana, Engelmann). Seeds very small, wing obovate. Female cones 

 terminal. Scales persistent, more or less woody. 



T. Alhertiana. See T. Mertensiana. 



T. Balfouriana, McNab in Journ. Linn. Sac. xix. (1882) 211, ed. 1. 



1. T. Brunoniana, Carriere, Coiiif. 188 ; Beissner, 397 ; Masters in 

 Gard. Chron. Oct. 16, 1886 ; and J. D. Hooker, July 17, 1873, fig. 



