78 
DIANDRIA. MONOGYNIA. Salix. 
(49. S. hir'ta. Leaves elliptic-heart-shaped, pointed, finely notched, 
downy on both sides : leaf-scales half-heart-shaped, flat, toothed, 
nearly smooth; branches hairy. 
E. Bot. 1404. 
A small tree. Branches thick, covered with close prominent horizontal 
hairs. Leaves two inches long. Foot-stalks longish, very hairy. Barren 
Catkins cylindrical, rather slender. Scales somewhat acute, brown, 
hairy. Nectary blunt, papillary. Stamens yellow, long. E. Bot. 
Hairy Branched Sallow. Observed in Norfolk by Mr. Crowe. 
T. April—May. E.) 
(50. S. rupes'tris. Leaves inversely-egg-shaped, serrated, flat, silky 
on both sides: stipule hairy : branches minutely downy: germen 
stalked, awl-shaped, silky: stigmas undivided. 
E. Bot. 2342. 
A trailing, depressed shrub: branches very finely downy, of a dark hue. 
Leaves about an inch long, acute, broadish, not wrinkled, veiny, finely 
and regularly serrated. The scales or small leaves of the flowering 
buds very smooth above. Stipulce small, egg-shaped. Catkins egg- 
shaped and thick, scales very hairy; the fertile ones soon elongated, and 
cylindrical. Germen at first rather egg-shaped. Style prominent, 
smooth. Stigma egg-shaped, scarcely notched, never deeply cloven. 
E. Bot. 
Silky Bock Sallow. Rocks of Craig Chailloch and Mael Ghyrdy, in the 
Highlands. Mr. W. Borrer. The Editor has been fovoured with speci¬ 
mens from Weardale, Durham, by Mr. Winch. S. April. E.) 
(To the Sallows also belong S. Andersoniana and S. Forsteriana. Sm. 
somewhat obscure species; the former a low shrub, with leaves ellipti¬ 
cal, acute, finely notched, downy. Stipulce half-ovate, smooth. Germen 
smooth. Stigma cloven. 
E. Bot. 2343. 
The smooth germen distinguishes this from every other known species of 
the Sallow tribe. 
Brought from Breadalbane (where Dr. Walker first found it,) by the late 
Mr. George Anderson. At Heaton Dene, and upon the banks of the 
Tyne, below Newcastle. Mr. Winch. 
S. Forsteriana is a tree of twelve or fifteen feet high: in foliage much re¬ 
sembling the former, but the leaves more decidedly glaucous beneath. 
Germens silky, which appears to be its chief characteristic. 
E. Bot. 2344. 
Observed in Scotland by Mr. Forster : in Heaton Dene, and on the banks 
of the Tyne, near Friar’s Goose, by Mr. Winch: by whose kindness we 
have been favoured with specimens of both these plants. E.) 
(51. S. spiiacela'ta. Stem erect: leaves entire, elliptical, flat, downy 
on both sides, somewhat withered at the point: stipulse half- 
heart-shaped, toothed, erect; capsule tapering. 
E. Bot. 2333— Hoffm. t. 5. f. 4. 
A small, bushy tree, six or eight feet high, young branches very soft, with 
hoary, short, velvet-like down. leaves soft and downy, always greyish ; 
the tip soon assuming a tawny hue: a striking characteristic. Siam. 
