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THE SILVA OF NORTH AMERICA

BY

PROF. 0HARIJ;B a SABaiKT

$uf)Ufiil)etsi' annotttieement

As it has been found impractioabk to include in this twelfth volume of Professor Sargent'8 great work the general Index to the entire work, ft thirteenth volume, containing this Index, together with deucriptions and illustrations of recently discovered speeies, and such corrections of the original volumes fts recent explora- tions have made necessary, will be 8©lit to subscribers w'lhout charge, as soon as ready,

HouGHTOK, Mifflin & Co.

THE

SILVA OF NORTH AMERICA

A DESCRIPTION OP THE TREES WHICH GROW

NATURALLY IN NORTH AMERICA

EXCLUSIVE OF MEXICO

CHARLES SPRAGUE SARGENT

DIRECTOR OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM OF HARVARD UNIVBR8ITT

iUusitrated tmt^ fisattti anti SLmima mratstt from Mature

BT

CHARLES EDWARD FAXON

VOLUME XII CONIFERS

{Abietinem after Pintui)

m^^^^e

BOSTON AND NEW YORK HOUGHTON, MIFFLIN AND COMPANY

MDCCCXCVm

u i>]rTi|M, ime,

Hi OBABLKS BPIIAOUK 8/B0(HT.

All righu rewrvM'.

TV Rtvertide Pnti, Cambridge, Mail., V. 8. A. ■toetratypKl vA Printad by H. O. HoughUm ud CoB|May.

^

so WILLIAM MARRIOTT CANBY

THIS TWELFTH VOLUME OF

THE SILVA OP NORTH AMERICA

18 AFFECTIONATELY DEDICATED

BT BIB COMPANION IN MANY JOUBNETB TBBOUOB

THE FOaESTS OF THE CONTINENT

TABLE OF CONTENTS.

STMonu or Oitona

Laiux Ambbioama Plate dzoiU.

Lahix oooidbntalm PUli dzoiT.

Labix LvAtMi Plmte dzov.

PioBA Mariana

PlPEA RUBBNH .

tU

T

11

16

Plata dxoTi 28

Plate dxovii. 88

87

43

47

61

85

68

00

78

PioBA Camaobnbu Plato dxoviii

PiOBA Knoklmanxi Plate dxoix

FiOEA Pahrvama Plate dc.

PiCEA Bkkwbriana Plate del

PicBA SiTOUBNDis plate doil ....,..,

Thuoa Canadbnhih Plate doiii

T§uoA Caroliniana ..,,.... Plate dciv

TSUOA ilBTBROPHYLLA Plate doT

TsuoA Mkhtenbiana Plato dcvi 77

PsEUDOTHUOA HUORONATA ...... Plate dcvil. 87

PsKUDOTgOOA MACROOAHPA PUtO dcviii 08

Abieh FRA8EKI Plato dcix,

Abies balsamea piato dcx.

Abiks lasiocabpa Plate doxi.

Abies orandis piate doxil.

Abies concolor piato doxiii,

Abiks AMABitra piato dcxiv 126

Abies venusta Hates dcxv., dcxvi 129

Abies nobilis piate dcxvii 133

Abies maonifica Plates dcxTiil., dcxix 187

Abies maonifica, var. SHAsmmis Plate dcxx 189

108 107 118 117 121

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Ct

Stc 8tam pernii

SYNOPSIS OF THE ORDERS OF PLANTS CONTAINED IN VOLUME XII. OF THE 8ILVA OF NORTH AMERICA.

CLAiia III. OYMNOSPERlf^. Resinous trees or shrubs.

Slotns increwing in diameter by the »nnual wMition of a Uyop of wood iniiide the b«rk. Flowen anisexaal, naked, fitttmenii numerous. Orule* 2 or many not incloied in an orary. Cotylodoiu " or more. Leaves usually Btrai({ht-veined, pernistent, or denidiious.

B8. Conifarm. Flowers monneious, usually solitary, terminal, or axillary. Orutes 2 or many. Fruit a woody or rarely fleshy strobile. Cotyledons 2 or many. Leaves scale-like, linear or subulate, solitary or clustered.

r *■ .-

SILVA OF NORTH AMERICA.

LAItlX,

Flowers solitary, naked, monnpuloiw, tllM «t«ttiin»te nxillary; stamens indefinite, anther-cells 2, surmounted by thelv (i(>nHu»!f,lvn j the pistillate terminal, ovules 2 under each scale. Fruit a woody strobilu, ntfituriiin jtt one season. Branchlets dimorphic. Leaves scattered or fascicled, doci^'uoiiK,

Larix, Adanson, Fam. PI. ii. 480 (1703).— Mnk, Alihiimt, PJflUd, t;ltirintl«, Oen. 2fl3 (in part) (1737). Endlicher, Akad. Berl. 1827, 183. Kngelmami, ?)'««»• Ht, lull in (hll. M) (Ifi port). Mei«ner, Oen. 362 (in part).

Acad. ii. 211. Bentliam & Hooker, Qen, iii, iVl— Hrtlllmi, IIM. /^i. xii. 44 (in part).

Eichler, Engler & Prantl Pflanxenfam. H, pt, \, 7fi. = Abted* A. L. de Juisleu, Qm. 414 (in part) (1789). Masters, Jour. Linn. Soc. xxx. 31,

Tall pyramidal trees, with thick 8onotim(i>* l'lH'l'(»W»<(l W'ltly bark, hard heavy henrtwood conspicu- ously marked by dark bands of Bummer Pellt* iiM}(l'^gfml«tl with tesin, thin pale sapwood, slender remote horizontal and often pendulous braiioh»s, ^loit^H^Mll l(<fttl)M^ branvlilets roughened by persistent leaf- scars, usually short thick spur-like lateml Im'i.'MmIiI»i|a tllnttppenring at the end of a few years or occasionally developing into vigorous branolinH, HimIn Alliall* subglobose, covered by numerous broadly ovate thin chestnut-brown lustrous soules, tlmiMi ((I* lll« lowpf |mir lateral and opposite, the others spirally disposed; outer scales accrescent, utai'king i\w \i\{m\\ brtdittlilets with prominent ring-Uke scars, the inner deciduous with the appearance of tltn iMttVPM MMtl tllM falling of the staminate flowers.' Leaves linear-subulate, triangular and rounded ftbovp •'))' Ktwiy tptfflgonal, keeled and stomatiferous below, articulate on low persistent ultimately woody \m^»^, i MIltrtiMJIIff flingle (ibro-vascular bundles, and two resin canals in their lateral angles close to the ej)i(lMi'l||i«, ftlij^lllly iiRMirved in the bud, deciduous ; spirally disposed and remote on leading slujots, an Aw\% Ih1»*I'((I llfrtliohletH in crowded fascicles, each leaf in the axil of a minute deciduous bud-scale. Flowdi'H MU)llttJ|i|illlR( xolitury, terminal, the staminate on leafless, the pistillate on leaf-bearing lateral branchluts of UtM liI'MVioun or of an earlier year, surrounded at the base by the reflexed inner bud-scales. Stamiliatu lloWMM (^lobcwi't ovoid or oblong, sessile or pedunculate, composed of numerous spirally arranged sliiH't-Mtrtlkfll <,WO-('»'llp(l subglobose anthers opening longitu- dinally, their connectives produced above tllMii) iltlo ftllort |i(tifitfi or gland-like umbos; pollen-grains globose. Pistillate flowers appearing with tllM Iwivmbj ftdltgloliose, subsessile, composed of few or numerous spirally arranged suborbicular (itipi)(t(y mH\\m liPdtilig on their inner face near the base two naked collateral inverted ovules, each sciilu iit UlM ItKJA (if a tiiiioh longer mucronate membranaceous usually scarlet bract, the lowest bracts without widltJtj fiml ^oii^lieiiiiig with their persistent tumid closely imbricated bases the stalks of the conua. IfVllit m ((Void oliloiig conical tr subglobose short-stalked cone, at first nearly horizontal, fiiiiiliy assuigHllt hy (llM idciirvilig of the stouw stalk, composed of the slightly thickened woody suborbicular or ol»l»Jli{j-(tl»MV(ll** dlosMly or hiosely imbricated concave scales of

SILVA OF NORTH AMERICA.

CONIFERJB.

!•

the flower, more or less erose on the margins, often longitudinally striate, longer or shorter than their bracts, gradually decreasing in size from the centre of the cone to the ends, the small scales usually sterile, persistent on the central axis of the cone after the escape of the seeds. Seeds geminate, reversed, attached at the base in shallow depressions on the inner face of the scales, nearly triangular, rounded on the sides, in falling bearing away portions of the membranaceous lining of the scale form- ing oblong or obovate-oblong wing^Uke attachments longer than the seed. ; testa of two coats, the outer crustaceous, light brown, the inner membranaceous, light chestnut-brown and lustrous. Embryo axile in copious iieshy albumen ; cotyledons usually six, much shorter than the inferior radicle.

Larix is now widely distributed over the boreal and mountainous regions of the northern hemi- sphere, ranging from the Arctic Circle to the mountains of Pennsylvania in the New World and to latitude 30° in the Old World. Eight species are recognized ; one inhabits northeastern North America, and two western North America; one' grows on the mountains of central Japan and another^ on the eastern Himalayas; on the mountains of central Europe there is one species,* another' forms great forests on the plains of northern Russia and eastern Siberia, and eastward is replaced by another species " which extends to Saghalin, northern Japan, and the Kurile Islands. The type is an ancient one, and its fossil remains have been found in miocene rocks of central Europe.'

Larix produces hard, durable, valuable timber, which is often of great commercial importance, turpentine, which is sometimes used in medicine,' tar,^ bark rich in tannin,'" and a peculiar manna-like substance."

Larix is preyed on by numerous destructive insects" and by serious fungal diseases."

Some species are considered valuable ornamental trees, and are often planted in northern countries for the decoration of parks.

Larix, the classical name of the Larch-tree, was adopted by Tournefort,'* but was included by Linnaeus in his genus Pinus.

' Henry, Nov. Act. Acad. Cat. Lap. liz. 98, t. 13 ; xxii. 246, t22. ' Larix Kamp/eri (not Gordon). Pinut Larix, Thunberf , Ft. Jap. 275 (not Linnaus) (1784). Pinua Kamp/eri, Lambert, Pinut, ii. Preface, p. T. (1824). Abia Kcmpferi, Lindley, Pmny Cgcl. i. 34 (1833). Abia Itplolepis, Siebold & Zuucarini, Fl. Jap. U. 12, t. 106 (1842).

Pinut leplolepit, Gndlicber, Syn. Cmif. 130 (1847). Pul>- tore, De CandoUe Prodr. xvi. pt. ii. 410. Larix Japonica, Carriire, Traite Cmif. 272 (1855). Larix teplolepit, Gordon, Pinelum, 128 (1858). A. Muiray, Proc. K. Hort. Soc. ii. 633, f. 154, 156-160 ; The Pines and Fir$ of Japan, 89, f. 172-177. Miquel, Ann. Mm. Bot. Lugd. Bat. iii. 166 (Prot. Fl. Jap.). Kegel, Gartenflora, tx. 102, t. 686, f. 5 ; Act. Hort. Petrop. i. 108 ; Beige Hort. xxii. 100, t. 8, f. 2. Kran- ohet & Savatier, Enum. PI. Jap. i. 466. iVf alters, Jwir. /.inn. Soc. xviii. 52- {Cotiifern of Ja])an). Trautvetter, Act. Hort. Petrop. ix. 212 {/ncretnenta Fl. lions.). Mayr, Monog. Abiet. Jap. 63, t. 5, f. 14. Bei.«ner, HuM. Nadelh. 318, f. 83. The ifapanesc Larch, which is a tree seventy ur eighty feet in height, with a massive trunk from three to four feet in diameter, and pale blue-green foliage, is common on the mountains of central Hondo at elevations of from five to six thousand feet above the sea-level, where it is scattered usually in small groves through forests principally composed of Birches, Oaks, and Hemlocks. The hanl durable wood, difficult to obtain from the inaccessihli; moun- tain forests, is used locally for the timber of mines and in the manufacture of many small articles. (See ilcin, Industries of Japan, 238. Sargent, Forest Fl. Jap. 83.)

Larix Kampferi was introduced about forty years ago into the gardens of Europe and the northeastern United States, where it is hardy and vigorous and is chiefly distinguished by the brilliant yellow color assumed by its leaves in autumn.

At the upper limits of tree growth, at elevations of between eight and nine thousand feet above the sea, a low form of this Larch, dwarfed by cold, with shorter leaves and smaller cones, grows on Mt. Fugi-san. This is

Larix Ktxmpferi, var. minor. Abies leptolepis, Lindley, Gard. Chron. 1861, 23 (not Siebold &

Zuccarini). Lanx leptolepis, var. minor, A. Murray, Proc. R. Hort. Soc. ii.

633, f. 155 (1862).

Larix Japonica, A. Murray, The Pines and Firs of Japan, 94,

f. 178-188 (not Carriirc) (lSt!3). Kegel, Gartenflora, xx. 104,

t. 685, f. 7; Act. Hort. Petrop. i. 159; Beige Hort. xxii. 103, t. 9,

f. 4. Larix leptolepis, 0 .\furrayana, Maximowicz, Ind. Sem, Hort.

Petrop. 1866, 3 (nomen nudum). Kranchet & Savatier, /. c.

Beissner, I. c. 319, f. 84. Masters, Jour. It. Hort. Soc. xiv. 217. Larix Japonica macrocarpa, Carri6ro, Traite' Conif. ed. 2, 354

(1867).

» Larix Orijjilhii, Hooker f. ///. Him. Pt. t. 21 (cxcl. staminate flowers) (1855); Fl. Brit. Ind. v. 655. Van Houtto, Fl. desSerres, xii. 165, 1. 1267. —Gordon, I'inetum, Suppl. 39; ed. 2, 171. Kegel, Gartenflora, xx. 106, t. 685, f. 1-4; Act. Hort. Petrop. i. 161; Beige Hort. xxii. 105, t. 10, f. 4-7. Brandis, Forest Fl. Brit. Ind. 531. Itcissuer, (. c. 316, f. 82.

Lnrit Klriffilhiana, Carri6re, Traite Conif. 278 (1865).— Gor- don, Pitietuin, 126.

CONIFERiB.

CONIFERS.

8ILVA OF NORTH AMERICA.

3

r than their Bales usually Is geminate, y triangular, e scale form- its, the outer Bmbryo axile

rthem hemi- r World and astern North and another ' lother ' forms id by another is an ancient

1 importance, ir manna-like

liern countries s included by

fears ago into the States, where it is d by the brilliant

nations of between

low form of this

ind smaller cones,

23 (not Siebold &

DC. R. Hart. Soc. ii.

Fin of Japan, 94, lartmjiora, xi. 101, lort. xxii. 103, t. 9,

cz, Ind. Sem. Uort. & Savatier, I. c. Hort. Soc. xiv. '217. Uc Conif. ed. 2, 354

21 (cxcl. stamiiiata mttc, Fl. des Serres, ■d. 2, 171. Kegel, "drop. i. 101 ; Beige ri. Brit. Ind. 531.

278 (IbCi). Gor-

Pinu» Oriffitkii, Farlatore, De Candolle Prodr. xvi. pt. ii. 411 (1808).

Lariz Griffilhii, which is a tree from twenty to sixty feet ia height, with long gracefully pendulous branches and c'vugnted cones made conspicuous by long exserted deep orange-brown bracts, is scattered over the inner mountain ranges of Bh'.«can, Sikkim, and eastern Nepal at elevations of between eight and twelve thousand feet above the sea-levcl, growing usually near the heads of valleys on moraines, which it covers with scanty forests, and occasionally on well-drained grassy slopes. (See IlTokcr f. Himalayan Jour- naU, newed. i. 246; Gard. Chron. n. ser. xxv. 718, f. 157. Ganimie, Rec. Bot. Surv. Ind. i. No. 2, 11.) The wood, which is considered more durable than that of the other Himalayan conifers, is exported from Sikkim and Thibet. (See Gamble, Man. Indian Timbert, 410.) Introduced into England in 1848, the Himalayan Larch has rarely flourished in oultiTation, although occasionally a plant in some exceptionally favorable situation in Europe shows the beauty and interest of this tree as a garden ornament. (See Gard. Chron. n. ser. xxvL 464, f. 95.— Bull. Soc. Tosc. Ort. xvii. 312.) * Lariz Larix, Karsten, Pharm.-med. Bot. 326, f. 157 (1882).

Piniu Lariz, Linnieus, Spec. 1001 (1753). Pallas, f/. Row. i. 1 (in part), 1. 1, f. A, B. Brotero, Hitl. Nat. Pinheiros, Larices e Abeloi, 22, Ledebour, Fl. Ross. iii. 672. Reichenbach, Icon. Fl. German, xi. 4, t. 632 (Lariz Europaa on plate). Christ, Verhand. Nat. Gesell. Basel, iii. 646 (Uebersicht der EuropSischen Abielineen). ParUtoie, Fl. Ital. ir. 69 ; De Candolle Prodr. zri. pt. ii. 411.

Larix decidua. Miller, Diet. ed. 8, No. 1 (1768). K. Koch, Dendr. ii. pt. ii. 268. Larix caduci/olia, Gilibert, Ezercit. Phyt. ii. 413 (1792). Pinus lata, Salisbury, Prodr. 399 (1796). Abies Larix, Poiret, Lamarck Diet. vi. 511 (1804) ; 111. iii. 368, t. 785. JVouDMu Duhamel, v. 287, t. 79, f. 1. Richard, Comm. Bot. Conif. 65, 1. 13. Lindley, Penny Cycl. i. 32, f.

Larix Europaa, De Candolle, Lamarck Fl. Franf. ed. 3, iii. 277 (1805). Link, Linnaa, xr. 534. Schouw, Ann. Sci. Nat. s^r. 3, iii. 241 (Coniferes d7/o(i«). Corriire, Traite Conif. 276.— Fiscali, Deutsch. Forstcult. Pfl. 36, t. 1, f. 21-28. Gordon, Pinelum, 124. Bertrand, Ann. Sci. Nat. s^r. 5, xx. 90. Col- meiro, £iiuin. PI. Hispano-Lusilana, iv. 709. Herder, Act. Hort. Petrop. xii. 102 {PI. Radd.) ; Bot. Jahrb. xiv. 160 (H. Europ. Russlands). Hempel & Wilhelm, BHume und Strducher, i. 109, f. 53-57, t. 3.

Lariz pyramidalis, Salisbury, T'raiu. Linn. Soc. viii. 314 (1807).

Larix Europaa communis, Lawson & Son, Agric. Man. 386 (1836). Larix Europaa laxa, Lawson & Son, I. c. (1836). Larix Europaa compacta, Lawson & Son, /. c. (1836). Larix vulgaris, Spaoh, Hist. Ve'g. xi. 432 (1842). Pinus Larix, a communis, Endlicher, Syn. Conif. 134 (1847). Pinus Larix, 8 laxa, Endlicher, I. c. (1847). Pinus Larix, compacta, Endlicher, /. c. (1847). Pinus Larix, ?) rubra, Endlicher, /. c. (1847). Pinus Larix, S rosea, Endlicher, I. c. 134 (1847). Pinus Larix, i alba, Endlicher, I. c. lU (1847). Larix decidua, a communis, Henkel & Hochstetter, Syn. Nadelh. 130 (1805). Kegel, Gartenflora, xx. 100, t. 084, f. 3 ; Act. Hon. Petrop. i. 150 ; Beige Hort. xxii. 98, t. 7, f. 1. Larix Europaa, a lypica, Kegel, Russ. Dendr. pt. i. 28 (1870). Larix Europaa pendula, Kegel, /. c. (1870). Larix communis, var. ! pendulina, Kegel, Gartenflora, xx. 101,

t. 684, f. 6, 6 (1871) ; Act. Hort. Petrop. i. 157 ; Beige Hart. xxii.

99, t. 7, f. 5, 6.

Larix Larix, the type of the genu.i, grows naturally only at high elevati'ins on the mountain ranges of central Europe from south- eastern France to Servia and Hungary. In France, either alone or mixed with mountain Pines, it often forms great forests, but in Switzerland and on the Bavarian and Italian Alps it is less abun- dant, and is usually associated with the Spruce, frequently growing to the upper zone inhabited by trees. The European Larch is from eighty to one hundred or exceptionally one hundred and fifty feet in height, with a tall trunk from three to four feet in diameter, and small spreading often pendulous branches, and produces strong heavy and very durable wood, which has been valued since the time of the Romans, and is largely used for beams, piles, water- pipes, posts, railway-ties, and shingles, in cabinet-making, and for painters' palettes. (See Tour d'Aigues, Mem. Soc. Agric. Paris, 1787, 41.— Desfontaines, Hist. Arb. ii. 599.)

During the last one hundred and fifty years the European Larch has been largely planted as a timber-tree beyond the limits of its natural home. In Scotland in particular great attention was given to the cultivation of the Larch by the Dukes of Athol ou their estates of Athol and Dunkeld, and between 1738 and 1820 they covered about eight thousand acres with pure forests of this tree. (See Trans. Highland Soc. xi. 166. Loudon, Arb. Brit. iv. 2359.) In European plantations the Larch has grown with great rapidity while young, and, on the whole, these plantations have produced satisfactory results if the trees have been cut when they were from forty to sixty years of age. Removed from its native forests, how- ever, the Larch produces wood which deteriorates before the tree reaches maturity, and in recent years Larch plantations have suf- fered seriously from disease and the attacks of insects. (For culture of the Larch in Europe, see Evelyn, Siiva, ed. Hunter, i. 279. R. Hartig, Forst. Culturpfl. Deutschl. 37, t. 3. M'Corquodale, Trans. Scottish Arboricultural Soc. ii. 43. Gorrie, Trans. Scottish Arboricultural Soc. viii. 61. Mathieu, Fl. Foreslilre, ed. 3, 485. Michie, The Larch. McGregor, Trans. Scottish Arboricultural Soc.

ix. 234. Lorentz, Culture des Bois, ed. 6, 159 Mer, Rev. Eaux

et Forets, xiav. Ill [^Culture du Helize dans les Vosges']. Schlich, Manual of Forestry, ii. 309. J. B. Carruthers, Jour. R. Agric. Soc. England, ii. pt. ii. [Tie Canker of the Larch]. Somerville, Trans. English Arboricultural Soc. ii. 363.)

The European Larch, brought to America probably early in the present century, flourishes in the north Atlantic states, where it grows rapidly to a large size and has proved one of the few Euro- pean trees which can really be successfully grown in the New World. It has been frequently planted here as an ornamental tree, and occasionally, on a comparatively small scale, for the pro- duction of timber. These plantations are still young and have not yet shown the quality of the material which the European Larch can produce in the United States. (See Sargent, Rep. Sec. Board Agric. ulass. ser. 2, xxiii. 276. Warder, Am. Jour. For- estry, i. 11.)

A form of the European Larch, with long pendulous brnnches {Larix Europaa pendula, Lawson & Son, Agric. Man. 387 [1830]. Loudon, Arb, Brit. iv. 2361. Larix decidua, < pendula, Kegel, Gar- tenflora, XX. 102, t. 084, f. 11 [1871]), which is believed to have originated in the Tyrol, is often planted as an ornament of pnrks ; and nurserymen propagate other abnormal forma. (See Beissner, Handb. Nadelh. 327.)

» Larix Sibirica, Ledebour, Fl. All. iv. 204 (1833). Link, /. c. 535. Carri6rc, /. c. 274. Trautvctter, Middendnrjf' Reise, i. pt. ii. 170 (Pi. /en.). Trautvettcr & Meyer, Middendorff Reise, i.

SILVA OF NORTH AMERICA.

CONIFERiE.

pt ii. 88 (R OrAol.)- Kegel, R\ut. Dendr. pt. i. 30.— M««teri, Jour. Linn. Soc. iviii. B23 {Coni/en of Japan). Herder, Act. Uort. Pelrop. xii. 101 (PI. Radii.) ; Bot. Jakrb. xiv. 160 (Fl. Europ. Riutlandt).

Pinut Lara, FaUat, Fl. Ron. i. 1 (in part), 1. 1, f. C (not Lin- ■ueus) (1784).

Larix Archangtlica, Lawson & Son, Agric. Man. 380 (1836). Traiitvctlcr, .id. Horl, Pelrop. ix. 211 (Incremmta Fl. Roii.).

Larix Europaa, var. Sibirica, Loudon, Arb. Brit. iv. 23C2 (1838).

Larix intermedia, Turcianinow, Bull. Soc. Ifat. Mosc. xi. 101 (Cat. PI. Baicttl.) (not Lawson & Son) (1838). K. Koch, Dendr. ii. pt. ii. 260.

Larix Ledebourii, Rupreoht, /7. Samojed. Cimral. 56 (1845). Gordon, Pinetum, 127.

Pinus Ledebourii, Endlioher, Syn. Conif. 131 (1847). Lede- bour, Fl. Ross. iii. 672. Turczaniuow, Fl. Baicalensi-Dahurica,

ii. 140 Herder, BuU. Soc. Nat. Mosc. lU. 423.— Christ, Ver-

kofd. Nat. Gesell. Basel, iii. 046 {Ueberticht der EuropSiichen /16i<(in««i).— Parlatore, De CandoUe Prodr. xvi. pt. ii. 410.

Larix Altaica, (Nelson) Senilis, Pinacea, 84 (1866). Traut- Tetter, /. r.

Larix communis, var. fi Sibirica, Kegel, Garlenflora, zx. 101, .. 684, f. 1, 2 (1871) J Act. Hort. Petrop. i. 1S6 ; Beige Hart. xiii. 99, t. 7, f . 2, 3.

Larix communis, y Rossica, Kegel, Guiimjlora, xx. 101, t. 684, f. 4 (1871) ; Act. Hort. Petrop. i. 157 ; Beige Uort. ixii. 99, t. 7, f. 4.

iarii Rmsica, Trautvctter, I. c. 212 (1884). Larix Sibirica, which many hotanista have considered a geo- graphical form of the Larch of central Kurope, is a large pyramidal tree, and forms great forests on the plains of northern Rnssia and western Siberia, ranging northward to the seventy-llrst degree of latitude, and eastward to the Altai Mountains, on which it abounds at elevations of from two thousand five hundred to five thousand five hundred feet above the sea-level. l*he character of the wood is very similar to that of Larix Larix and is used for similar purposes.

Larix Dahurica, Turcianinow, Bull. Soc. Nat. .Mosc. xi. 101 (Cat. PI. Baical.) (1838). Kegel & Tilling, Fl. .ija,: 119.— Carrii're, 7>ai(e Conif. 271. (iordon, Pinetum, 123 (excl. svu V Trautvctter & Meyer, MiddendorffReise, i. pt. ii. 88 (Fl. Ockol.), Maiiniowicz, Bull. Phys. Math, .tcad, Sci. St. Pilnsbourg, xv. 430 (Bourne und Strducher des Amarlands); Mt'm. Sav. Etr. Acad. Sci. St. Pilersbcurg, ii. 202 (Prim. Fl. Amur.); Bull. Soc. Nat. Mosc. liv. 58. F. Schmidt, Mfm. Acad. Sci. St. Pitrrshourg, srfr. 7, xil. 63 (lieisen in Amurlanite), 177 (Fl. Sachatinermis). K. Koch, /. c. Glehn, Act. Uort. Petrop. iv. 86 ( IVn. Wilim-Olehna- Lande). Masters, I. c. 522. Hegel, Russ. Dendr. ed. 2, pt. i. 63, t. 13, b. h. Bcissncr, llandh. Nadelh. 328, f. 90. IlcrJer, Act. Uort. Petrop. xii. 98 (/'/. «a(/ii.). Korahinsky, Act. Hort. Petrop. xii. 424 (/'(. Amur.).

Pima Larix (Americnna), I'allas, Fl. Ross. i. 2, t. 1, f. E. (1784).

Larix- Europtra, var. Dahurica, Loudon, /. c. (1838). Pinus Ihihurica, Trautvettcr, Imafj. PI. Fl. Huss. 48, t. 32 (1811). Lcdebour, Fl. Huss. iii. 073. Kndlicher, /. c. 128. Turcariiiiow, /. r. Parlatore, /. c.

Larix Fl o/Hta, MiildendiirlT, Bidt. Phys. Mnlh. Acad. Sci. St. Pelersliourij, iii. 2.>"> (not Ur Candollc) (18l.'>). Abies Gmelini, Huprecht, /. c. (1840). Pinus Kamtsckalika, Endlichcr, /. c. 135 (1847).

Larix Kamtschatika, Carriiro, I. c. 279 (18S6). Gordon, Pine- tum, Suppl. 39. Parlatore, /. c. 431.

Larix Dahurica, a typica, Itegcl, Gar'enflora, xx. 106, t. 084, f. 8, 9 (1871) i Act. Horl. Petrop. i. 160 j Beige Hort. xxii. 104, t. 9, f . 6-0.

Larix Dahurica, Bprosliata, Kegel, Gartenfloni, xx. 105, t. 684. f. 9-10 (1871) ; Act. Hort. Petrop. i. 100; Beige Horl. xxii. 104. Larix Dahurica, which is described as a small tree, becoming shrubby and semiprostrate in the extreme north, is generally dis- tributed through eastern Siberia, Kamtsohatka, Manchuria, nurth- eni China, and Saghalin, and in one form reaches the extreme northern part of Yezo, and the Kurile Islands. This form ia Larix Dahurica, var. Kurilensis.

Larix Dahurica, var. y Japonica, Kegel, Garlenflora, xx. lOS, t. 686, f. 6 (not Larix Japonica, Carriire) (1871) ; Act. Hort. Pe- trop. i. 100; Beige Hort. xxii. 105, t. 10, f. 1. Beissner, /. c. 329, f. 91 Miyabe, Mem. Bost. Soc. Nat. Hist. iv. 261 (Fl. Kur'. Uands). —Sargent, Forest Fl. Jap. 84, t. 26.

Larix Kurilemi», Mayr, Monog. Abiel. Jap. 06, t. 6, f. 15 (1890). ' Saporta, Origine Paleontologique des A rbres, 72.

* The turpentine of the Larch, usually known in commerce as Venice turpentine, because it was formerly exported from Venice, is a thick pale yellow honey-like Huid with a bitter aromatic flavor. It is collected from Larix Larix, chiefly in the Tyrol, by boring in early spring, nearly to the centre of the trunk, a hole about an inch in diameter and a foot aliove the ground, and firmly closing fhe hole with a wooden stopper, which is taken out in the autumn, when the turpentine which has collected in the hole is removed with an iron spoon. The hole is then closed again, and the same process is repeated in the following autumn. A hole, which yields about half a pound of turpentine annually, continues to be produc- tive for many years, and, if it is kept carefully closed, does not injure the growth of the tree. Under the more wasteful methods which were long practiced on the Italian and French Alps a much larger annual yield was obtained for a short time from a number of larger holes made in the same tree ; this metlioil, however, soon ceased to be productive, and if the holes were left open in order that the tur- pentine might flow continuously through wooden pipes into small pails, the value of the wood was soon impaired.

Venice turpentine, once considered a sovereign remedy for many human diseases, is now rarely used except in veterinary practice, and the article sold under that name is u.sually a mixture of com- mon resin and oil of turpentine. (See Mnttloli, Opera [Apolo- jia, 146]. Womlville, .Med. But. iii. 570, t. 210. Loudon, /. c. 2366. Guibuurt, Jour, de Pharm. xxv. 500 ; Hist. Drog. ed. 7, ii. 251. Mohl, Bol. Xeit. xvii. 329. Kliickiger & Hanbury, /'Aar- macographia, 549. linntley & Trimen, Med. PI. iv. 260, t. 260. U. S. Dispells, ed. 10, 1489.)

* A large part of the tar used in Europe is made in Scandinavia and northern Russia by burning the rooUs an<l lower parts of the trunks of Pinu,i sylvestrut and Larix Sibirica. (See FlUckiger & Hanbury, /. c. ■'JOO.)

"* The bark of Larix contains from twelve to fifteen per cent, of tannic acid, and extracts of tlmt of the European and ea.sterii North American species are used in considerable <|iiantitles in tanning leather. The inner bark of the Kuropoan Larch, ehielly in the form of a cincture, is used in nu-dieine as a stimulating astringent and expectorant. (See Fllickiger & Hanbury, (. c. 601. U. S. Dupens. cd 10, 870.)

" itrian(,-oit manna is a white .saccharine substance which is found often in considerable ipiuntitics on the leaves of the European Larch

C0NIFE1L«.

SILVA OF NOIiTJJ AA/A'Jl/dA.

I. 106, t. 084, ort. zxii. 104, t.

XX. 105, t. 084. fori. xxii. lot. tree, becoming 1 gonerally dtn- incliiirin, iiurth- Ds tbo extreme is form ia

iora, XX. 106, t.

; Act. Horl. Pe-

-Beisaner, {. c.

tt. iy. 201 (Fl.

20.

66, t. 6, f. 16

In oommeTce u d from Venice, aromatic flavor. 'o1, by boring in ie about an infib inly closing the in the autumn, lole is removed in, and tlie same lie, which yields les to be produc- 1, does not injure I methods which I a inucli larger lumber of larger % soon censed to Icr that the tur- jipes into small

cmedy for many trinary practice, nixture uf com- Optra [Apolo- Loudon, I, c. t. Drag, cd. 7, ii. Haiibury, Fhixr- V. 200, t.2C0.—

near the town of Brian^on in southeastern Kranci'. Formerly it was used in medicine ; but although it is still gathered by thu peasants uf the region, it is believed to have disappeared from trodo and is no longer employed except locally. (See Klilckiger & Ilun- hury, Vharmacographia, 373.) Mclczitose, a peculiar sugar analo- gous to that of the Cane, was detected in this substance by liortliolut {Compt. llend. xlvii. 224). (See, also, Bonastro, Jour, de Pkarm. tit. 2, xix. 443, 020. KlUckigcr & Hanbury, /. <■. 373. Bentley & Trimcn, Afcd. PI. iv. 200, t. 200.)

"In North America, Larix is seriously injured by several insects, but the number of species which attack these trees here and in the Old World is not large. Less than fifty species of insects are reported as living upon Larch-trees in North America, but it is probable tliat the number will be much increased by n more careful study of these trees in the region west of the Kocky Moun- tains. The trunks of living healthy Larches do not appear to he affected by borers, although several species of Scolytidie or Bark Beetles of genera like Oendroctonus, Hylesinus, and Tomicus live under the bark of dead, dying, or weak trees. The weakness and death of these trees, which make them liable to the attacks of bor- ing insects, is frequently caused by the ravages of foliage destroy- ers. The most destructive of these, 'vhich is also known in Kurope, is the Larch Saw-fly, iVema/wr Krichsoniij Uartig, whose larvo) often entirely strip the trees of leaves. This pest docs not appear to have been much noticed in this country before 1880, but in recent years it has attracted great attention on account of its abundance on both native and Kuropean Larches in the northeastern states and Canada ; and in southern Labrador, Larix Americana has been almost totally destroyed by the ravages of this insect, which ap- pears to be spreading northward and eastward. (See Low, Uep. Geotog. Surv. Can, n. scr. viii. 30 L.) More abundant in some years than others, it is nevertheless n constant menace to the successful growth and development of the Larch in the region where it occurs. Other species of Saw-flies which occasionally feed upon the Larch are not known to be seriously injurious.

The larvffi of a minute moth known as the Larch Sack-bearer, Coleophora taricetla, llUbner, which has probably been introduced from Kurope, have of recent years caused much injury to Larch- trees in the eastern slates. The bwlies of these larvte are pro- tected by small closc-litting cases of the same color as the bark of the twigs. The larvio hibernate and in early spring eat out the parenchyma of the young growing leaves, leaving on the branchlets thin dry gray or wliitish epidermal skeletons. In Kurope, the iuv ages of another small moth, Steganoptycha pinicolanOf Zcller, often cause great damage to Larch-trees, particularly on the high Swiss Alps (Christ, Garden and Foreal, viii. 238).

The Lapibus uf Wf<i(<'»li UntiU /tmerlcs are sometimes injured by the liicvw itf « liMtlcritf, I'lptlii htnmpia, Kelder, and the larvio of various miM\» iii w<vm»i«I fHtlillles are found upon Larches, but rarely in su|iliui«Mt mi»\m>ii Ui patlse perninnent injury.

Among ApliMlii, lith'liwin iiltliifcr, I'iteh, and Chermes taricifolm, Fitcli, ui'u suMiulJMIf") mim lit le/is nbundant on the twigs and leaves ; and l,AFflHFl'f«t Cllltl»ll(«(t In the eastern states are occa- sionally suriiiMiily »(fccM'(( Sif m\ Kiltes, Telranyehiu lelariiu, Lia- nisus.

" Tlia iiMst *»timill dMMM of the Larch is a fungus, which attacks tliu |f)Mrw|W)«ll ftjiCciM HUit Is known as Conker or Krobs, caused by Ihianwniiliii Wlllhimmii. H. Ilnrtig {Unlermck. Font. Bol. Imlilul. Mimr-hm: i. t\^), The mature condition of this fun- gus, consisting iii »\m\\ mukli i'Ii\ki, which are fringed on the outer surface apid nmf&m wifll lulnilte #hHlsh hairs, while the disk is yellowisli Fed, U imm\ ilcpt^mlMis on the surface of the stems and young bmilfh*"*. (I Aims hut appear to lie able to make its way inti) l\» ifm HillfM i\m mtt'ime of the br.inches has been injured by hail m (Iw MimM* lit insects. It is said to occur also in thu t'liiUii) HtttUiili imt 1(4 mige I/ere is not well known, as Dasy- acypha WillhmmU ilf fltfliift HUlhatu has not always been distin- guished frmn Hmuwillillil iHll/Hm or from Danynrypha Agaaiizii, Berkeley 4i i^ltHtir 'I'tm IUHfen lit the Kuropean Larch are at- tacked by the fmt, t'lHimil l.itrMn, Westendorp, which forms golden yellifw fiMii||jf)||.-iili«> sfrtifs on their under surface. This fungus is belJiiVf'4 hi IN^colofjI.its to be connected genetically with Melampsiirii Tmimlit, 'tu\»!iim, *l(lch forms insignificant spots on the leaves of I'lipiilim iMIiiilil ill fcllfope and occurs also on species of I'opulus ill Ml" I'liilcrt Stuies.

A serious limum Ilf ItiC (y*H'h In flermany, which causes the leaves to fall in \negii umiimea, is attributed by Ilartig to the attacks uf UphiiFclln liwmn, M. (iHrllg, and the discoloration and deatli of LsFull \miil"> Hff ('««W(( by llypodermella Lands, lubeuf.

In geiiL'cal, UlM (IW(i»<(C9 iti Liirir Amfrwana do not appear to be important, i)ft »( U<»'>t (hff imne not attracted the attention of mycologists til »iiy fniviii, Speeies of I'olyporus and Trametcs, which injure (jiii 0'li|lk<i lit (lit? 'fmiMtmh, are not, however, peculiar to the IjiixIi. (e>(j|( |', M. tllllHefi hull. No. 1, Div. Forentry U. S. Depl. Ayrh. A|i(Hf- I, fia.J t'lill/porm iifficinaUt, Fries, formerly used in iiieditijnii, tmm «hll« i*rtgular masses on the Larch in Kurope, especially \n ftniHill*.

Thu jiseojies ui Mlf mtWm AM«tleen species of Larix have not l^Ccu stiidled.

" in,t. mi, f. mi:

e in Scandinavia ver parts uf the ^e Klikckigcr &

teen per cent, uf id caHtcrn Nurth titii's ill tuiiuing li, rliii'fly ill the luting astringent c. Kil. U. S.

CONSPECTUS OF THE NORTH AMKHIOAW ¥i\*VmV.n.

Cones small, subglobose ; their scales few, longer than tho bracts.

Leaves triangular ,,,,,,

Cones elongated ; tliuir scales numerous, shorter than the bracts.

Yuiiiig branchlets pubescent, soon becoming glabrous ; leaves triangulAF t i i i i t Young branchlets tomentusc ; leaves tetragonal > i i i i <

. 1. L. Amrricana.

. 2. L. OCCIDENTALI.S. . 3. L. LVALLII.

;e which is found Kuropean Larch

COl

Lai

Pin Pin

1 Pin

Pin

i

Pin Pin Pin

Pin i

Pin i

Pin

Pin

I

Pin

CONIFERJE.

aiLVA OF NORTH AMERICA.

LARIX AMERICANA. Tamarack. Laroh. Cones small, subglobose, the scales few, longer than their bracts.

Larix Americana, Michaux, Fl. Bor.-Am. ii. 203 (1803). Miehauz f. HUt. Arb. Am. iii. 37, t. 4. Audubon, Birds, t. 4. Emerson, Treea Mail. 89; ed. 2, i. 106, t Giboul, Arh. Rii. 61. (Nekon) Senilin, Pinaeae, 86. Hoopes, Eiiergreens, 247. Nordlinger, Foritbot.

427, f Kegel, Gartenflora, xx. 106, t. 684, f. 7, 8 ; Act.

Eort. Petrop. i. 160 ; Beige Hvrt. xxu. 105, 1. 10, f . 2, 3. Bertrand, Ann. Sci. Nat. b6t. 6, xz. 90. Sargent, Forest Trees N. Am. lOth Census U. S. ix. 216. Watoon & Coulter, Qray's Man. ed. 6, 493. Mayr, Wold. Nordam.

221. Beissner, Handb. Nadelh. 329, f. 92 Hansen,

iTour. R. Hort. Soc. ziv. 413 (Pinetum Danieum). Koehne, Deutsche Dendr. 28.

PinuB Larix Amerioana nigra. Muenchhausen, Hausv. v. 226 (1770).

Pinualarioina, Du Boi, Obs. Bot. 49 (1771) ; Harbk. Baumz. ii. 83, t. 3, f. 6-7. Burgsdorf, Anleit. pt. ii. 185. Wangenheim, Nordam. Bole. 42, 1 16, f . 37. Schoepf, Mat. Med. Amer. 142.— Moench, Meth. 364.— Bork- hausen, Handb. Forstbot. i. 461.

PinUB Larix Canaden8i8,Wan(;enheini, Besehreib. Nordam, Holz. 43 (1781).

PinuB LarJx rubra, Slarsball, Arbust. Am. 103 (1786). Schoepf, Mat. Med. Amer. 142.

PinuB Larix alba, Marshall, Arbust. Am. 104 (1786).

PinuB Larix nigra, Marshall, Arbust. Am. 104 (1786).

PinuB pendula, Aiton, Hort. Kew. iii. 369 (1789). Will- denow, Berl. Baumx. 215 ; Spec. iv. pt. i. 602. Lambert, Pinui, i. 66, t. 36. Persoon, Syn. ii. 679. Fursh, Fl. Am. Sept. ii. 645. Nuttall, Oen. ii. 223. Sprengel, Syit. iii. 887. Brotero, Hist. Nat. Pinheiros, Larices e Abetos, 27. Audubon, Birds, t. 90, 180. Hooker, Fl.

Bor.-Am. ii. 164.— Torrey, Fl. N. ¥. ii. 232 Endlicher,

Syn. Conif. 132. Lawson & Son, List No. 10, Abieti- ne(B, 21. Dietrich, Syn. v. 395 Courtin, Fain. Conif. 66. Farlatore, Do CandoUe Prodr. xvi. pt. ii. 409.

FinuB Larix, /3 rubra, CastigUoni, Viag. negli Stati Uniti, ii. 315 (1790).

PinuB Larix, y nigra, Castiglioni, Viag. negli Stati Uniti, ii. 315 (1790).

Pinu3 Larix, S alba, Castiglioni, Viag negli Stati Uniti, ii. 315 (1790).

Pinus interm.jdia, Du Boi, Harbk. Baume. ed. 2, ii. 114 (1800).

Pinus mici-ooarpa, Lambert, Pinus, i. 68, t. 37 (1803). Willdenoii', Spec. iv. pt i. 502 ; Enum. 989 ; Berl. Baumz. ed. 2, 273. Persoon Syn. ii. 679. Stokes, Bot. Mat.

Med. iv. 436. Aiton, Hort. Kew. ed. 2, t. 321. Big*. low, Fl. Boston. 235. Pursh, Fl. Am. Sept. ii. 646. Nuttall, Qen. ii. 223. Hayne, Dendr. Fl. 176. Spreng- el, iSF^st. iii. 887. Bioteio, Hilt. Nat. Pinhtiros, Larices e Abetos, 27. Meyer, PI. Labrador. 30. Hooker, Fl. Bor.-Am. ii. 164. Antoine, Conif. 64, t. 21, f. 1. Endlicher, Syn. Conif. 132. Lawson & Son, Lilt No. 10, Abietineae, 21. Dietrich, <S>^. v. 396. Courtin, Fam. Conif. 66.

Abies pendula, Por.eil, Lamarck Diet. vi. 614 (1804). Nouveau Duha,nel, v. 288. Lindley, Penny Cycl. i. 33. Lindley & Gordon, Jour. Hort. Soe. Land. v. 213.

Abies miorooarpa, Poiret, Lamarck Diet. vi. 614 (1804). Nouveau Diihamel, v. 289, t. 79, f. 2. Lmdley, Penny Cycl, i, 33. Lindley & Giordon, Jour, Hort. Soc. Land. V. 213.

Larix pendula, Du Mont de Courset, Bot. Cult. iii. 771 (1802). Salisbury, Trans. Linn. Soc. viii. 314. —Law- son & Son, Agric. Man. 387. Forbes, Pinetum Wobum, 137, t. 46 Carrifere, Traiti Conif, 279. Gordon, Pinetum, 129. Courtin, Fam. Conif. 66. S^n^>lauze, Conif, 105. SchUbeler, Virid, Norveg, i. 441. Will-

komm, ^ors^ ii7. ed. 2, 166 Masters, Jour. B, Hort,

Soe. xiv. 218.

Larix tenuifoUa, Salisbury, Tram. Linn. Soc, via. 314 (1807).

Larix miorooarpa, Desfontaines, Hist. Arb. ii. 697 (1809). Lawson & Son, Agric. Man. 388. Forbes, Pinetum Wobum, 139, t. 47. Spach, Hiit. VSg. xi. 436. Link, Linncea, xv. 536. Carribre, TraitS Conif, 276. Gor- don, Pinetitm, 129. Henkal & Hocbstetter, Syn. Nadelh. 137 S^n&ilauze, Conif. 106. Kegel, JRuss. Dendr. pt. i. 29. Veitcb, Man. Conif. 130. Lanche, Deutsche Dendr. ed. 2, 100. SchUbeler, Virid. Norvng. i. 441. Willkomm, Forst. Fl. ed. 2, 167.

Larix intermedia, Lawson & Son, Agric. Man. 389 (1836).— Forbes, Pinetum Wobum. 141. Link, Linncea, xv. 536.

Larix Amerioana rubra, Loudon, Arb. Brit. iv. 2400 (1838). Knight, Syn. Conif. 40.

Larix Amerioana pendula, Loudon, Arb. Brit. iv. 2400 (1838). Carribre, TraitS Conif. ed. 2, 366. o^n&Iauze, Conif. 101.

Larix Amerioana prolifera, Loudon, Arb. Brit. iv. 2401 (1838). Carriijre, TraitS Conif. ed. 2, 356.

Larix deoidua, y Amerioana, Henkel & Hocbstetter, Syn. Nadelh. 133 (1865).

Larix larioina, K. Koch, Dendr. ii. pt. ii. 263 (1873).

I

i

8

SILFA OF NORTH AMERICA.

CONIFEItA.

Lauche, Peinir/ie Dendr. «d. 2, 90. Siiilwurtli, K»p. ir. S. Pept. A;iric. 1892, 330. Uritton & Urown, ///. J-for. 1.54, f. 120. Lariz larjoina, vnr. miorooarra, LenirooD, itV/). CaUfomui

State Hoard forentry, iii. 108 {Cone-Bearen of Califor- nut) (1800). Lorlx larioina, var. pendula, Lomiion, Rep. Caltfomia State Hoard Farentry, iii. 108 (Cone-Ileareri of Califor- nia) (1890).

A tree, from fifty to sixty feet in luight, with ii trunk eighteen or twenty inches in diameter, but often much smaller toward the northern and Houthern UmitH of its range. During its early yearti the slender horizontal branches form a narrow regidar pyramidal head, which continues to charact rizo this tree when it is crowded by its associates in the forest ; but vhore it can obtain abund^^nt light aad air some of the spcciaUzt.<d upper brunches grow more vigorously than the others and than those below them and sweep out in graceful curves, or often become much contorted and frequently pendulous rad form a broad open head which is sometimes extremely picturesque. The bark of the trunk ia froTi one half to three quarters of an inch in thickness, and separates into thin closely appresscd raiher bright reddish brown scales. The slender leading branehlets ore glabrous in theii first summer and are often covered with a glaucous bloom ; during the following winter they ar? light orange-brown and conspicuous from the small globose dark red lustrous buds ; during their second season they gradually grow darker, and in the third und fourth years become dark brow: t and dingy and begin to lose the spur-like lateral branehlets. The leaves are triangular, rounded abov .ominently keeled on the lower surface, from three quarters of an inch to an inch and n quarter in length and about one thirty-second of an inch in width ; they are bright green and conspicuously stomatiferous when they first expand, which is from the beginning to the end of May, according as the tree grows at the south or at the north, and, gradually becoming darker during the summer, they turn dull yellow in September or October not long before they fall. The staminate flowers are subglobose and sessile, with pale yellow anthers, and are principally borne on branehlets one or two years old. The pistillate iiowurs are oblong and short-stalked, with light rose-colored bracts produced into elongated green tips and nearly orbicular rose-red scales, and usually appear on branehlets from one to three years old. The cones when they are fully grown and begin to open in the autumn are raised on itout incurved stems, and are oblong, rather obtuse, and from one half to three quarters of an inch in length, and are composed of about twenty scales ; these are largest near the middle of the cone, diminishing tofvard its extremities, and are very concave, slightly erose or nearly entire un the margins, semiorbicular but usually rather longer than broad, and about twice as long as their bracts, which are emarginate and furnished at the apex with short niucros ; as the cone enlarges! the scales gradually lose their red color, and when fully grown are light bright chestnut-brown ; growin darker afier their first winter, during which they gradually scatter their seeds, they usually fill dunug their second year, although occiisionally a few cones remain on the branches through another season. The seeds are an eighth of an inch in length, witli a pale coat, and are about one third as long iis the light chestnut-brown wings, which are broadest near the middle and obliquely rounded .at the apex.

From about latitude 58° north, near the coast of Labrador, Larix Americana ranges northwestward nearly to the southern shore of Ungava Bay ; the line which marks the northern limits of its range then extends westward, and, turning toward the south, reaches the shore of Hudson Hay a few miles south of the mouth of the Nastapoka River,' and from a point a little to the northwest of Port Churchill on the western shore of Hudson Bay, in latitude .'>9° north, extends northwestward to the northern shores of Great Bear Lake, from whici! the Larch follows down the valley of the Mackenzie River nearly to latitude (57° liO' north.^ West of the Rocky Mountiiins Lririr Americana ranges westward

' The distribution of Ir.'ii Amenrami i>ast of Hudson I'ay iis - Kiclinrclsoii, I'ratitlin Jour. Appx. No. 7, 752 (ua rinus micro-

liero laid down is partly taken from I>r. Uolwrt Hoh'a tvnpcr on i-ar]>n); Arclir Searching fizped. ii. 'MS.

tlic (foograpliieal distribution of fori'st trees in Canada, first pub- On I'cel Uivcr Portage, a divide between the waters of tlio

lished in the Scolliah Gnffraphical Maijazine, xiii. '28,'). Mackenzie and Yukon Kivcrs, iu latitude 07° 30' north, larix

CONirRK^

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when they

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the south

wt

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enzie River

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^H

CONIFERiB.

81LVA OF NORTU AMERICA.

e

along the Dease River and along the upper Liard and Frances Rivers, and northward nearly to Finlayson Lake, reaching (iS" Sii' north.' Southward it spreads through Canada" and the northern states to northern Pennsylvania,' northern Indiana and Illinois and central Minnesota, and to about latitude HS" north in Alberta on the eastern foothills of the Rocky Mountains.* Of the trees of the subarctic forest of America, Larix Aiaerkana best supports the rigors of the boreal climate, and at the extreme northern limits of the forest is still a little tree rising above its associate, the Black Spruce, which clingH to the ground with nearly prostrate stems. In the interior of I^ibrador," where it is the largest tree, it is surpusscil iii numbers only by the Black Spruce, and grows in all the cold swamps, and in the southern part of the peninsula occurs occasiunally on well-drained benches a few feet above the surface of rivers." It g.ows near the western shore of Hudson Bay with the White Spruce as far north as the mouth of Little Seal River, and northwest up to the very margin of the barren lands, the great rolling grass-covered plains which stretch beyond the subarctic forest to the shores of the Arctic Sea, extending down the T'<lzoa River as far north as Doobaunt Lake and down the Kazan nearly to Yath- kyed Lake, where it .uCains a larger size than its companion, the Black Spruce.^ West of the Rocky Mountains, where it is usually associated with the Black Spruce, it is abundant in cool swamps and on northern slopes ; it is common in swamps in Saskatchewan, through which it crosses from the eastern base of the Itocky Mountains to Manitoba, where it finds the southwestern limit of its range near Carberry, southwei^t of Lake Manitoba," and probably attains its largest size north of Lake Winnipeg on low benches which it occasionally covers with open forests. In the maritime provinces of Canada and in the United States it inhabits cold deep swamps, which it often clothes with forests of closely crowded trees rarely more than forty or fifty feet in height.

The wood of Larix Americana is heavy, hard, very strong, rather coarse-grained, compact, and very durable in contact with the soil ; it is light brown, with thin nearly white sapwood, and contains broad very resinous dark colored bands of summer cells, few obscure resin passages, and numerous hardly distinguishable medullary rays. The specific gravity of the absolutely dry wood is 0.G23G, a cubic foot weighing 38.8G pounds. It is largely used for the upper knees of vessels, for shin timbers, fence-posts, telegraph-poles, and railway-ties.

Although Larix Americana is said to have been cultivated by Philip Miller, in the Physic Garden at Chelsea, as early as 1735," the first account of it appeared in Charlevoix's Ilistoire de la Nuuvelle France, published in 1744.'° It was known, however, much earlier to the European settlers in New England, as Josselyn described its merits soon after the middle of the seventeenth century."

Americana, whivli here grows to a height of six or eight feet, with » trunk an inch in diameter, extends in small open groves ahovo the Spruces and up to elevations of twelve hundred feet ahove the level of the sea. (See McConnell, Rtp. Geohg. Sun: Can. n. aer. iv. 117 D.)

G. M. Dawson, Garden and Foretl, i. 58; Rep. Geohg. Surv. Can. n. ser. iii. pt. i. 112 B; Appx. i. 187 B. Macoun, Hep. Geolog. Surv. Can. n. ser. iii. pt. i. Appx. iii. 2'J6 B.

Larix Americana was not found by Dr. G. M. Dawson on the IVlley and Lewes Kivers, but be suggests that the Larch seen by Dull (.itaska anil i/s /jMourees, 441, C92) on the lower Yukou is probably tliis species, which he thinks may be found to extend from the valley of the Mackenzie nearly to the shores of Behring Sea.

' l'rovan"her, .'We Canadienne, ii. 5G8. Brunet, Cat. Veg. Lig. Can. 59. Macoun, Cat. Can. PI. 475.

Kothrock, Rep. Dept. Agric. Penn. 1895, pt. ii. Div. Forestry, 284.

In Pennsylvania Larix Americana grows sparingly in the coldest parts of PikC; Monroe, Luzerne, and Lackawanna counties, or on the Pocano Plateau and the adjacent regions. It grows in Tama-

rack Swamp in the northern part of Clinton County, and it is said, on doubtful authority, to occur in Somerset County on the high AUegbanies up to ele.ations of three thousand feet above the sea.

The most southern station in Alberta where Larix A mericana has been seen by Mr. John Macoun is in a swamp forty miles south- west of Edmonton.

' On the Labrador coast trees grow in protected valleys at the beads of the inner bays up to latitude 58° north, although the western foothills of the Atlantic coast range are treeless. Two degrees farther south they grow on the coast and high up on the hills ; the headlands and outer hills remain, however, treeless as far south as Hamilton Inlet. (See Low, Rep. Geolog. Surv. Can. n. scr. viii. 31 L.)

Low, I. c. 36.

' Tyrrell, Re/). Geolog. Surv. Can. n. ser. ix. 214 F. ^ Tente John Macoun.

Alton, Ilort. Kew. iii. 369 (Pinus pendula). Loudon, Arb. Brit. iv. 2399.

" Larix Canadensis, longissimo folio, cd. 12"", iv. 371, f. 92.

" "Groundsels made of Larch-tree will never rot, and the

8ILVA OF NORTH AMERICA.

CONirRRA

Uitually an inhai'L<tnt of liimiii Mtturatml with water, htrix Americana, when traimplanted to iiplandH, grows in ^noA iwiil much more rupiiily than it <1ooh in its native swampi, attaining a larger size and more picUiroHquu habit, and uf all the Fiiircii-lroeH which have been tried in the northern statea it lH>Nf -.'.userves attention oh an ornament of iiarks and gardens.

lunger it \j»» tlio hanler it ((rowea, that jnn m*y ulniM

anil ijlo II bur of (mn m vuiljr m into that." (Juueljrii, /in

Aecminl of Two Voyagn lo New Kngland, AH.)

" The turpciuioit that iuuoth rniin tho iH>ncii of the l>aroh-traa (which ciimrii nciin'iit nf any to th« n){ht 'I'liri/ontinn) ii •ingiiliirly guml to heal wuuudi, and to draw out the umliov (or Thorn, »a

ihlmmt phraaea it) of any Aeh rubbing the plaee tberewitb, and ■trowing upon it the powder of .Va^leavea." {ibid. p. 17.)

" I ourrd onoo a detpi^rate llruiie with a Cut upon the Kn«« I'an, witli iin llngent niado with the l^avea of the Utrch Trre, and llogK (ircaao, but the (iuiu ia beat." (Juaael/o, Ntv England KarUiu, IW.)

EXPLANATION OF THE PLATE.

Platr DXCIII. Lahix Amuiicana.

1. A flowering bnnch, natural aite.

2. A ataininate flower, enlarged.

3. An anther, front view, enlarged.

4. An anther, nido view, enlarged. 6. A pistillate IIowit, enlarged.

6. A acalu of n pintilliito flower, upper aide, with it* br«o( and ovale*, enlarged.

7. A fruiting hraneli, natural aize.

8. A cone-«'ul< . lower ■idl^ witli iti bract, natural site.

9. A cone-Kcnle, up|ior aide, with ita aeeda, natural size.

10. Vertical section of u aeed, enlarged.

11. An embryo, enlarged.

12. CroM section of a loaf, magnified fifteen diametcn. l.'l. A wmter brnnchlet, natural Hize.

14. A seedling plant, natural siu.

t

connnm.

implanted tu a lurt;«r Hize Ota Htates it

10 tbarawith, aud

td. p. 07. ) iilMin (hn Knfl* Larck 1'rrr, miil

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vtll,.. (TH il

mul

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rpitiilMK J It •if)^iilirlt

'yon ■• tiM po«ii«r 'il Xii«r-li<iix^ , '*i4, f. 91 , -I >m^' - l<^p*r^i» llruiMi villi a Cut niuM lfc« > iw*

i '•>*» «ilb (ho l^ttM at Ibp Lan-h TVw -I

'"'' •■' it irnti." {Jumttjtt, Ntm Unfttni

I 1 '*.-r, 'I' I

7. A frnitiKK lirwH-b, iHUnr*! iii»

K. A rf*ik<»-«<*itl'', Uiw^r >i*l*'. huIi Kk hr:iri, iiul*ir;il «)f^i.

*> A i-.-'ik-^k' upv^r »i<ln, with ila iicrila, luliirai liu),

to V<irtir«t M<->44iii 'if B iH'cil, BnUrKml.

II. An viuliryo, nnlargnl.

IV. CroM Mclion of •luaf, innKiiiHwl fiftM>n rii«mrU>ni.

13. A trihUr liminhldt, rmtiiritl -\u-

XA. A MM^Ii.i;- |il«nt nalur*! •><•

I.', Willi iM brMi smI »t«im. riiUrKMl.

rilH|fKH.t.

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lll"''Itl Uk- '••

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,v« <i! Itiir'.h AniTi'*

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LARIX AMERICANA, ;.'.;. hx

-■^ JiWit-tii.t iitn\i^

/ffif:, ''. r>ttirur /'iirr.--

CONIFERA

SJIV4 or MOurn ameuwa.

11

LARIX OOOmSNTALIB.

Cones elongated, the soalos nmnorouMi slioftef than their bracts. Young branch- lets soon becoming glabrous. Louve« triHliKiilHri

Lariz oooidentaUa, Nuttall, Sylva, iii. 143, t. Vid ()H4U)> Newberry, Paeifte R. R. Rep. vi. pt. HI. 68, », 94, iJB, = Cooper, Am. Nat. iii. 412. Lyall, Jour, linn, Sw< ¥ii> 143. (Nelson) Senilis, PinaeecB, 91. HuopsK, /?«*»>: greens, 253. Regel, Gm enflora, m, 103, t. «8B, I »-|0 ( Act. Hart. Petrop. i. 158; Beige Uott. «»ii. JOt, fr H, ti 3-5. Gordon, Pinetum, ed. 2, 176.— VeiUill, Man- Oiilli/', 130. Sargent, Forest Treea N. Am. lOth Oentm P, )l, ix. 216 J Gard. CKron. n. ser. xiv. 652, f. 145 i Qiwlm

iintt jfhrMt, ix. 491, £. 71. Mayr, Wold. Nordam. 047. Ltniffion, Rep. California State Board Forestry, III; lOfi (Cone-Bearers of California). Beissner, Handb. Nilihlh. U14, f. 80. Masters, Jour. R. Hort. Soc. xiv. yiN. ttnnsen, Jour. R. Hort. Soc. xiv. 417 (Pinetum IhlHlmm). Koeline, De'Usche Dendr. 25. Leiberg, lliiiifftti. It. a. Nat. Herb. v. 50. Pmm MuUallll, Parlatore, De Candolle Prodr. xvi. pt ii. i\'i (1808).

When it has grown under the moat fitviimhlM i<Mliilil<ioMfl on low moiHt soil, at elevations of between two thousand and three thousand feet abovtt |:)|(i i4*j)^lt>V(>l« the western Larch often rises to the height of two hundred and fifty feet, with a trunk frilll) HJK U) f l^ilt feet in diameter ; on drier soil and exposed mountain slopes it has an average height of xlifnili iiliM liiiliflreil feet, with a trunk two or three feet in diameter. On young trees the remote elungutoil mi\ um\'\)f tioriitontal branches form an open pyramidal head ; usually they soon disappear from the \nv/M' (t((H lit (lie stem, and the full-grown tree is remark- able for its elongated tapering naked trimk, whi(i|l i<i df^iiUfiiitly free of branches for two hundred feet above the ground and is surmounted by a. nhmt DftClOW (t^yiAltildiil head of small branches clothed with scanty foliage,' or occasionally at low altitw(l^i^ tlo (i|0Wli Is Inrf'er, with elongated drooping branches. The bark of young stems is thin, dark-colored, uni\ dimlj/i but when the tree is about one hundred years old the bark changes in character, and, beginnlllg M**ttl' lliw brtse, where on old trunks it is often five or six inches thick, it breaks into irregularly s\m\m\ hI»I(I(ij$ [ilrttes fre(|uently two feet in length and covered with thin closely appressed light einnamoii-PBd mi»]m, TIir lending branchlets are comparatively stout, and when they first appear are covered with mh (ittjp pubescence, which on some trees disappears during the first season and on others uoittiiiiief* Ut CUVWC the shoots until their second year ; they are bright orange-brown in their first year aittl BOllielJIHPS retain this color during a second season, although they more often then begin to assiiMte the (Irtlh ^my-brown color of the older branches and of the lateral branchlets, which, usually short, »ie iWtmUtmWy nearly three quarters of an inch in length. The winter-buds are globose and about an ei(jhMl i)f hii Inch in diameter, their dark chestnut-brown scales being erose and often coated on the niHiyiim willl Umry tomentum. The leaves are triangular, rounded on the back, conspicuously keeleil on )||m IiiWmI' fltirfrtce, rigid, sharp-pointed, from an inch to an inch and three quarters in length, about one Mlicfy-SMCOtMl of an inch in width, and light pale green, turning pale yellow early in the autumn. The Htt»i)iii(rttfi llowers are oblong, with pale yellow anthers,

' The most remarkable fact, perhaps, about this tree is tllS StHltll: ncsa of Icnf surface in comparison with liuiglit and tli|ul(W*<i lit stem, and there Is certainly no other instance among Ihii Ifntm iif the northern hemisphere whore such massive trunks tiM|)|liirt DHcIl small short branches and sparse foliage. It U not, IhurMfMFM, flMf- prising that Larix occidentalis grows slowly after the ImiiA mI jfit lower branches, usually at the end of forty or Hfty yintFH- lilt)

KIWhIiHHH In itl« ifesttp Collection of North American Woods in the A((ll*tlftttl MtlseilMi of Natural History, New York, is eighteen Wi'hf* III fllntiieter inuli" the bark and two hundred and slxty- iil-*Ml ti'ilfs old. At Ihc iigc of fifty ycais the trunk of this tree ^M llllin liiclicn In diameter ; the sapwood, which is half an inch (IllHki limitalnii forty layers of annual growth.

^

ii i

12

SILVA OF NORTH AMERICA.

CONIFEIt£.

and at maturity are raised on stout stalks about an eighth of an inch long. The pistillate flowers are oblong, almost sessile, with nearly orbicular scales, and with bracts which are produced into elongated tips. The cones are oblong, short-stalked, and from an inch to an inch and a half in length, with numerous thin stiff scales which are nearly entire or slightly erose and sometimes a little reflexed on the margins ; they are more or less thickly coated on the lower surface below the middle with hoary tomentum, and after the seeds are scattered stand out at right angles to the axis of the cone or often become reflexed. The seeds are nearly a quarter of an inch long, with a pale brown coat, and are from one half to two thirds the length of the thin and fragile pale wings, which are broadest near the middle and obliquely rounded at the apex.

Scattered on the moist deep soil of bottom-lands through forests of Hemlocks, Firs, and Cotton- woods, and mixed with the Yellow Pine, the Lodge Pole Pine, and the Douglas Spruce on high benches and dry mountain sides, the western Larch grows at elevations of between two thousand and seven thousand feet above the sea-level, usually singly or in small groves. Its home is in the basin of the upper Columbia River, from which it crosses in southern British Columbia to the mountains over- looking the eiistern shores of Shuswap Lake, one of the sources of the south fork of the Thompson, where it flnds the northern limits of its range in latitude 51° north, and is not abundant ; ' in the United States it grows near most of the mountain streams which feed the Columbia, from the western slopes of the continental divide in northern Montana to the eastern slopes of the Cascade Mountains, extending southward to the Blue and Powder River Mountains and the eastern foothills of Mt. Jefferson in Oregon. Of comparatively small size and less generally multiplied northward and south- ward and on the Cascade Mountains, the western Larch is most abundant and attains its largest size on the bottom-lands of the streams which flow into Flat Head Lake in northern Montana, and in northern Idaho, where it is the characteristic and most interesting inhabitant of the great forests that cover this interior region.

The noblest of the Larch-trees, surpassing all others in thickness and height of stem, splendid in massiveness and in the colors of the great plates into which its bark is divided, Larix occidentalis is one of the most valuable timber-trees of the continent, and no other North American coniferous tree produces such hard and heavy wood, well suited for use in furniture of the best quality. The wood is very heavy, exceedingly hard and strong, close-grained, susceptible of receiving a good polish, and very durable in contact with the soil ; it is bright light red, with thin nearly white sapwood, and contains broad dark-colored resinous bands of small summer cells, few obscure resin passtiges, and numerous thin medullary rays ; the specific gravity of the absolutely dvy wood is 0.7407, a cubic foot weighing 46.16 pounds. It is largely used for railway-ties and fence-posts, and is manufactured into lumber used in cabinet-making and the interior finish of buildings. An exudation, which flows abundantly from wounds in the trunk and forms large sheets, has a sweetish taste, and is gathered and eaten by Indians in southern British Columbia."

The earliest notice of Larix occidentalis is in the journal of Lewis and Clark, who, in their entry of .Tune I.'j, 180(), record the occurrence of a Larch-tree in the forests on the upper Clearwater River, which they ascended in crossing the Bitter Root Mountains on their homeward journey.^ In 1827 it was seen near Fort Colville on the upper Columbia by David Douglas, who mistook it for the Larch of Europe,* but to Thomas Nuttall, who found it on the Blue Mountains in 1834, belongs the credit of

* G. M. Dawson, Can. Nat. n. ser. ix. 329. Mucuiin, Cat. Cati. PL 475.

^ This substance, which is (»f a Itrownislt yellow color, somewhat porons, and possesses a nimlerately sweet taste with a terehin- thino flavor, is found !iy Trimble to Ije free from resin and not identical with nielczitose, as might have been expected, its jiliysical properties closely rcsemliliug dextrin. (See Am. Jottr. I'hann. Ixx. W2.)

•' HLitory of the Eip&lition under Command of Lewi.i and Clark-, cd. Coues, iii. 1043, IWiO. Sargent, liurilm and Forest, x. 39.

' Douglas, Companion Bot. Mag. ii. 109.

Of this tree Douglas, in his journal, says ; " 1 measured some thirty feet in circunifereneo ; and several which have been le>eled to the ground by the late storms were one lurulred and forty-fivo feet long, with wo(h1 pj-rfectly clean and strong." If Douglas had realized that he was in the presence of one of the great trees of

CONIFERJE.

CONIFERS.

SILVA OF NORTH AMERICA.

18

ite flowers are into elongated n length, with ttle reflexed on die with hoary ! cone or often t, and are from lear the middle

s, and Cotton- pruce on high thousand and in the basin of lountains over- the Thompson, idant;' in the im the western ide Mountains, lothills of Mt. ird and south- its largest size )ntana, and in eat forests that

first distinguishing this tree. Larix occidentalis was first cultivated in 1881 in the Arnold Arboretum, where it is hardy and produces cones.'

In the struggle for supremacy between the different inhabitants of the Columbian forests under the changed conditions which have followed the white man's occupation of the country, Larix occi- dentalis seems destined to hold its own and probably even to extend its sway, for in this struggle, in which fire now plays a controlling part, it is aided by the great thickness of its bark, which enables half-grown trees to bear without permanent injury the heat of annual fires, and by the power of its abundant seeds to germinate and of its seedlings to grow rapidly in the shade of other trees and in favorable situations often to overtop and finally to destroy them.

the vorld, as remarkable as the Sugar Fine or any of bin other discoveries, the western Larch would not probably have remained one of the least known of the important timber4rees of America. ' Seedling plants of Larix occidentalis, transferred from Oregon

to the Arnold Arboretum in 1881, have remained small and stunted, but branches of these trees grafted on roots of the Japanese Larch have grown vigorously into shapely trees now nearly twenty feet in height and almost twice as Urge as the seedlings.

m, splendid in occidentalis is coniferous tree The wood is lolish, and very I, and contains numerous thin reighing 46.16 umber used in undantly from ten by Indians

, in their entry sarwater River, f.' In 1827 it t for the Larch js the credit of

)/ Lewis and Clark; irf Form, X. 39.

" I nirasurod some 1 have been IcAcled uirod and forty-five ." If Douglas bad i the great trees of

.1

EXPLANATION OF THE PLATE.

Platk DXCIV. Labix occidentalm.

1. A flowering branch, natural size.

2. An anther, side view, enlarged.

3. An anther, rear view, enlarged.

4. An anther, front view, enlarged.

5. A scale of a pistillate flower, upper aide, with its bract and

ovules, enlarged.

6. A fruiting branch, natural size.

7. A cone-bcale, lower side, with its bract, natural size.

8. A cone-scale, upper side, with its seeds, natural size.

9. Vertical section of a seed, enlarged.

10. An embryo, enlarged.

11. Cross section of a leaf, niagnitied fifteen diameters.

12. A winter branchlet, natural size.

13. A seedling plant, natural size.

mfmrmmmmmmm

is*'

m

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r

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rr

2. An xtA- rnUr^txl.

3. A: i-nUryw'l. A A' ■». iiOargwl.

: ttilUte fluirer, upper lid*, wi'.ti ii*

6. A fnitting lir»!it.'h. natural ilw

7. A f<>ni*-«»-ule, lower «idc, witii i^ W«r4 =«nitt**j 'f^ 8 A cotwHMjnIn, upp<>r «!iJ», »■*(• i«t »»<te. nawnU »i««. 9. Vsrtical meiwn of lead, enlttjfiHl

10. An eifiHryi", I'nUijjeil.

11. Crtwii (KKiion of a leaf, magnified fifteen diameten.

12. A winter braoi'tilrt. natural the. 13 A e'V'dliug I'luul. nutural siw.

'J,

I

Silva or North America.

Tab DXC'.V

^ "d cJb

C E Fa.riffi r/t/

itfirifie- J'c^

LARIX OCCIDENTALIS, Ni

A.RixJcreu.c ,itrAV :

Imp.J.l'tifi^uf '\irtj-.

comn&B.

SUVA OF NORTH AMERICA.

u

LABIZ LYALLU.

Tamarack.

Cones elongated, their scales shorter than the bracts. Branchlets tomentose. Leaves tetragonal.

Larix Lyallii, Parlatore, Bnum. Sem. ffort. R»g. Mu*. Flar. 1863 ; Jour. Hot. i. 35 ; Oard. Chron. 1863, 916 ; GaTter\flora, ziii. 244. Lyall, Jour. Linn. Soc. vii. 143.— Henkel & Hoclutetter, Syn. Nadelh. 417. Car- n\tn, Traiti Conif. ed. 2, 361. Hoopea, Evergreent, 266. Regel, OarUnflora, xx. 103, t. 685, f. 11-13; Act. Hart. Petrop. i. 158 ; Beige Hort. xxii. 102, t 9, f. 1-3. Bertram!, Ann. Sci. Nat. »ir. 6, xx. 90. Veitch, Man. Gmtf. 130. Sargent, Forett Trees 2f. Am. lOlh

Cenitu U. S. ix. 216; Oard. Chron. n. ler. xxt. 653,

f. 146; ger. 3, xxiii. 366, f. 136 Mayr, Wald. Nordam,

366. Leminon, Rep. California State Board Foreetry, iii. 109 (Cone-Bearert of California). Beiuiier, Handb, Nadelh. 316, f. 81. Blasten, Jowr. R. Hort. Soe. xiv. 218. Pinus Lyallii, ParUtore, CandoUe Prodr. zvi. pt. ii. 412 (1868).

A tree, usually from forty to fifty and occasionally seventy-five feet in height, with a trunk generally eighteen or twenty inches but sometimes three or four feet in diameter, and remote elongated palmately divided exceedingly tough persistent branches which, developing very irregularly, are sometimes decidedly pendulous and sometimes abruptly ascending at the extremities, one or two being ^equently much longer and stouter than the others, and sometimes twenty feet in length. Until the tree is about fifteen feet high the bark of the slender stem and branches is thin, rather lustrous, smooth and pale gray tinged with yellow ; it is dark brown and broken into loose thin scales on larger stems and on the large branches of old trees, and on fully grown trunks it becomes from one half to three quarters of an inch in thickness, and is slightly divided by shallow fissures ii \o irregularly shaped plates which are covered with thin dark red-brown loosely attached scales. The winter-buds are prombent,and conspicuous from the long white matted hairs which fringe the margins of their scales, and, protruding from between them, often almost entirely cover the bud. The leading branchlets are stout and coated with thick hoary tomentum, which does not entirely disappear until after their second winter ; they then beg^in gradually to grow darker, and sometimes become nearly black at the end of four or five years, when their stout lateral spur-like branchlets have occasionally attained the length of three quarters of an inch. The leaves are tetragonal, rigid, short-pointed, pale blue-green and from an inch to an inch and a half in length. The staminate flowers are oblong and about an eighth of an inch long, wiih pale yellow anthers, and are raised on short stout stalks. The pistillate flowers are ovate- oblong, with dark red or occasionallj pale yellow-green scales and dark purple bracts which are abruptly contracted into elongated slender tips. The cones are ovate, rather acute, and from an inch and a half to nearly two inches in length, and are subsessile or raised on slender peduncles coated with hoary tomentum ; their bracts are dark purple, exserted and very conspicuous, with slender tips much longer than the oblong-obovate thin dark reddish purple or rarely green scales ; these are erose and their margins are fringed with matted white hairs, which are also scattered over their lower surface, being thickest near the middle ; at maturity the scales spread nearly at right angles from the stout axis of the cone, which is densely covered with pale tomentum, and frequently become much reflexed before the falling of the cone, which usually occurs during the first autumn. The seeds are full and rounded on the sides, an eighth of an inch in length and about half as long as their light red lustrous wings, which are broadest near the base, with nearly parallel sides.

Larix Lyallii, which grows only near the timbei^line on mountain slopes between four thousand

16

SILVA OF NORTU AMERICA.

CONirERA.

five hundred and eight thoiuand feet above the level of the Heu, w diiitrihute<l from Houthorn Alberta and the interior of southern Dritiith Columbiu ' Houthward along the CuHvade Mountaiim and through northern Washing^ton to Mt. Stewart, one of their eontern MpurH at the head of a north fork of the Yakima River." In Alberta Lnrix Li/itllii growM on Hteep mountain HlopeH and bencheH, UHiially on those which face the north, either singly or in groves of a few hundred trees, and alone or mixed with the Engelmann Spnice ; on the elevated pliiteau which extends from northern WaHhington into British Columbiit, about the State Creek Pass through the Cuscado Mountains, it is spread at an elevation of about six thousand feet above the sea over undulating gross-covered table-lands with Pinun nlhicmtUa, Ahiea laaiocarjm, and Tmrnja Mirtt'imiaiiti, and on Mt. Stewart it forms a straggling line of scattered trees at the upper limits of tree-growth, or, occasionally clinging to steep sltipes facing the north, it forms small irregular groves at elevations of from five thousand Kve hundred to eight thousand feet above the sea.'

The wood of Lnrir. Lyallii is heavy, hard, close-grained, and bright reddish brown, with thin nearly white sapwood. It contains broad dark resinous bands of small summer cells, few obscure resin passages, and many thin medullary rays. The specifiu gravity of the absolutely dry wood is 0.7077, a cubic foot weighing 44.10 pounds.*

Larif Lyallii was discovered on the Cascade Mountains in 1860 by David Lyall," the surgeon and naturalist of the British Commission which marked the northern boundary of the United States west of the Rocky Mountains. It has not yet been cultivated.

' Maooun, Cat. Can. PI. 470.

' In 1883 Lariz lyallii waa round on Mt. Stewart by Mr. T. .S. Brandrgce, who reported that it aometimea fomied there triinkii four feet in diameter. Thii a much larger than any of the troei I have Men in Alberta, where, although they are often sixty feet in height, the trunks rarely exceed twenty inches in diameter.

* The range of Lariz Lyallii is still very imperfectly known. It is reported hy Mr. John Macoun on a mountain six miles southwest of Morley, Alberta, at the unoiually low altitude of four thou- e ..ad five hundred feet above the sea-level. This is on the eastern slope of the Rocky Mountains, and the most easterly jwint where this tree has been seen. It is very abundant on the mountains near Laggan on the Canadian Paeiflo Railroad, not far from the continental divide, where it grows up to elevations of almost seven thousand feet above the sea; this is the most northerly point at which it has l>een reported. It is, however, so abundant here and of such large size that it probably ranges much farther northward along the Rocky Moimtaina, which are entirely unknown Intani- cally from the line of the Canadian Paciflc Railroad to the Atha- basca Pass, eighty miles to the northward. It might be expected to range along both slopes of the Rocky Mountains south to northern Montana, but, although thia region has been visited by Imtanists, tliere is no record that it does occur there.

* Sargent, Garden and Forat, iii. 35G.

Larii Lyallii grows very slowly. The trunk in the <Teaup Col- lection uf North American Woods in the American Museum of Natural History, l^v\v York, cut by Mr. T. S. Brandegeo on Mt. Stewart, is sixteen and one half inches in diameter inside the bark and five hundred and sixty-two years old. The sapwood is three eighths of an inch in thickness, with thirty-two layers of annual growth.

' David Lyall (.lune 1, 1817 -March 2, 180r>) was lum at Auchinblae, in Kincardineshire, and received a medical cducatiou

at Aberdeen, where he took hia degree, having been previously admitted to the Royal College of Surgeons in Minburgh. After graduating he made a voyage to (trceuland as surgeon to a whaling ship, and, on bis return, entering the Royal Navy in IH30, he was np|Hiinted assistant surgeon of II. M. S. Terror for service under Sir .lames Ross, in his scientific expedition to the antarctic regions. During this voyage, from which Dr. Lyall did not return until 18-12, he devoted much attention to botany, making several impor- tant collections, and discovering in Kergiielen'a Land the plant which waa named for him by his brother ofHcer, the younger Hooker, Lyallia. After returning from the antarctic expedition, Dr. Lyall served in the Mediterranean, and then as surgeon and naturalist on the Acheron, which was detailed to survey the coast of Now Zealand. At this time he discovered the great white- flowered lianunculu* Lyallii, the largest of all the Hiittercupa. In 18,U he was appointed surgeon and naturalist to one of the veasela in the acjuadrou sent under command of Sir E. Belcher in search of Sir .lohii Franklin ; and his collections of ptanta made in the American polar islands at this time added much to the knowledge of the distribution of the arctic flora. In 1858 Dr. Lyall served as surgeon and naturalist to the Boundary Commission under Sir John Hawkins, uccompanyiug it in its survey of the boundary line be- tween British Columbia and the United States from the Gulf of (leorgia to the summit of the Rocky Mountains. An account of his Imtnnical collection made on the boundary, with descriptions uf the various zones of vegetation, wo-s published in the seventh volume of the Jourtial of the Limiaan Society. After his return from North America he wiis on borne duty until 1873, when be was retired. In addition to his paper on the botany of northwest- ern America, Dr. Lyall published, in the twentieth volume of the Proceeditiyn of the Zuiilogii'al Society, a paper on the habits of Strigopt habroptiius, a New Zealand bird. (See Hooker f. Jour. Hot. xxxiii. 200.)

IS

covnv.HM.

lutherii Alborta im and through rth fork of the cheH, tiHually on e ur mixed with tun into British an elevation of 'inun nUncnulis, ine of Hcnttered ing the north, it lit thousand feet

irown, with thin Bw obscure resin ood is 0.7077, a

all," the surgeon e United States

Ting b«en pnTioiialy in Kilinliurgh. After I surgeon to it whaling Navy in 1R30, he was rror for service under

the antarctic regions.

did not return until laking several impor- len's Land the plant

officer, the younger I antarctic ezpedition,

then as surgeon and ed to survey the coast Bred the great white- I the Buttercups. In it to one of the vessels r E. Belcher in search f plants made in the luch to the knowledge [38 Dr. Lyall served as iiission under Sir John the boundary line be- atcs from the Gulf of tains. An account of y, with descriptions of ished in the seventh pty. After his return r until 1873, when be 1 botany of northwest- entieth volume of the per on the habits of (See Hooker f . Jour.

'

EXPLANATION OF TItK PLATR.

PiiATB DXCV. Larix Lyallii.

1. A 6oirsrtng brunch, natural siia.

2. A utaminahi flowpr, I'nliirgnil. 8, A nUnien, front view, enlarKsd.

4. A atanien, aoen from bulow, I'lilarf^ed.

5. A pittillate Hiiwor, natural the.

0. A acale of u pixtilluto lluwer, upper aide, with ita braot and OTulei, enlarged.

7. A fruiting branch, natural aize.

8. A cone^calo, upper aide, with ita acedi, natural iiie. i>. A «eod, enlarged.

10. Vertical Miction of ii seed, enUrged.

11. An embryo, enlarge<l.

12. Croaa lection nf n leaf, magnified fifteen diameten.

#

-<*

#

\

^ (tjp

■.tiTk

i

r SV-i .4 ^

T f. u&turjil »ii« I pwtilUu floveir. ap|wr Me, rntik ito brant itiul viu- n, rulillfflti. . . A fruitirifr bruiiti, natural niu. H A cone-s«;alc-. upper Hide, witli its aeeds, r.Hliir«I site, y. A (weii. enlar;;o(l. 10. Vortical ««ntiiin of a teed, i-iilargcd. It. An «ml>ryii. enlargwi. I'd. Crow scrlictn i>f U^',. ina)i[iniie<[ flfle>'n diitnieu'r*^

I: ;

li |;

Silva of North America.

Tab. DXCV.

f.i.n.n ,M

ll\\<Vf, LYAIJ.ll

A /iiiiiffu,r (/i/'fi/' '

M>/> . / r,.

irit'Uf\ : ,!/i.i^

.!

M

I

t

CONIFEIUK.

SILVA OF NORTH AMERICA.

19

PICEA.

Flowehs solitary, naked, monoecious, the staminate axillary or terminal ; stamens indefinite, anther-cells 2, surmounted by their crested connectives ; pistillate flowers terminal or axillary ; ovules 2, under each scale. Fruit a woody strobile maturing in one season. Leaves angular or flat, spirally disposed.

Ploea, Link, Abhand. Akad. Berl. 1827, 179 (1830).— Engelmann, Trans. St. Louis Acad. ii. 211. Bentham & Hooker, Gen. iii. 439. Eichler, Engler & Prantl, PJtanamfam. ii. pt. i. 77. Masters, Jour. Linn. Soc. XXX. 28.

Abies, Linnffius, Gen. 294 (in part) (1737). —A. L. de Ju»-

sieu. Gen. 414 (in part). D. Don, Lambert Pinus, ill (1837). Pinua, Linnnus, Gen. ed. 5, 434 (in part) (1754). End- licher. Gen. 260 (in part). Meissner, Gen. 352 (in part). Baillon, Hist. PI. xii. 44 (in part).

Pyramidal trees, with tall tapering trunks often strongly buttressed at the base, thin scaly or rarely deeply furrowed bark, soft pale wood containing- numerous resin canals, slender whorled horizontal limbs clothed with pendent often elongated twice or thrice ramified lateral branches, their ultimate divisions stout, glabrous or pubescent, thick roots wide spreading near the surface of the ground, and long flexible tough rootlets. Branch buds usually three, surrounded with numerous more or less developed acicular scales articulate on persistent bases and generally deciduous before the opening of the buds, the two lateral in the axils of upper leaves, and much smaller than the terminal bud, ovate, acute or obtuse, covered by numerous spirally arranged light chestnut-brown accrescent scales acute or rounded and on some species strongly reflexed at the apex, those of the first pair minute, opposite and lateral; outer scales thickening and long persistent at the base of the branchlet, the inner thin, scarious, slightly united into a cup-like cover, deciduous in one piece from the end of the young branchlet.' Leaves spirally disposed, densely packed and appressed in the bud and on the lengthening branchlets into cone-shaped clusters, ultimately extending out from the branch on all sides, or occasionally appearing two-ranked by the twisting of the petioles of those on the lower side, mostly pointing to the end of the branch, frequently somewhat incurved above the middle, acute or acuminate at the apex, with slender callous tips, or rarely obtuse, entire, longer and more slender on sterile branches than on fertile branches and leading shoots, articulate on persistent prominent rhombic ultimate woody bases, dark or light green and lustrous, or blue or bluish green, keeled above and below, tetragonal and stomatiferous with numerous rows of stomata on the four sides, or flattened and stomatiferous only on the upper surface and occasionally also on the lower, containing one or two lateral resin ducts close to the epidermis of the lower side, or destitute of resin ducts, persistent generally for from seven to ten years, deciduous in drying. Flowers appearing in early spring, monoecious," terminal or in the axils of upper leaves on branchlets of the previous year from buds formed during the summer, surrounded at the base by involucres of the numerous enlarged scarious scales of their buds. Staminate flowers oblong, oval or cylindrical, erect, short-stalked or often nodding at maturity on long slender pedicels, composed of numerous spirally arranged yellow or scarlet anthers opening longitudinally, their connectives produced into broad nearly circular toothed crests ; pollen- grains bilobed with lateral air-sacs. Pistillate flowers erect on short stalks, oblong-cylindrical, pale yellow-green or scarlet, composed of numerous rounded or pointed scales usually broader than long, entire or denticulate on the margins, spirally imbricated in many ranks, bearing on their inner face near the biise two inverted collateral ovules, each scale in the axil of an oblong generally acute or acuminate or of a nearly orbicular bract, at first much longer but before the fecundation of the ovules

I

•1:1^

ao

SILVA OF NORTH AMERICA.

CONIFERiE.

usually much shorter than the quickly accrescent scales. Fruits ovoid or oblong-cylindrical pendulous sessile or short-stalked cones maturing in one season, crowded on the topmost branches, or on some species scattered over the upper half of the tree, deciduous during the first winter or persistent on the branch for many years, their scales obovate, rounded above with entire or denticulate margins, or oblong and often more or less narrowed to both ends, with nearly entire, dentate, erose or laciniate margins, much longpr than their bracts, gradually decreasing in size to the two ends of the cone, the upper and lower usually sterile, persistent on the axis of the cone after the escape of the seeds. Seeds geminate, reversed, attached at the base in shallow depressions on the inner face of the cone- scales, ovoid or oblong, full and rounded on the sides, usually acute at the base, in falling bearing away portions of the membranaceous lining of the scale, forming oblong wing-like attachments longer than the seeds, and inclosing them except on their upper side ; testa of two coats, the outer crustaceous, light or dark brown, the inner membranaceous, pale chestnut-brown and lustrous. Embryo axile in conspicuous fleshy albumen ; cotyledons from four to fifteen, and, like the prin-ary leaves, denticulate on the margins.^

Picea, which often forms gfreat forests on boreal plains and high mountain slopes, is widely distributed through the colder and temperate regions of the northern hemisphere, ranging from the Arctic Circle to the high slopes of the southern Appalachian Mountains, and to New Mexico and Arizona in the New World, and in the Old World to central and southeastern Europe, the Caucasus, the Himalayas, and Japan. Sixteen species are now usually recognized, but it is not improbable that a more accurate knowledge of the Spruce-trees of northeastern continental Asia than it is now possible to obtain may increase the number. The forests of North America contain seven species ; of these one species crosses the northern part of the continent from the shores of the Atlantic Ocean to those of Pehring Sea ; another ranges from the east to beyond the Rocky Mountains ; one species is peculiar to the Appalachian Mountain system ; two species belong to the silva of the Rocky Mountains ; another is confined to the northwest coast, and one, probably the least widely distributed of the whole genus, grows only on a few of the high mountains of northern California and southern Oregon. In Japan Picea hicolor* and Picea Torctno^ are scattered, usually singly, through the forests of Beeches and Oaks which cover the mountains of central Hondo. Picea Jezoenaia " ranges from southern Yezo to the coast of Manchuria, and Picea Glehni'' also reaches Yezo from the north. On the temperate Himalayas Picea Smithiana ' forms gfreat forests, and on many of the mountains of Asia Minor and on the Caucasus is replaced by Picea orientalis ; " farther westward Picea Omorika '" represents the genus on the Balkan ranges; and in western Europe Picea Abies" is a common 'itabitant uf mountain forests, and at the north often covers great plains, while in northern Asia its place is takuu by Picea obocata}'- The type is an ancient one, and Spruces very similar to those now living inhabited Europe during the miocene period."

Picea, which contains some of the most valuable timber-trees in the northern hemisphere, produces soft straight-grained pale wood and resinous exudations sometimes used in medicine. Many of the species, which can be easily raised from seeds and generally grow rapidly, are used to decorate the parks and gardens of all northern countries.

Picea is often seriously injured by insects," and is subject to a number of fungal diseases."

Picea, wliich was probably the classical name of the Spruce, was first used by Link as the generic name of the Spruces as the genus is now limited.'^

' Henry, Nov. Act. Cat. Leap. xii. 97, t. 13.

' Androgynous flowers of Picea Ahien have been noticed by Masters ( Vrqetahle Teratohrftjt 192), ami a similar piienonienon has been founil by .J. G, ,Iack on two |ilaiit3 of Picea Camuleruit. (See Garden and Foreil, viii. 222, f. 3.1, 1.)

' The species of Picea with tetragonal and with flat leavoa may

bo grouped in two sections, as suggested by Engclmann (Gard. Chrnn. n. sor. xi. 331 [1879]), and by Willkomm (Forsl. Fi. eci. 2, 00 [1887]) :

KijpicRA. Leaves tetragonal, stomatifcrous on all sides.

Omorika. Leaves flattened, usually stomatifcroua ouly on the upper side.

CONIFERJE.

CONIFERiE.

SILVA OF NORTU AMmWA.

21

idrical pendulous ches, or on some or persistent on ulate margins, or irose or laciniate ids of the cone, ipe of the seeds, [ace of the cone- ing bearing away lents longer than uter crustaceous, Embryo axile in saves, denticulate

slopes, is widely ang^ng from the New Mexico and pe, the Caucasus, ; improbable that than it is now n seven species ; i Atlantic Ocean ains ; one species /a of the Rocky videly distributed lia and southern ^ly, through the ezoenais'^ ranges > from the north. >f the mountains Picea Omorika '"

" is a common lorthern Asia its

similar to those

isphere, produces

Many of the

to decorate the

liseases."

k as the generic

ly Engclmann (Gard. amm (Forsl. Fi. cu. 2,

rous on all sides. mati(crous oul; on the

* Picea bicolor, Jiayr. Mmog. Abiel. Jap. 49, t. 3, f. 8 (1890).

Abies Akoquiana, Lindley, Gard. Chron. 1861, 23 (in part).— K. Koch, Dcndr. ii. pt. ii. 240 (in part).

Ahics bicolor, Maximowicz, Bull. Acad. Sci. St. Pilersbourg, x. 488 {Mil. Biol. vi. 24) (1860). Franchet & Savatier, Enum. PI. Jap. i. 407.

Picea Ahockiana, Carriftro, Trae Conif. ed. 2, 343 (1867.) Masters, Gard. Chron. n. ser. Tii. 212, f. 41, 43 ; Jour. Linn. Soc. xviii. 508, f. 7-9 (Conifers of Japan). Ilenuingii, Gartenjlora, xixviii. 216, f. 40.

Pinus Alcoijuiana, Parlatoru, De Candolle Prodr. xvi. pt. ii. 417 (1868).

Abies Alcockiana, Gordon, Pinelum, ed. 2, 4 (not Lindloy) (187.5).

Picea bicolor, which is probably rare and not widely distributed, is a tree seldom more than seventy or eighty feet in height, with u trunk sometimes two feet in diameter, tetragonal leaves, and stout cones five or six inches in length, with thin rounded scales which are slightly denticulate on the margins and become reflexed at maturity. It appearn to exist in Ao'erioan gardens only in a very young state, and to be exceedingly rare in Europe. In the mountains of Japan the old trees with their feeble branches and sparse t'uliage possess little beauty.

» Picea Torano, Koehne, Deutsche Dendr. 22 (1893).

1 Pinus Abies, Thnnbcrg, Fl. Jap. 275 (not Linnreus) (1784). t Pinus Thunbergii, Lambert, Pinus, ii. Preface, p. v. (1824). Abies Torano, Siebold, Verhand. Batau. Genoot. Konat. Wet. x>i. 12 (1830). K. Koch, I. c. 233.

f Abies Thunbergii, Lindley, Penny Cgcl. i. 34 (1833). Abies polila, Siebold & Zuccarini, Fl. Jap. ii. 20, t. Ill (1842). Miquel, ,4nn. Mus. Bot. Lugd. Bat. iii. 167 (Prol. Fl. Jap.). Franchet & Savatier, I. c. 406. Gordon, I. c. 16.

Pinus polita, Antoine, Conif. 95, t. 36, f. 1 (1840-47). End- lichcr, Syn. Conif. 121. Parlatoro, I. c.

Picea polita, CanilsTe, Traile Conif. 266 (1856). Bertrand, i4nn. Sci. Nat. sdr. 6, xx. 85. Masters, Gard. Chron. n. ser. xiii. 233, f. 44 ; Jour. Linn. Soc. xviii. 507 (Conifers of Japan). Mayr, /. c. 46, t. 3, f. 7. Beissner, Handb. Nadelh. 380, f. 102.

Abies Smithiana, Gordon, Pineium, 12 (in part) (not Loudon) (1838).

On the Nikko Mountains Pima Torano is a stunted tree thirty or forty feet in height, with a thin top and short ragged branches ; it is distinguished by its stout rigid falcate tetragonal sharp-pointed yellow-green leaves, and by its broadly ovate cones from four to six inches in length, with rounded scales thin, entire or slightly flinbriuted on the margins. Ugly and unattractive in its nativo forests, Picea Torano is one of the hardiest of the Asiatic Spruce- trees in the gardens of the United States and England, into which it was introduced thirty or forty years ago, and in which, still retaining the dense habit and the shapely form of youth, it pro- duces cones abundantly every season.

Picea Jezoemii, Cnrriire, I.e. 255 (1855) Beissner, I. c. 389.

Abies Jezoensis, Siebold & Zuccarini, I. c. t. 110 (1842).

Miqnel, /. c.

Pinus Jezoensis, Antoine, I. c. 97, t. 37, f. 1 (1840-47). End- lichiT, i. c. 120.

Abies Ajanensis, Lindley & Gordon, Jour. Horl. Soc. Land, v. 212 (1850). Miiximowicz, Bull. Phys. Math. Acad. Sci. St. Pctersbourg, xv. 436 (Bdume wid Struucher des .-imurlands).

Picea .Ijanensin, Trautvettcr & Meyer, Middendorff Ilcise, i. pt. ii. 87, t. 22-24 (Fl. Ochot.) (1850). Cairiiire, /. c. 259.

Kegel & Tilling, /^// Ajm, 110<— Maxlmowicx, Mim. Sav. £tr. Acad. Sci. St. I'itmlmfU, i». B«l (I'rlm. Fl. /Imur.). Kegel, Ulm. Acad. *:|. A(, Plfmlimtfg, nft. 7, ir. No. 4, 138 (Tent. Fl. f/Mur.). MaslufK, l/fli-il, I'hfim. «. ser. lili. 115, f. 22; xiv. 427, f. 80-84, ser. ,1, ii), ffi, f. W j Jim. Linn. Sec. xviii. 608, f. 8-10 (Conifers nf Japim), ~'\'mtUM«t, Ait. Hort. Pelrop. ix. 212 (Incremeula Fl. //«»*)== ((cHKlhfjl, /. c. Mayr, /. r. 53, t. 4,

f. 10. - BeiMHCf, /. ,.■; fwft, I m,

Picea Ajammii, a llmulliil, 'ffdMltelter St Meyer, I. c. (1866). Picea Ajmmm, g mftilllfl/tfflmi, trautvetter & Meyer, I. e. (l&m).

Abiei mitmapenim, (iUt4\*jf, Olifit. Chron. 1861, 22.— Gordon, Pinelum, Sgppl. \%~^, MiiffHf, Prnc. II. Hort. Soc. ii. 429, f. lU-U8j The Pines mill hfn iifjilpan, 69, f. 129-136.

Abies Alaiipmnil, (/jll/tlcj'i /, (•. (861, 23 (in part). A. Mur- ray, Priic. H. Ihrl: /lm>: ii. m, I. W9-110 j The Pines and Firs of Japan, 06, f. 1 («-»!» =(iW(i(*, /. i: 8.

Picea micrnspmui, W»fH*fe, TtaM Conif. ed. 2, 339 (1867). Pinus Mmiifilii, I'ifldtef*, t, g. 418 (In part) (not D. Don) (1 .). Piiiua Japmiim, P»Fl»(«fp, /. c, (1868).

Ahics Silcheiiiis, B.- Umb, L if. Ii. pt. ii. 247 (in part) (not Lindley &Oot«J«»)(l»f»),

Abies Afemiesii, VfrnHitiel A Satatier, /. e. 467 (not Lindley) (1875).

Piiea Ajimentis, nnf: mii^utpetiiia, Masters, Gard. Chron. n. ser. xiii. 116 (imt)i ,finif. Lltni. Soc. xviii. 609 (Conifers of Japan).

Abies Ajaneim, v»jr.- mil^mperma, Veitcb, Man. Conif. 66 (1881).

Tsugn .ijoneim, B^f^l, Huiill: tJeiidr. ed. 2. pt. i. 39 (1882). Picea llimilmms, M»j/f, /. (;. 61, i. 4, f. 9 (1890). Picea JezotiLiis U » ifm tfuin eighty to one hundred feet in height, with sleitAvf UflHlvim, lint leaves dark green and lustrous below and silvery wllji^ »)«/♦«, nmi slender cones from two to four inches in length, wit)) imifn llf ksn pointed laciniately cut scales. It bears a strong siipFlicliil ws^mjrfanee to Picea Sitchensis of the northwest uoast uf Ndfill AmcMeft, Utltn which it, however, differs in its Matter and gmwfliUl/ hlilliM testes and in the minute sub- orbiinlar bract* of ^fia iiiiim^^imki:

This is the cumilUllt f»flK(C#4C»e of Yezo, where, on low rocky hills, it is scattuFuiJ Ml>'»llt$ll tlw tutesla of deciduous-leaved trees, either singly or m S»/*ll pwcsj und In the western part of the island forms forestK mi nmmpi/ gfmlliU not much above the level of the ocean. It is n\m iwmmm im Raghalin and the coast of Man- churia, where it is mii tit gfim ih enlehsive forests.

Picea Jeznemis is Huimlly m\M American and English gar- dens Picea Alroi/viimn, mw <rf the syiionyms of Picea bicolor; in the eastern Uiiitaij Staf^ii, wlww there are eone-bearing specimens from wWciity-tivB U> Uli'tC fc(<l lit helghl, it has proved very hardy and one of tbn IlKWt l«<*«(!f«l ut (lie exotic Spruces, especially in early spring, wlwii it imf im (jisdilgliished by the bright scarlet color of ;iie youipg \u)ti/^t 4«h|,|| (fipy fl^st emerge from the buds.

' Picea aiehni, MimMFii, (kfil: Chrim. n. ser. xiii. 300, f. 54 (1880); Jour. I.iim- Hw, %m filij, f. 18 (Conifers of Japan); Jour. R. Hort Sc: xiv. mi Mnjif, /. c. «), t. 4, f. 11. Beissner, ;. e. 377.

.■I*i>« aienhi, Vf, MimVH, HHitl. Aeml. Sci. Si. Pitersbourg, srfr. 7, xii. 17li, t. 4, f. «-|!J ( W, l^iiiMHilin.'i.i) (1808). —Veitcb, I. c. 80. Little is known ,if Mli<> ifPC, miihil Was discovered on the island of Siighulin, and viUMl gfllWK, (ll<HI( ut n few points near the south- ern coast ot ¥b8*.. ii i# tUmtif felated to the Siberian Picea

I

w

SUVA OF NORTH AMERICA.

CONIFEIMC.

ohnvat'i, of which it ia, perhiipn, only an eitronio form. A largo nnii'U'r of seedlings have been raised in the Arnold Arboretum, but they are Rtill too young to show whether this tree is likely to flourish in the eoatorn United States.

Pirm Smithiana, Boissier, Fi. Orient, v. 700 (1884).

Pinus Smithiana, Wallioh. Pi Aitiat, Har. iii. 24, t. 246 (183o)._l). Don, Lamhert Pinits, iii. t. Antoine, Conif. 95, t. 30 bis. PiirlntoiT, De VandoUe Prtxlr. xvi. pt. ii. 410.

Abien Smithiana, Lindley, Penny Cycl. i. .'11, f. (18;W). Lou- don. Arh. lirit. iv. *j:n7, f. li'A'O. Forbes, Pineliun Wohurti. 103, t. ;W3. Madden, Jour. Afjric and llort. Soc. Ind. iv. pt. iv. Ii30 ; vii. pt. iv. 87. Gordon, Pinetum, I'J. Ch'gliorn, Jour. Agric. and llort. Soc. Ifid. liv. pt. ii. 'JOO, t. r> (^Pincs of the. North- west Himalayan). Herder, Bull. Soc, Nat. Mmc. xU. 423. K. KiK-h, Dendr. ii. pt. ii. 232.

Abies ^nnuliaat Griflith, //in. i. 14u (1848); Icon. PI. Asiat. t. 303.

Pinus Khutrow, Royle, III. 353, t. 84, f. 1 (1839). Antoine, /. c. 94, t. 30, f. 2.— Endlicher, Syn. Conif. V.'.2.

Picea Morinda, Link, Linnaa, xv. 5'^2 (1841). Carridrc, Traite Conif . ed. 2, 340. Hooker f. FL Brit. Ind. v. 653.— Bei.HHner, Uandb. Nadelh. 'MX

Abie!t Khilrow, Lou-Ion, /iuryr/. Trrr.i, 1032, f. 1951 (1842).— Lindiey & (iordon, Jour. llort. Soc. Lond. v. 21.

Picea Khutrow, Carri^ro, 7'raite Conif. 258 (1855). Ber- trand, Ann. Set. Nat. s6r. 5, xx. 85.

Abies Moriuda, (Nelson) ScnilJN, Pinacea, 49 (1860). Picea Smithiana ia a tree From or .ndred to one hundred and twenty or ueuasionally one hundred tifty feet in height, with a

trunk often four or Ove and oceiusionally seven feet in diameter, pale scaly hark, wide-spreading branches, long pendulous branehlets, slender four-sided pale green leaves, and cylindrical obtuse eones frotn four to six inches in length, with thin br -'ily ubuvate, rounded usually entire .scalt-s euueute at tite haj^e. The Ilimalaynu Sjiruee is geuenilly found on northern un<l western slopes bi'tweeu elcvatioub of .six thousand and eleven thousand feet above the sea-level, grow- ing rarely in pure forests, but most commonly mixed with deciduous- leaved trees and with Cedrus Ikodara, Pinus NejMxlensis, and Abiea Wehbiana ; it is distributed from Afghanistan to Sikkim and Hho- tan, where it is found only in the valleys at elevations of from seven thousand eight hundred to ten thunsaud feet.

The wood of Picffu Smilhiatta, which is ni>t durable, is used for paeking-e;uses and the iuteriur fitiish iif buildings, and occasionally for shingles ((ramble, Man. Indian Timheri*, 407). The bark is employed for the roofs of huts and water-troughs, and the branches for fodder and miunire. In northwestern India the young cones are used in medicine. (.See Brandts, Forest Fl. Brit. Ind. 525.)

Picea Smithiana wa8 introduced into Scotland in 181H, and has proved a hardy, fa.st-growing, and desirable iirnauiental tree in the countries of temperate Kurope. (See Mitstcrs, (rard. Chron. n. ser. xxiv. 393, f. 85. Webster, Tram. Scotlinh Arhoricultttral Snt\ x\. 57. Dunn, Jour. Ii. florl. Sor. xiv. H5.)

In the middle Atlantic states, where the largest plants are still small (see Harden and Forest, vi. 458), and in (.'aHfornia, tb" Hima- layan Spruce has proved hardy, but it has not suceecaed in New England.

Pirea itrifnlalis, Carri^re, I. c. 24-1 (18.55). TehihatchefT, A.^ie Minenre, ii. 495 (exel. hab. northern Kussia, Siberia, and the Ku- rilc Lslands). Boissier, /. c. Masters, /. c. xxv. 333, f. 02; ser. 3, iii. 751, f. 101. Beissncr, /. r. 371, f. 100.

Pinus orientalis, liinnieus, A/^f^r. ed. 2, 1421 (1703). LamU rt, Pinwt, i. 45, t. 29, f. a. Marsehall von BiuLwrstein. hi. 7'aur.-

Cauc. ii. 409. Htovcn, Bull. Soc. Nat. Mosc. xi. 48; Ann. Set.

Nat. Hdr. 2, xi. 57. Antoine, /. r. 89. t. 35, f. 1. Endlicher,

/. c. 116. Lodooour, Ft. Boss, iii. 671 (in part). K. Koch,

tinnfta, xxii. 296. TurczHninow, Ft. Baicater^ni'Dahurica, ii.

139. Christ, Verhand. Nat. Gesell. Basel, iii. 540 (Ueberxieht

der Europiiischefi Abietineen). Parlatore, /. c. 414.

Abies orientalis, Poiret, Lamarck Diet. vi. 518 (18(V4). Lind-

loy, /. r. .laubert & Spach, /'/. Orient, i. 30, t. 14. K. Koeh,

Dendr. ii. pt. ii. 239. Pinus ohomta, 'Vurcz&miww, Bull. Soc. Nat. Mosc. xi. 101 {Cat.

PI. Jiairal.) (1838).

A tree, freipiently one hundred and fifty feet in height, with a trunk often four feet in dianu'ter, Picea orientalut forms extensive forest.1 up to elevations of six or seven thousand feet above the sea. It is distinguished by its narrow pynimidal crown of slender limbs, which sweep upward in graceful curves and are clothed with short rigid lateral branches, by its short dark green and lustrous tetra- gonal leaves closely pressed against the T^ubescent branehlets, which therefore appear unusually slender, ami by its narrow i:}Iii;drieal ncuto cones fn>m two to three inches in length, with broad rounded scales thin and entire on the margins.

Pirea orientalis was introduced into the gardens of western Kuro|>e in 182.5, and for at least tUty years it hit inhabited those of the eastern United States, where it has proved itself periectly hardy as far north as eastern Massachusetts and one of the most beautiful and desirable of ail the exotic conifers which have been well tested hero.

A dwarf form and one with yellow leaves arc occasionally culti- vated in European collections (Bcissner, /. r. 370).

*" Picea Otnorika, Bolie, Mounts. Beford. Gartenb. Preuss, Statt. 1877, 124, ir>H (/>!> Omorica-Fichte) (1877). Purkyne, Osterr. Monats. For.>sln: 1877, +10. A. Hraun, .SV/z. /^rf. Ver. Prov. Bran- f/fM/>ur*7, 1877, 16. Reicbcnbach f. B< (. Xeit. xxxv. 118. Will- komm, Cent. Gesell. Forst. 1877, 305 i Kin neuer NadelhoUbaum Europas); For.tt. Fl. ed. 2, 99; Wien HI. Gart.-Zeit. 1885,494.— Carriftre, Rev. llmt. 1877, 2.';9. l». Aseherson & A. Kanetz, Cat. 7. Boissier, /. r. 701. Ma.sters, /. c. vii. 470, 620; xxi. 308, f. 50, 58; Jour. Linn. Soc. xxii. 203, t. 8; Jour. II. llort. Soc. xiv. 223.— Hornmiiller, Onterr. Bot. Zeit. xxxvii. 398. P. Aseherson, Oaterr. Bot. Zeit. xxxviii. 34. Stein, GnrteujUmi, xxxvi. 13, t. 4, 5. Wettstein, Sitz. Math.-uat. Ahtd. IVi.ss. Wien, xeix. pt. i. 503, t. 1-5. Beissncr, /. c. ;W2, f. 109. Koehne, Deutsche Dendr. 20, f. 8, N. Hempel & Wilhelm, Bdume und StrAucher, i. 82, f. 41, 42.

Pinus Omorika, Panci^, Fine ucue Conifere in den Ostlichen

Alpcn, 4 (1870).

Abies Omorilra, Nyman, Conspecl. Fl. Europ. 073 (1881); Suppl.

ii. 283.

Picea Omorika, which forms great forests and is probably gen- erally distributed at high elevations over all the region between the Adriatic and the Black Sea, is described as a lofty tree with short branches which form a narrow crown, red-brown bark sepa- rating freely in large thin scales, usually ttat obtuse or acute leaves, dark green and lustrous below, and silvery white above from the numerous hands of stumata on each sidu of the promuicnt midrib, and oblong-oval cones at first horizontal and finally j)endent, about two inches in length, violet-ccdored while young and ultimately red- dish brown and lustrous, with thin rounded striate ficates slightly and irrt'gu'arly di > tieulate on the margins.

Although one <(f the largest and most valuable timber-trees of Europe, and particularly interesting in its relationship to a species of the coaAt of northeasiem Asia and to the two species peculiar

CONIFEIl*,.

MoK. xi. 48; Ann. Sci. , t. STi, f. 1. Kndllcber, ft (ill imrt). K. Koch,

llairalmxi-Dnhurim, ii. lasel, iii. r>40 (Uebertirhl re, /. c, 414.

'. vi. 518(1801). IJnd- f. i. 30, t. 14. K. Koch,

Nal. Afoar. xi. 101 (ru/,

fty feet in licight, with » orienlalia funii« extensive ousnnd feet nbove the Aea. Ill erown of slender liinhs, ind lire elotheil with short green and lustrous tetni- iliesccnt brnnelilets, wliieh by its nurrow c^Iliidrienl iugth, with broad rounded

jfnrdcns of western Kiirop -)<) inlitibited those of the ved itself perfectly hnnly ) one of the most iH'aiitif ill Uch have been well tested

ves arc occasionally culti- /. c. 370).

iirrf. Gartenb. Preuft. Stn:i. 1877). I'lirkyne, O.ilerr. Silz. But. Ver. I'rov. Jinm- . y.eit. XXXV. 118. Will- Bin neuer Nadelhohbaum 1.1. Clart.-Xeit. 188,'), 494. •herson & A. Knnctz, Cat. : vii. 470, G'lQ ; xxi. JMW, 8; Jour. II. Ilort. Soc. xiv. ;xvii. 398. P. Aschcrson, 'itrleiijlora, xxxvl. 13, t. 4, Wi.1.1. Wim, xeix. pt. i. TiOT, [oeline, Deutsche Deiiftr. 20, le und Striiucher, i. 82, f.

Coni/ere in ikn d»tUrkeii

.Euro;). 073 (1881); Snppl.

jrests and is probably geii- vcr nil the region between icribed na n lofty tree with own, red-brown bark sepn- Ihit obtuse or neute leuve.'i, Ivery white alMive from the lo of the proniMient midril), 1 and liiinlly pemleiil, about e young and iiltimutely red- iidcd striate scales slightly ^iiis.

ost valuable tlinbir-trees of its relationship to a species to the two sjiccies peculiar

CONIFBILS.

SILVA OF NORTH AMERICA.

23

to the northwest coast of North America, Picea Omorika escaped the attention of botanists until comparatively recnt years, but under the name of Umorika it has iong been a familiar tree to the inhabitants of the region -vhere it grows.

In 1881 Picea Omorika was raised from seeds in the Arnold Arboretum, where it has proved hardy and has grown rapidly, promising to attain a largo size; it also Hourishes in Great Britain {Uard. Citron, ser. 3, xxi. 153, f. 14). " Picea Abies, Karsten, Pharm.-nud. Bot. 324, f. 165 (1881).

fiiim Abies, LinniBus, Spec. 1002 (1763). I.«inbert, finiM, i. 87, t. 25. Wahlcnberg, Fl. Lapp. 256; Ft. Ups. 320. - Antoine, Com/. 90, t. 3<j, f. 2. Endlioher, Syn. Com/. 117. Ledebour, Fl. Has. iii. 070. Koch, Syn. Fl. German, ed. 3, 578.

Abies Picea, Miller, Diet. ed. 8, No. 3 (1768). Spocb, Hut. Veij. xi 405. Pinus Abies Picea, Muenchhaiisen, Hausv. v. 223 (1770). Piwis Picea, l)u Itoi, Obs. Bot. 37 (not Linnieus) (1771) ; Harbk. lliiumz. ii. 110. Brotero, Hist. Nat. Pinheiro.; Laricts e Abelos, 30. Kcichcnbaeh, Icon. Fl. German, xi. 4, t. 532 (/16i« exceba on plate). Christ, Verhand. Nat. Gesell. Basel, iii. 645 (Uebersicht der Europtiischm Abietimen). Parlatore, .R. /tai. iv. 62; De CaniloUe Prodr. xvi. pt. ii. 415.

Pinus ezcelsa, Lamarck, Fl. Franf. ii. 202 (1778). Salisbury, Trans. Linn. Soc. viii. 314. Abies pcctinata, Gilibert, Exercit. Phyt. ii. 411 (1792). Pinus cinerea, Borkhauscn, Furslbot. i. 398 (1800). Roebliog, Deulschl. Fl. ed. 2, 619.

A bits exceha, De Candolle, Lamarck Fl. Franf. ed. 3, iii. 275 (1805). Poiret, Lamarck Diet. vi. 518. Nouveau Duhamel, V. 289, t. 80. Richard, Comm. Bot. Conif. 69, t. 14, f. 2, 15. Lindlcy, Penny Cycl. i. 31, f. Schouw, Ann. Sci, Nat. sir. 3, .ii. 239 (Coniferes d'Ualie). lUrlig, Forst. CuUurpft. Deutschl. 17, t. 1. Fiscal!, Deulsch. Forstcull.-Pfl. 23, t. 1, t. 13-20.— Gordon, Pinetum, 3. Willkomra & Lange, Prodr. /7. Hvtpan. i. 17. K. Koch, Deiidr. ii. pt. ii. 234. Colmeiro, Enum. PI. Hutpano-Lusitana, iv. 709.

Picea vulgaris. Link, Abhand. Akad. Berl. 1827, 180 (1830).— Herder, Bot. Jahrb. xiv. 160 (Fl. Europ. Russlands).

Picea excelsa. Link, Linnaa, xv. 517 (1841). Carriftre, Traite Conif. 245. Bertrand, Ann. Sci. Nat. sJr. 5, xx. 86. Beiss- ner, Handb. Nadelh. 351. Henipel & Wilhelm, Bdume und Striiucher, i. 58, f. 28^0, t. 1.

Picea montana, Schur, Verh. Seibenb. Ver. Naturw. ii. 1C9 (1851). One of the loftiest of the trees of Europe, the typo of the genus and its best known representative, Picea Abies frequently attains a height of one hundred and twenty and occasionally of one hundred and fifty feet, with a trunk from four to six feet in diameter and wide-spreading lower branches which even old trees do not lose unless crowded in the forest, and which, sweeping over the surface of tlie ground in graceful upward curves, occasionally develop roots in moist soil r '. send up secondary stems, forming small groves arounil the parent tree. (See M'Nab, Card. Mag. xiii. 249, f. 87- 92. Sehlibeler, Virid. Norveg. i. 416, f. 73-77. Christ, Garden and Forest, ix. 252.) The European Spruce is distinguished by its d::rk green lustrous sharp-pointed tetragonal Icnves rarely more tliiiii an inch in length, yellow staniinato flowers more or leas tinged with rod, obtuse bright scarlet pistillate flowers, and cylin- drical pointed cones which when fully grown are pale green or green shaded with red, especially on the side exposed to the light, and at maturity are from five to seven inches in Ic'igth and from an inch and a half to two inches thick, with rhomboidol incurved scales irregularly toothed at the apex.

Picea A bies is distributed from about latitude 07° north in Nor- way and 68° 15' in western Russia, southward to the Pyrenees, the Maritime Alps, the Euganian Hills in Lombardy, and Cc'ntral Rus- sia. Most abundant in Scandinavia, where at tliu north it grows at the sea-level, und in northern Germany, it also often forms exten- sive forests on the mountains of central Europe, which it frequently ascends to altitudes of six or seven thousand feet, but docs not grow spontaneously in Denmark, Holland, Belgium, western France, or in Great Britain, Turkey, or southern Russia.

The wood of Picea Abies, known in England as white deal, is light, tough, elastic, moro or less durable according to the soil on which it has grown, lustrous, and pale reddish or yellowish white, with straight even grain and few resin ducts ; it is employed in large quantities in construction and the interior finish of buildings, and for fuel. Its homogencunsness of structun vith its thin medullary rays, makes it especially valuable for tin transmission of sonorous vibrations, and in Europe it is almost ex. isivly used in the manufacture of pianos, violins, and other musical instru- ments, the best wood for this purpose being obtained from old trees which have grown slowly at high elevations. It is also largely used in the manufacture of matches and for paper pulp. (See Mathieu, Fl. Forestiire, ed. 3, 471.)

From the resinous exudations of Picea Abies Burgundy Pitch is produced. This is an astringent opaque yellow-brown hard and brittle substance with an agreeable aromatic odor, and is obtained by making in the stem numerous perpendicular incisions about an inch and a half in width and depth in which the resin collects. From time to time thin is scraped off with an iron instrument and is purified by being melted with steam or in hot water aiid strained. Burgundy Pitch, which was well known in England three centu- ries and a half ago (see Parkinson, Theatr. 1642), and was in- cluded in the London Pharinacopinia of 1677, is used as a mild stimulant in the preparation of medical plasters, and in Germany, mixed with colophony or gallipot, is employed to line beer-casks. The wounding of the trees to obtain their resinous product lias been shown, however, to bo injurious to the timber, and it is no longer permitted in the German state forests ; and Burgundy Pitch is now largely replaced in commerce by artificial compounds, the one most frequently sold being made by melting colophony with Palm-oil or some other fat, opaqueness being obtained by stirring with water. (See Loudon, Arb. Brit. iv. 2307. Guibourt, Hist. Drag. ed. 7, ii. 256. FlUckiger & Hniibury, Pharmacopoeia, 666. Bcntlcy & Trimeii, Med. PI. iv. 261, t. 261. Spons, Ency- clopaedia of ihe Industrial Arts, Manufacturer, nnd Haw Commercial Products, ii. 1679. U. S. Dispens. ed. 16, 1172. Baatin & Trim- ble, Am. Joum. Pharm. Ixviii. 418.)

The bark of Picea Abies is occasionally employe:! in tanning leather ' 'n Scandinavia the young shouts are someti:nes used for the winter fodder of cattle and sheep ; baskets are made from the inner bark ; and from the long slender flexible roots, which aro first split and boiled, strong cords arc twisted. (See Loudon, {. c. 2304.)

In the extreme northern portions of the Scandinavian peninsula, in Finland and northern Russia, the Spruce, which there rarely exceeds thirty feet in height, is distinguished from the tree of more southern countries, with which it appears to be connected by intermediate forms, by its shorter, thicker, and moro rigid and obtuse leaves, conspicuously marked by four white stomatiferous bands, and by its short cones with thin scales rounded and entire on the margins. This is Picea Abies medioxima, Abies orientalis, Fri. , Bot. Notiser, 1867, 174 ; 1868, 61, 199

(not Poiret).

f

24

81LVA OF NORTH AMERICA.

CONIFEUiR,

Pinta Ahitf, ru. nediozimo, Nylaoder, Bull. Soe. Rot. Franet,

X. not (1853). Abia ezcelna, v»r. medioiima, Iliaengor, Bot. Nulufr, 1807,49, t. Abiei medioiima, Lamon, Pinttum Brit. ii. 150, f. 1-10

(1870). Piniu Pieen medioiima, Chri»t, Flore de la S,M>e, i!54 (1883). Picra eiceUn, e mediiiiima, Willlianmi, FutbI. Fl. ed. 2, 7fi

(1887). Beiunor, Ilandh. Nadelh. 3D6. Kochno, DeriUche

lieniir. 'JJl.

The sAiiio fiirm ocouin in moro or less isolated clumps nt high elevations on the oontnU ranges ot the Swiss Alps, where it is believed to have eiistcd since the glacial period, and, with its northern prototype, to indicate the close relationship Iwtween the Spruce of Kuro(>o and the Siberian Picea obovata. (See Dammcr, Uard. Chron. ser. 3, iv. 479. Christ, (lardm and For,.tl, ix. 273.)

The tendency uf Picea Abiet to depart from its normal form is also shown by a number of curious varieties. Some of these are due to climatic inlluonces and others to seminal variation. Of the former the most distinct are the small columnar trees with short tufted branches, stunted probably by the short summers and severe winters of northern Scainlinavia and Finland, where individuals with this habit arc not uncommon (see Schlibeler, Virid. Normj. i. 406, f. 00, 08. Christ, /. c), and the numerous bushy plants dwarfed by cold which often grow near the timber lino un the high mountains uf central Kuro[^Q, (See Hrugg, Oarletijtora, xxxvi. 340. Beissner, I. e. 357.)

The most curious and remarkable seminal forma of Picea Abien are the so-called Snake Spruces, with long slender reroot4* and usu- ally pendulous branches nearly destitute of lateral branchlets and covered <vith crowded closely nppressed leaves, and elongated lead- ing shoots. A plant of this cliaractcr was discovered by Alstroemer in 1777. near Stockholm, wliich he identified with Linnieus's yAhie$ procera viminalit (Fl. Suec. 288 [1745]). This is, therefore :

Picea Abies viminalis. Pimu viminalis, Alstroemer, Vet. Ahad. Ilandl. Stockh. 1777,

310, t. 8, 9. liorkbauseu, Foralbol. i. 399. Koehling, DeuttcM.

Fl. cd. 2, 529. Piwa Ahie», t vin.inalii, Willdenow, Spec. iv. pt. i. 507 (1805). --

Wahlenberg, Fl. Srec. KM). Pica eiceha, B riminalit, Willkomm, Ftyr>l. Fl. OC (1877).—

Beissner, /. c. 3C0.

A number of individuals of this character have been found dur- ing the last century in southern Sweden, and others have appeared from time to time in the forests of different parts of (iermany. The best known form of these (icrman trees is

Picea Abiej virgala, Ahien eiceUa, var. virgala, Jacques, <4nn. Soc. Hart. Parit, xliv.

053 (185:1). Picea eicelm denudala, Carriiro, Rev. Ilort. 1854, 101, f. 7 ;

7'rai/« Coni/. 249. Abiei ezcelta denudala, Gordon, Pinelum, Suppl. 3 (1802). Picea exceha, var. i-irgala, Caspary, Scbri/I. Phyn. Oek. (lenell.

Kimigiberg, xiv. \-2T>, t. 15, 10 (1873). —Willkomm, Foreal Fl.

cd. 2, 75. Beissner, I. c. XS.

This is hardly different from the Swedish form except in the soniewliat more remote branches which distinguish somr individu- als, anil .Schiibclcr, who has given much attention to these mon- strous forms of Picm Ahiei, do<'S not separate them. (.See Virid. Nirrreij. i. 410, f. 09.) The plants grown in gardens under the name ot »ar. mimntrma Iwlung to the group of Snake Spruces and differ considerably among themst^lves in the degree of their Taria- tion from the normal form of the Norway Spruce.

Among other seminal forms of Picea Abiei ia one with branches which, ascending at narrow angles, g'vo to ibo tree the form uf the Lombardy I'oplar. This occurs on the Swiss Alps (see Christ, /. c. 2<'i2), and is probably similar ',o the plant propagated by nur- serymen at var. jii/riimidalin, ur '.crhaps identical with it. Another f"i'm which also grows sparingly on the Swiss Alps (see Christ, /. >'.) is peculiar in its pendent limbs clothed with elongated slender bninchlets which descend vertically. Plants of this general char- acter with branches more or loss pendulous are frequently culti- vated OS vars. jiendula and inveria, Another specinlir.ed form of the Swiss Alps, var. alrigosa {Picea eiceUa, var. »lrigo»a, Christ, '. c. [1890J), has numerous slender horizontal branches clothed with many branchlets which spread in all directions and give the trees the general aspi'ct of a Larch.

Numerous dwarf varieties of Picea Abien with short crowded leaves are cultivated in gardens ; they ore cither low pyramidal bushes or cushion-like plants sometimes only one or two feet high, with branches hugging the ground and sprcailing out into broad mats. (For enumerations of the garden varieties of Picea Abies, SCO Carri^re, 7>ni(t Com/, cd. 2, 328.— Voitch, Afan. Coni/. 70.— Beissner, /. c. 357.)

For centuries Picea Abies has been a fn-..r'te ornament of the parks and gardens of northern and temperate Kurope ; and no other conifer has been more generally and successfully used in the mountain plantations of France, (iormany, and Uussia, although this Spruce suffers seriously from the ravages uf the larvio of the Nun Moth, Lifiaris monarcha, Linnoius, which year after year, strip- ping it of foliage, has often destroyed thousands of acres of planted forests in Germany and Russia (Schlich, Manual of Ftrreslrg, iv. 289, f. 14i>~151). The Norway Spruce, as this tree is always called in the United States, was introduced into this country toward the end of the eighteenth century, and during the last llfty years has been more generally planted in the eastern and northern states than any other coniferous tree. As nn ornamental tree the Euro- pean Spruce has much to recommend it in tbe.se regions ; it is quickly and therefore cheaply raised in the nursery to a size suit- able for permanent planting out ; it is very hardy and grows with a rapidity which is surpassed by that of only a few other trees ; it is nut particular about soil and position, and yuung trees are shapely in habit and dark and rich in color. In America, however, at tl.s end of twenty-five or thirty years the trees usually begin to lose vigor, their tops becoming thiu and ragged, and it ia only under specially favorable conditions and in the middle Atlantic states that the Norway Spruce retains its beauty here for moro than (Ifly years. Except, therefore, as a nurse for slower growing and more valuable trees, the European Spruce has not proved suc- cessful OS an ornamental tree In America, and its general introduc- tion here has interfered with the cultivation of more permanent and valuable species.

■a Picea olmvala, Ledebour, f7. Alt. iv. 201 (1833) ; III. Fl. Iloas. V. 28, t. 499. Link, Linnira, xv. 518. Trautvcttcr, Middendorff li.nse, i. pt. ii. 170 (/'/. Vsn.). Trautvetter & Meyer, Middendorff lieise, i. pt. ii. 87 (Fl. Ochol.). Maximowicz, Mim. Sav. lilr. Acad. Sci. Si. Pi'lerslmurg, ix. 201 (Prim. Fl. Amur.). Ucgel, Mem. Acad. Sci. Si. Pilersbourg, si'r. 7, iv. No. 4, 130 ( Tenl. Fl. l/asur.); Kuns. Dettdr. cd. 2, pt. i. 31. Teplouchoff, Bull. Sac. Nal. Mosc. xli. pt. ii. 244. Masters, Jour. Linn. Soc. xviii. 500 (Conifers of .fti/Htn). Herder, Bot. Jahrb. xiv. 100 (fV. Europ. llussliinds). Miyal)C, Mem. Bost. .Sor. JVa^ Hitl. iv. 201 (/'7. Kurite Islands). Pinus Abies, I'allas, Fl. Boss. i. 6, t. 1, f. G. (not Linnicus)

(1784). Abies obovata, Loudon, Arb. Brit. ir. 2329 (1838). Maxi-

CONlFEUiU.

ihiei ii one with bniichefi to tho tree the form of B 8wiu Alps (see C'hriat, lUnt propagated by niir- entical with it. Another Swiss Alps (see Christ, td with cloiigntcd slender nts of this general char- ous are frequently culti- ther specialized form of tsa, var. »triijo»a, Christ, izontul brunches clothed 1 directions and give the

\hies with short crowded ire either low pyramidal >nly one or two feet high, spreading out into broad varieties of Picea Abiet, l^eiUh, Man. Conif. 70.—

Ffi^..-''te ornament of the iperate P^urojie ; and no 1 successfully used in tho ny, and liussia, although ages of the larvto of the lich year after year, strip- usands of acres of planted I, Mamml of Ft>rf»lry, iv. I this tree is always called y this country toward the ig the lost fifty years has tern and northern states 'uamcntal tree tho Euro- t in these regions ; it is lie nursery to a size sult- ry hardy and grows with only a few other trees ; ion, and young trees are In America, however, he trees usually liegin to d ragged, and it is only in the middle Atluntio its beauty here for more nurse for slower growing iruce has not proved suc- and its general introdue- ition of more permanent

>01 (1833) ; III. Fl. liosi. Trautvetter, Middendorff er & Meyer, MifMetKlorJf icz, A/t'm. AViy. J^tr. Acad. .•Imur.). Kegel, Mem. 4, i;tG ( 7>ti(. W. Umir.); IT, Hull. Snc. Nal. Monc. >r. xviii. 506 (Conifrrs of Fl. Europ. Uiiiiitttmds). 1 (Fl. Kurite IslaiuU). 1, f. G. (not Linna3us)

V. 2329 (1838). Maii-

CUNIFEILS.

8ILVA OF NORTH AMERICA.

25

mowioi, BuU. Phyi. Math. Acad. Sei. Si. Pitertbourg, «v. 437

(Bllwnt und Sirtiucher de$ AmurlamU). Piniu oboiiala, Autoine, Conif. DO, t. 37, f. 2 (not Turotaninow)

(lC>;0-47). Endlieher, 5yn. Conif. 110. Parlatore, Dt Can-

dolle Prodr. ivi. pt. ii. 416. Pittu nrienlalif, Ledebour, Fl. Rom. iii. 071 (in part) (not

Linumus) (1847^0). Pkea vutgarif, var. Atlaiea, TeplouohoS, BuU. Soc. Nal. Mote.

xli. pt. ii. '.TiO (1800). Abies exce'sa, K. Koch, Dendr. ii. pt. ii. 238 (in part) (not

Lamarck) (1873).

Picea obovat- is a lofty tree of the size and habit of Picea Abiei, from which it differs chiefly in its short oval or oblong cylindrical cones, vitli rounded nearly entire scales, and is distributed from northeii.;tem liussia through Siberia to Manchuria and northern China, ranging northward in Siberia, to latitude U0° 30*, and often forming vast forests on plains,and on the Altai Mountains, covering those from their foothills up to elevations of four thousand feet above the sea.

What is pe haps a form of the Siberian Spruce, with longer leaves and usu .Uy smaller cones, of the desert mountains of south- western Siberi i, is

Var. fi Sci renckiana, Masters, Jour. Linn. Soe. xriii. 600 (Coni-

fers ofjapa i) (1881). Picea Sc irenckiana, Fischer & Meyer, BuU. Acad. Sci, Si.

Pelenbmir /, x. 253 (1842). Carriirj, Traile Conif. 264. Beisa-

ner, Han A. Nadelh. 371. Pinw Schrenckiana, Antoine, {. e. 07 (1840-47) Endlioher,

I. c. UO. Piuu» orienlalis, 0 / 'V.yifolia, Ledebour, I. c. (1847-49). Abie» Schrenckiana, Lindley & Gordon, Jour. Hort. Soc. Land.

V. 212 (1860). Moximowicz, BuU. Soc. Nal. Mosc. liv. pt. i. 68. Pinu$ obovala, 0 Schrenckiana, Parlatore, /. c. (1868). Car-

ri6ro, Traile Conif. od. 2, 338. t Picea Tiamchanica, Rupreeht, Mem. Acad. Sci. Si. Pelers-

bourg, sdr. 7, xiv. No. 3, 72 (Serlum Tianichanicum) (1870).

Little is known of the Siberian Spruces in the gardens of the eastern United States and of western Europe. In Great Britain they grow badly and are often destroyed by spring frosts, while in New England, where they are now growing in the Arnold Arbore- tum, the oldest plants are still too young to give any idea of the value of these trees for our plantatious.

The curious dwarf Spruce, Picea Ataximounczii (Masters, Gard. ChroTi. n. ser. xiii. 303 [1880]), with very slender acicular spine- tipped leaves spreading on all sides from the glabrous brown brauchlets, and minute cones, which was raised from seeds dis- tributed several yearn ago from the Imperial Botanic Garden of St. Petersburg and supposed to have come from Japan, and which has proved hardy in eastern Massachusetts, is perhaps an imma- ture or transitory form of Picea obovala, from which, however, it differs in tho position of the resin canals of the leaves, or of some still unknown species of continental Asia.

" Saporta, Origine Paleonlologiijue de.i Arbrea, 80.

'* In North America more than fifty species of insects are reported to be living on the various species of Picea, although comparatively little is yet known of those which prey on these trees in the western part of the continent. In Europe Kaltenbach records between three and four hundred species injurious to coniferous trees, and a large proportion of these feed on the Spruces, which, however, are principally injured by only a few kinds. Although a great majority of the insects which obtain their food from Spruce- trees are not abundant enough to inflict serious damage on them,

there are several kinds which are sometimes widely deitruotive. (See Packard, Hth Jtep. U. S. Enlomdog. Comm. 811.)

The living trunks of Spruce-trees ore not exempt from bnrera, belonging chiefly to the longicom group, which also affect the true Pine-trees. Among such beetles are Monohammui ronfutor, Kirby, and Monohammut denlator, Kabricius, while Hhagium linealum, Olivier, infests the dry timber. Larvie of beetles lielonging to the Buprcstido) also bore into the wood, both living and dciut. The greatest damage to the trunk, however, appears to be caused by various species of several genera of small timber and bark beetles belonging to tho family Scolytidie. Among these, Pilyophlhorut puherulut, Lecontc, Xylotenu bivitlalut, Kirby, and Xyleborut cala- lu», Eiehhoff, are said to be most destructive, and are credited with causing great damage to the Spruce forests in Maine, New Hamp- shire, and New York. Polygraphus rujipennis, Kirby, and Den- droclonui fronlali), /limmerman, have been particularly destructive to the Ked Spruce in northern New York and in West Virginia. (See Peek, Tram. Albany Iml. viii. 204. Hopkins, BuU. No. 17, Wat Virginia Agric. Bxper. Slat. 1801; Iniect life, iii. 1803, 187.)

Other species of beetles of the same group also attack both living and dead wood, Dendroctonua rufipennia, Kirby, being said to damage seriously the Red Spruce in New Hampshire and the Engelmann Spruce in Utah. Hylesinui lericeue, Mannheim, Dry- ochaUt affaber, Mannheim, and Tomicua Pini, Say, are common species, which bore into the trunks of Spruce-trees in the Rocky Mountain region.

Spruces are not affected by many species of foliage-destroying insects, and few of th«jse are ever abundant enough to do much damage. Several of them, however, are liable to become very destructive.

A number of species of Saw-flies occur on Spruce-trees, their larviB occasionally stripping the leaves from individual branches or from whole trees. The larvo) of various Noetuids and other Lepi- doptera feed on Spruce-trees without attracting attention, although several species of Tortricidffi have proved serious enemies of their foliage. According to Packard, the Spruce-' ud Worm, Torlrix fumiferana, Clemens, has at times been very destructive to Spruce- trees in Maine and in other Spruce producing regions. Gelechia obliquielrigella. Chambers, Teraa varana, Femald, and Sleganop- lycha Ralzburgirna, Saxesen, are small moths, whose larvo) feed on the foliage of Spruce-trees. Larvo) of the Spruce-cone Worm, Pinipealis reniculella, Grote, feed upon and burrow in the young cones, several of them being often partially inclosed in a silken web, more or less covered with castings from the mining cater- pillars.

Plant lice, like Lachnua Abielis, Fitch, occur on Spruee-trees; and species of the so-called bud lice belonging to the genus Adelges, or Chermes, affect these trees, particularly in parks and gardens. Adelges Abielis, Linnieus, originally found on Spruces in Europe, is now also known in this country, and Adelges abielicolens, Thomas, has been described as an American species. These insects attack the young growing buds and shoots, eventually causing them to assume on the twigs hollow cone-like forms, within which the insects live during the summer, each apparent scale of this cone-like growth corresponding to the distorted base of a leaf. These abnormal growths are sometimes very abundant, causing much injury to the trees.

" Owing to the popular confusion in the nomenclature of the Spruces of the northeastern United States, which arc vaguely termed Block, White, and Red, it is frequently difficult, if not impossible, to refer to different species of Picea, as now understood, the fungus parasites reported as infesting these trees. American

Ll

!li

SILVA OF NORTH AMERICA.

CONIFKUA.

8prum-lfMt Appear to Ixi miieh !•■• inbjwt to th« ■ttmcki uf fungi, hawe«ar, than the Kuropvan I'icta Abin, on which mom than two hiiailrml tpeoiei of fungi have been recorded. The Spnioe Kuit, I'eridermium abitlmum, Krie», of Kurope, ia rery coiuinon, in the form called by Peck yar. dteolararu, un the dwarf Spnicoi which inhabit the lubalpine aummita uf the inuuntaina of the nurtkeaatcrn ftatea, and ita oluater-cupa are ao abundant toward the cud uf Auguat in many placea that thoae who walk through the denae dwarf Spruce foreata are covered with their orango-i'ulurcd aporea. Peridrrmium ahielinum, Frica, ia conaidered in Kurope to bo cun- uccted with Chrytomyxa Hhoilodfndri, l)e CanduUc, but in northern Europe it haa been auppoaed tu be connected with Chryiomifxa Ledi, Albertini & Schweiuiti. In northern New Ilanipa'iire the Peridermium on Spruce, judging by ita range and habitat, is proba- bly connected with Chrytmiyxa Ledi, Albertini & Schweinitz, on Ledum Utli/otium, as no Cbryaomyxa has been found un KhixMett- druii Lapponicum in that region. Beaidea the apeciea mentioned, the fungi definitely reported on the Red Spruce, which are few in number, are principally "olypori, among which may be mentioned MTeral Tarieties of Potypona voivalut, Peck, and Poti/ponu piceinut, Peck, which attack the trunks of Spruce-trees, as does also the Ascomyoete, Colpoma morbidum, Saccardo. Little is known of the fungal enemies of the Spruce-trees of western N'orth America.

' The use sometimes of Picea and aonietinies of Abies as the name of the Spruces still confuses the cultivators of theae treoa, although botanists now invariably call the Spruce-trees Picea and the Kir-trees Abies. Pliny and other classical writers possibly intended their Picea to designate the Kir-tree and their Abies the Spruce-tree, although Pliny's description of these two trees does not make thia perfeetly clear. In 1G86 Camerarius (De Plantis Bpitomt, 47, f.), and in 1616 Dodoens (Slirp. Hiit. 803, f.), used Picea as the name of the Spruce-tree and Abies as that of the Kir-

tree. Toumefort, in 1710 (/rut. S8fi), united the Silver Kirs anil the Spruces, including the Americiiii Iluiuluck, in his genua Abirn. I.innoiua, in the Hrat four editiuna uf his (lenera Planlarum, fulluwrd the arrangement of Toumefort, but in the llftli edition, piikliahcd in 175-1, ho merged hie genus Akica, iiu^luiling I'ii^ca, into I'inua, to which he alio then referred Tuurncfort's genua L,ari>. In tlm first edition of the Spiriri Planlarum, publialied in llKi, Linnieus called the Kurupean Spruue Pinus Ahttn and the Kuropean Kir Pinu» Piffa, following what was probably the clasaical application of the two namca. Du Koi, in 1771 (llarhk. liaiimt. ii. 110), did the opposite, and called the Spruce Pioea and the Kir Abies. In IKH) Link, separating the Spruces from the Pines and Kira, niadti the genua Picea fur these trees, thus revoraing Linneua'a uao of Picea and Abiea, and ft>)lowing tliat of l)u Uoi. (See Abhand. Atad. Bert. 181!7, 171) ; Linnita, »v. BIO) Kndlichor, in 1836 (Wm. 260), followed Link in the unu of Picea aa the name of the Sprucea, although he conaidered the group as a section uf Pinua, and Car- ri6re and all aubsequent Continental authora have adopted the same nomenclature. In 1837, however, D. Don, in the third vol- ume uf Lambert's Gmut Pinut, diaregnnling Link's application of the two names, called the Spruces Abioa and the Kirs Picua. Don's uae of the two names was adopted by L<iuJ'<n ^Arb. BrU. iv. 2203), and later by Gordon, and has been in general use among English horticulturists over since, although in the United States and in Continental Europe the Sprucea are ilmoat habitually called Picea aud the Kira Abies. According to the rules of botanical nomencla- ture, this use ia certainly correct without reference to the clasaical meaning of the two worda, ur to Linnoius's use of Picea and Abiea as specific namea in his genua Pinus, because Pioea is the oldest name under which the Spruce-trees have been generioally diatin- guished. (Seo Backhouse, Gard, Chrun, a. ser. xxvi. 681!, fur a discussion of this subject.)

fi

lilted the Silver Kira aiut lulutik, ill hit genus Altipif. Imera I'lanlarum, fnlluwcil ho fifth edition, published idiiig I'icca, into i'iiius, tu 'i*H geiiuH Lurix. In thu iibliiiho<l ill 17n:i, LinniDUH en and the Kurupean Kir y the elauical appllcatiuti 'larhk. JIaumz. ii. IIU), ilid a and the Fir Aliiea. In I the Pinea and Fira, made Bvoraing LinnBua's uao uf t I)u Koi. (See Ahhaml. Endliuhor, inlKMiC&ni. s the name of the Spruces, icction of rinuB, and Cac- iithora have adopted the D. Don, in the third voi- ding Link's application of and the F'ira Picea. Don's mi-'a {Arb. /iri(. iv. 2293), ;cneral use among English the United States and in oat habitually called Piccu jlea of botanical nomencla- t reference to the claaaical a's uae of Picea and Abies ecauae Pioea is the oldest re been generioally distin- I. D. ser. uvi. 082, for a

coNiFBRji. SILVA OF NORTH AMERICA.

CONSPECTUS OP THE NORTH AMERICAN SFECIES.

EvncRA. L«RT(ii tetraijnnal. itomntiferous on the (our sidet. Cono-«calea rounded at the apex. Cone-scalcB atllT and ridged at maturity ; branclileta pubeae«nt.

Conoa ovate on atrongly incurved atalks, persistent for many years, their sealea eroa« or

dentate ; leavea blue-green

Conea ovate-oblong, short-atalkeil, early deciduous, their scales entire or obsotirely

denticulate ; leaves dark yellow-green

Cone-scales soft and flexible at maturity : branchlets glabrous.

Cones oblong-cylindrical, slender, their scales entire ; leaves blue-green

Cone-scales uaiially oblung or rhomboidal ; leaves blue-green. Branchlets pubescent ; leaves soft and flexible.

Conea oblong-cylindrical, or oval, their scales narrowed to a tnincate or leoie apes, or

occasionally obovato and rounded, erose^lentate or entire

Branchlets glabrous ; leavea rigid, spineacent.

Cones oblong-nylindrical, their scales rhomboidal, flezuose, rounded or truncate at the

eroae apex

Omorika. Leavea flattened, usually stomatiferoua only on the upper surface. Cone-scales rounded, entire ; branchlets pubescent.

Conea oblong-cylindrical, slender ; leavea obtuse, stomatiferous only on the upper surface Cone«!ales oblong-oval, rounded and denticulate above the middle ; branchlets glabrous.

Cones cylindrical-oval ; leaves acute or acuminate, stomatiferous on the upper and occasionally also on the lower surface

27

1. P. Mariaka.

2. P. BDBim.

3. P. CANADBNilS.

4. P. Enoklmanni.

6. p. Pabbtana.

6. p. Brcwerlana.

7. p. SnoHnraia.

\l \

I'l

SUVA OF NORTU AMERICA.

cuNiriciuc

PIOEA MARIANA. Black Spruoe.

C0NE8 ovnto, incurved nt the biwc, persistent, their scales rounded, erose, or dentate. Brunchlets pubescent. LeuvcH shurt, blue-green.

Pioea Marinna, Hrittun, Sterna A I'li^KiMiburg. Cut. PI. iV. y. 71 (IMS). J. U. Jitck, Uarden atul Foreit, z. 62.

Abiea Mariaua, Millvr, Dlft. ml. 8. No. 5 (1768).— Muenrhliaunen, llmifr. v. '."Jl. Wangenheini, Nordiim. UiiU. 7.'!. K. Kiwh, ne}ulr. ii. pt. ii. WO. Uuche, Dmitadif Dfndr. eel. '.', 92.

Plnua Mariana, Du Itoi, Obt. Bot 38 (1771): Harbk. Saiimx.WAVi. Moencli, JIaume jrcim. 74. Burgt- dorf, Aiilelt. \>t. ii. I •!'.•. Ehrhart, lleilr. iii. 23.

PinuB- Abies Canadeneis, Manball, Arbwit, Am. 103 (1785).

Plnus nigra, Aiton, J{ort. Keu>. iii. 370 (1789) Willde- iiow, llert. Iliium*. 220; S/ifi: it. pt. i. 506 1 Enum. 990. . Ikirklmuaen, Jfiindb. Fanthot. i. 406. I^mbert, Pinui, i. 41, t. 27. I'ersoon, Sijn. ii. fi79. UlKelow, Fl. Botton. 234. Purah, Fl. Am. Sf/>t. ii. 640. Nut- tall, Oen. ii. 223. Hayne, Dendr. Fl. 177. Sprengel, Si/Ki. iii. 885. Itnitero, /list. Xat. PinheirnH, Laricet e Abetoi, Xi. Torrcy, Fl. X. K. ii. 230 (in part). Hooker, Fl. Bur.-Ain. ii. 16,3, Ant4>inti, Cimif, 88, t. 34, f. 3. Kndlirher, Syn. Conif. 115. I^waon & Son, List No. 10, Aliietiiieir, 16. Dietrich, Syn. v. 395. Courtin, Fatii. Conif. 61, Parlatore, De Catululle I'rodr. zvi. pt. ii. 413.

Pinus Canadensis, ft nigra, Caatiglioni, Viag. negli Stati Uniti,i\.'AV> (17'.K)).

Pinus Americana, Uaertner, Fniet. ii. 60, t 91 (not Du Roi) (1791).

Abies bigra, Du Roi. Harbk. Baumz. ed. 2, ii. 182 (1800). I'oiret, Lamarik Dirt. vi. 520. DcxfontaincH, Hist. Arb. ii. 580. Du Mont<le Coiirset, Ihit. Cult. ed. 2, vi. 475. Micbaux f. J'i»t. Arb. Am. i. 123 (in part). NomteAiu Ihihumel, v. 292,u81,f. 1. .lauine Saint-Hikire, Tr<iitf, de.1 Arhres Furvstiers, U 74, f. 1-4. Lindley, Penny Cycl. i. 32. lUtinesque, New FL \. 39. Lawaon & Son,

Agric Mnn. .167. Spaoh, llitl. Vi'g. xi. 410 (in part).— Emcraon, Trrrs Must. 81 ; ed. 2, i. 96. Knight, Syn, Conff. 36, Lindley & Oordon, Jmtr. Ilort. Sue. Lond. y. 211. Gordon, Pinetiim, II. Darlington, Fl. Ceitr. ad. 3, 292. lit'nkel A I Iwhatetter, Syn. Nadelh. 191. (Nelaon) Senilia, Pinarnr, 50. lioopea, Krergreetm, 169. Voitch, Man. Conif. 74, ScbUbelcr. Virid. Norvtg. i, 431.

Abies dentioulata, Michaux, Fl. Bor.-Am. ii. 206 (1803). I'oiret, Lamnrrk Diet. vi. 524. lirotero. Hist. Nat. Pinheims, l.arires e Abetim, 36.

Pioea nigra, Link, llandb. ii. 478 (1831) ; Linnn-a, xv. 520. Carrikre, TraitA Conif. 241. Urunet, Hist. Pieea, 10, t S(<n(<<daur.e, Conif. 32. Rpgel, Huss. Dendr.

pt. 1. 18 livrtrand, Ann. Sci. Nat. »6t. 5, xx. 85.

VevV, Trans. Albany Inst. viii. 283 (in part). Kngol- mann, Oanl. Chron. n. aer. xi. 3i<4 (oxcl. vur. rubra).— Sargent, Forest Trees N. Am. mh Census U. S. ix. 202 (in part). Willkomm, F.>rst. Fl. ed. 2, 96. WaUon lilc Coulter, dray's Man. cd. 6, 491. Mayr, Wald. Nordam.

218. IkMHaner, Handb. Nadelh. 332, f. 93, 94 MaatcrH,

Jour. K. Ilort. Soc. xiv. 222 (in part). llanaen, ,four. H. Hort. Soc. xiv. 430 (Pinetum Panieum). Koehne, Deutsche Dendr. 23, f. 8, L. llotbrook, Hep. Dept. Agric. Penn. 1895, pt. ii. Dio. Forestry, 282.

Pioea nigra, a squamea, Provaucher, Flare Caiuulienne, ii. 557 (1862).

Pioea rubra, Britton, Bull. Torrey Bot. CM, xxi, 27 (not Dietrich) (1894). Britton & Brown, III. Fl. i. 65 (in part), f. 123.

Pioea brevifolia, var. semiprostrata, Peck, Spruces of the Adirondaeks, 12 (1897).

Pioea brevifolia. Peck, Spruces of the Adirondaeks, 13 (1897). Britton & Brown, lU. Fl. iU. Appx. 496, f. 122 a.

A tree, usually twenty or thirty and occasionally one hundred feet in height, with a trunk from six to twelve inches and occasionally three feet in diameter, often small and stunted, frequently cone- bearing when only two or three feet high,' and at the extreme north reduced to a low semiprostrate

' 111 imrtlicrn Minneaotn, on tlic bordera nf small furcat lakca or often produce conea when only two or three feet high; and a.s

muskeauH, which are being gradually covered by scdgca anil aphag- their cnergica appear to bo riitircly devoted to bearing accda, the

nuni, the Black Spruce is able to exist without mineral aoil, and to fertile branchca become the only vigorous ones. " Theae are

grow slowly to a great age on beds of floating plants. Such trcca dcnaely crowded ne:^ the top of the tree, while thi trunk below ia

CONIfKIMt.

m

COSltKHM.

aiLVA OF Mmrii America.

undod, crosc, or

('.(j;. il. 410 (In p»rt) !, i. Wl. Knight, Sijn. Joitr. Ifort, Siir. LonU.

Darlinnton, Ft. Vettr. ,n, Sijn. NaiUlh.Wn.—

iloupe*, Ki'trijrMtit, 4. SohUbelcr, Viriil.

m.^m. ii. 206 (1803).— , Hrutero, llitt. Nat.

B (1831) ; Linna-a, xv. 1. Drunot, IlUt. I'icfAi,

Ri<g«l, Hum. Detulr. Nat. »iT. 5, XX. 85. 283 (in part). Kngcl- VM («xcl. Tur. ritlira). I^A Ceiutu U. S. ix. 202 /. ed. 2, 96. WaUun &

Mayr, Wald. Nordiim. 332,f.«3,94. Mantcra,

part). Iluninn, Joiir. n Danii'um). Koeline,

Uothrnck, Hep. Uept. 'oreatry, 282.

ler, Flore Canadienne, ii.

Hot. Club, xii. 27 (not Brown, ///. Fl. i. 50 (in

'ftta, Peck, Spruces of the

of the Adirondack/I, 13 I. Fl. iu. Appi. 496, f.

it, with a trunk from ted, frequently cone- I a low seiniprostrate

!>T three feet high; ami as evnted to Iwarin^; ncuds, the gorous onoa. " TheBO are Be, while thx trunk below ii

Hlirul). Tho bronchen, which are Hlonder, oompurntivoly short, and uituiilly pimduloun with upward ourvoH, form thu Djien and irre|{ular crown which chiirauteriHtio of the Hlack Spruce, and Hom«timt>N, when the tree hiiH jjrown iti ii fuvorahle pohition, clothe the nteni to the ground, or Hoon fall from itn lower half when the tree hiut been shaded by neiKhlxirH or ..tuntetl by imtuflicient nouriMhment.' The bark of the trunk u from one quarter tr one half of an inch iu thickncMH, and m broken on the Hurface into thin rather clowily appreiwcd gray-brown HcaleH. The branchletn when they lirst emerge from tho budn in early Hummer are pale green, and, like the baHCH of the leaven, are (oatinl with pale pubcHcence ; they soon begin to grow darker, and during their first autumn and winter they are light cinnamon-brown and covered with short rusty pubescence, their thin dark brown bark gradually becoming glabrous, an<l bogiiniing to break up into small thin scales during their second year. The winter-buds are ovate, acute, light reddish brown, puberulous, and about one eighth of an inch iu length, with ovato closely appressed acute scales. Tho leaves stand out from all sides of the branches, and are tetragonal, ribbed above and below, abruptly contracted at the i\\tex into short slender callous tips, longer and more acute on sterile than on fertile branches, slightly incurved above the middle, pale blue-green when they first appear, bluish green and glaucous at maturity, from one quarter to three quarters of an inch in length, hoary on tho upper surface from the broad bands of couspicuous stoniata, and lustrous and slightly stomatiforous on tho lower surface. The staminate flowers are subglobose and about an eighth of an inch in length, with dark red anthers, and the pistillate flowers are oblong cylindrical, with obovato purple scales rounded above, wedge-shaped below, puberulous and tumid on the outer surface, and marked below the thin erose bright red margin by a couspicuous transverse glaucous hand, and with oblong purple glaucous bracts rounded and denticulate at the apex. The cones increase rapidly in size, and are often almost fully grown in early summer before the young 'iDots have attained half their length ; at maturity they are ovate, pointed, gradiuilly narrowed at tht.' Inise into short strongly incurved stalks clothed with the persistent enlarged erose inner scales of the Howei^buds, which increase in size from the base to the apex of the stalk, and gradually assume the appearance of the small sterile lower cone-scales ; usually about an inch long, the cones vary from one half of an inch to an inch and a half in length ; their scales are rigid, rounded or rarely somewhat pointed at the apex, and puberulous, with delicate more or less erose or notched pale margins ; in ripening the cones turn a dull gray-brown, and as the scales gradually open and slowly discharge their seeds they often become almost globose in form, and remain on the branches sometimes for twenty or thirty years, the oldest close to the bases of the branches near the trunk. The seeds are oblong, gradually narrowed to the acute base, about an eighth of an inch in length,

often destitute of living branebes, although unshaded and growing far from other trees. These dense tufts of dark branches like plumes upon polos prcsen* a strange S|ieetavio to the traveler who for the flrst time crosses tho larger inuskeaga, especially at twi- light, for he seems to bo looking over a weird procession, stretching often mile after mile until lost in the distance," On tho small muskcags there is often a regular gradation in the size of the trees, from little seedlings close to tho water in the centre of the bog to tall slender specimens often siitjr feet in height, with thin drooping branches which are freely developed on tho better soil of the high margins, and trunks which rarely exceed eight inches in diameter. (See Ayres, (lardm and Foretl, vii. BOJ, f . 80 {The Mmkeag Spnicr']).

Cone-bearing Ulack Spruces not over two feet high are very abundant also in tho sphagnum-covered bogs of Prince Edward's Island.

' " There seems to be four forms of the Black Spruce in north- ern Minnesota. First, the upland form with peudulouB branches;

second, tho common upland form with stiff branches, the two grading one into the other ; third, the dwarf tree with only fruiting branches and perhaps a few others at the base of the stem, grow- ing on very wet muskcags; fourth, tbo stifT-branched tree, growing mostly on drier land than number three, although still on sphagnum and usually on the borders of the same muskeaga, I can see no distinct lines of separation between theso forms, which seem to grade into each other, that is, intermediate forms are found in complete series, and I am inclined to believe that tho variation in the development of the branches is due to the conditions under which the trees are grown. Plants of tho branchless form of thu muskeags are of remarkably slow gniwth. One of these I cut, and counted soveuty-tive layers of annual gniwth in tho stem, which was about an inch and a half in diameter. Such wood is very compact and even in texture. Occasionally one of the upland trees is cut for log timber, but they ore never large, and I have not seen one above twelve inches in diameter." (Ayres, in litl.)

80

SUVA OF NORTH AMERICA.

CONIFERS.

and very dark brown, with delicate pale brown lustrous wings broadest above the middle, very oblique at the apex, often nearly half an inch long and an eighth of an inch wide.

Picea Mariana inhabits sphagnum-covered bogs, and swamps and their borders, and at the north also well drained bottom-lands and the slopes of barren stony hills ; it is distributed from the shores of Ungava Bay southwestward to those of Hudson Bay, and from the mouth of the Nelson River north- westward to the valley of the Mackenzie in about latitude 65" north,' and reappearing west of the Rocky Mountains on the ' jterior plateau of British Columbia in latitude 53°,' it is common in the interior of Alaska as far north at least as the shores of Frances Lake and the valley of the Pelly River ; ' southward it ranges through Newfoundland, the Maritime Provinces, eastern Canada, and the north- eastern United States to Pennsylvania, and along the Alleghany Mountains to northern Virginia ; * it occurs on the eastern foothills of the Rocky Mountains in Albcrta,° and extends through Assiniboia, northern Saskatchewan, and northern Manitoba to central Minnesota, Wisconsin, and Michigan. In the Labrador peninsula the Black Spruce is the most abundant tree, growing both in cold sphagnum swamps and on high hills covered with sands or with rocks or heavy glacial drift, usually in dense thickets, with ''<ng slender naked stems, but along the border of the treeless plains, where, alone with the Larch, the i?lack Spruce holds the northern outposts of the forest, it grows in open glades, and its stout trunks a^e clothed to the ground with branches." West of Hudson Bay the Black Spruce also readies t. o margin of the barren lands, forming scattered groves along the Telzoa River down to Doobaunt Lake, in latitude 63°, the most northern plants being here low shrubs with wide-spreading branches, from which occasionally a small upright stem rises to the height of four or five feet.' On the alluvial bottom-lands of the Athabasca River, between latitudes 58° and 59°, the Black Spruce ia aliiindant, with trunks often three feet in diameter and occasionally eighty feet in height. It is the largest conuerous tree of Saskatchewan and of northwestern Manitoba, frequently covering large areas and growing both on well drained bottoms, wliere it attains its largest size, and on low stony hills, where it is Rva:\\l a<iu stunted. The Black Spruce is common in Newfoundland, and in all the provinces of eastern Ca inda ;;xcept in southern Ontario, growing in cold wet swamps and rarely attaining a greater height than thirty eet.' Farther south it is also almost exclusively an inhabitant of swamps and their bor lers, Uhougb occasionally a few stunted individuals maintain a foothold on the summits

* Richardson, Franklin Jchi: Appx. No 7. 'i"<2; Arctic Searching Eiped. ii. 317.

^ Picfa Mariana was eollectod by Dr. G. M. Dawson in 1870, cast of the coast mountains of British Columbia, near the Black- water River,

See G. M. Dawson, Rep. Geolog. Sun. Can. n. scr. iii. pt. i. 112 B, 116 B, 118 B. Macoun, Kep. Geolog. Sun: Can. n. scr. iii. pt. i. Appi. iii. 22(i B.

Britton & Brown, ///. Fl. i. fiS (as Picra rubra).

' During the summer of 1897 I'icea Mariana was found by Mr. John Macoun about thirty miles from Calgary, on one of the branches of the Elbow Uivi-r.

* " The Black Spruce is the most abundant tree of the Labrador peninsula, constituting at least ninety per cent, of the forest, and it is found everywhere from the shores of the St. Lawrence north- ward to Ungara Bay, and from the Atlantic coast to Hudson Bay. The northern limit of its distribution, which coincides with that of the forest region, leaves the east coast of Hudson Bay in tlic neighborhood of latitude 57°, posses ahnust due east for about one hundred miles, until the watershed of Hudson Bay is crossed, when the course changes to nearly northeast, following the lower country of the Koksoak River, and reaches nearly to the shore of Ungava Bay, about fifteen miles north of the mouth of the Koksoak River, in about latitude 58° 30' nortii. The trees skirt the southern shore of Ungava Bay to George River, at its aoutboastcrn comer, and

grow from five to ten miles from the shore. From the mouth of George River, in latitude 58°, the line passes eastward for a short distance to tho western Hanks of the high Atlantic coast range, which here rises from three thousand to six tl'.ousaud feet above the sea-level, and is quite barren. The black Spruce is found in small open glades along the western flanks of the range, in the valleys of the streams and on the shores of lakes, southward to latitude 54°, where the groves become connected and a continuous forest covers the lower ground, while the hilltops remain bare for upwards of one hundred miles farther south.

** On the Atlantic coast the islands and mainland are without trees to Iwluw latitude 58^, where small Spruce and Larch are first found about watercourses, at the heads of the deep narrow fiords which penetrate far inland on this coast. At Davies Inlet, in lati- tude Gil\ the trees are found growing everywhere along the coast, covering the lower bills, up to an elevation of five hundred feet, but the islands are still barren. At Hamilton Inlet, in latitude 51°, the trees ascend the hills to an elevation of nearly one thousand feet; and the inner islands are well wiHuled, only those far out from shore remaining barren." {Low in lilt. &ee, tiiiio, how, Hep. Geolog, .S'ury. Can. n. ser. viii. 35 L.)

' Tyrrell, liep. Geolog. Surv. Can. n. ser. ix. 214 F.

' Brunei, Cat. Veg. Lig. Can. 58 (in part). Macoun, Cat. Can. I'l. 4C8 (in part).

CONIFERJB.

aJlVA OF NOIITII AMmWA.

31

^RP

of the high hills of northern New England Aixl Nxw Yofki tn the United States it is most common and grows to its largest size in the territufy uilJMtwiit to the Oreat Lakes, where; however, it is nowhere abundant, thriving only in the mui>«MMl< NitlMtioitf)^ and rarely producing trunks a foot in diameter. It is far less abundant than tliu Ufd H|)HI(<(< id idl the Appalachian region, and everywhere east of the Alleghany Mountains the \i\wk ^\m\m if* A Atiiall and comparatively rare tree, although it extends farther south along the Atluntio timlumcd tllftti any other Spruce, and occupies numerous small swamps near the coasts of southurn Nbw Klij^lrtllil, Npw York, New Jersey, and Pennsylvania.

The wood of Picea Mariana is liglit, m'fU rt'l'l K'/t strong ; it is pale yellow-white, with thin sapwood, and contains thin resinous huiidi* ul NHMtll nUlilttiftr cells and narrow conspicuous medullary rays. The specific gravity of the absolutely thy Wood U OXt'H^, a cubic foot weighing 32.86 pounds. It is probably rarely used, except iu Manititba Mllil HMAkfttiiliewan, for other purposes than the manu- facture of paper pulp. Spruce gum, the ri^tiillMMH KJKKlations of the Black and Red Spruces, and occasionally of the White Spruce, is gathorad \u m»p\t\p^ii\t\e i|uantities, principally in northern New England and Canada, and is used m It n)iMt>i«<f(M>^'j'<' f^|>riice beer is made by boiling the branches of the Black and Red Spruces.'

Pieea Mariana was introduced by BUIlop Doiojrtwtt, Into his garden near London, before the beginning of the eighteenth century,' althoM(|[h tllff fficlit^st des(!ription of it was not published until 1755.* Still frequently cultivated in westet'l) Vimu\wl' Mn\ oceasioiially in the northern United StJites, the Black Spruce is one of the least desirable ut fill HfiflKiii-lt t>es for the decoration of parks and gardens, soon losing in cultivation the shapely bttl)it Slid Uw V)j$(*K»ils beauty of its youth, which are replaced by a naked stem and a small open beuil i)t ^]mv\, Fillfl^^lhig branches. In European nurseries a few abnormal forms of dwarf habit, or with |)HI)4mIoiIK hmtKdies, or with yellow or white leaves, are occasionally propagated."

The resinous exudations of the Spruce-trees of BMMFn ¥nrW\ America are obtained from the cavities of decayed kuuU 41)4 iHltl^F natural depressions extending to the heartwood ill thu tFHIlIf* nl these trees, and not from wounds made for the \mf\^m»- '\%» gum is collected in winter by "gummers," men on amw-nlwM, carrying long poles armed with chisels, with wliiiiji t||a FS«JHWI4 masses are knocked or out off and caught iu small Clips UUU'\wA to the poles just below the chisels. (See Menges, ihmlrilr llffl: Pharm. Umveraily of Waconidn, No. 2, 'M; Am. Jour. I'hiim Iviil- 394. Bastin & Trimble, Am. Jour. Pharm. Ixviii. 4I3-)

A tincture prepared by dissolving the resinous giiiii »f Hm fM- crn Spruce-trees in alcohol is occasionally used in niediciw, nh though it has no official recognition in the I'barniaunpiiiiiiiir (Mkm Millspaugh, Am. Med. PI. in Homoeopalkic Remeilieii, i\. UiH)

' The preparation of a fermented beverage ihwIb liy IwJIilltl Spruce branches with honey was probably familiar to Mil) lmH\^l'fl^ Indians before the settlement of the country by li)iii'upeit||ii, wllll learned the art from them; and in 1G72 the value uf IJpi'MWB lliiff was recognized by Josselyn, who thus describes its virtiiwi^

" Tlie tops of Green Spruce Boughs boiled in Hmr, Illl4 lifllllki is assuredly one of the best Remedies fur the Scurvy, l'iiiitiiFili(( Hm Infected party in a short time; they also maku a |<iitlilH ilf miMIN of the decoction, adding Hony and Allura." (New HnnlnmtU HilfU lies, 64.)

Spruce beer, which is considered a pleasant and agreeiiliJH |)fi|||t in hot weather, and a useful preventive of scurvy, |s imw mmh from the essence of spruce, which is a liquid uf tlie ciililF iilll) fiiN-- sistency of molasses, with a bitter astringent acid Havni', iiIiIuImijiI by boiling the young branches of the Black and lied t3|IFIIUui| III water and evaporating the decoction, the disagreeable uililF »l Hlf

♦Vlll(^ fl(inif(i (finking it unauitablo for this purpose. To prepare llllii liKVi-^Nge (he essence of spruce is boiled in water flavored with t^ltfllillii llifiredleiits, and is then mixed with molasses or occasion- ltllj> Willi mg»t, allowed to ferment, and bottled. (See Duhamel, '/'«/«/! (/m Arhref, i. 17. Kaflnesque, Med. i^Y. ii. 183. Spons, lilli'i/i'lniHUllil of Ihe Indunlrial Arlt, Manufactures, and Ram Com- tUHflill I'rmturl; I. 4l!4. Druggists' Circular, New York, 1880, 120. - MlUftnl Water Heinew, 1881, 140. U. S. Dispers. ed. 16, 1487. " AHiiii, Hurl. Kew. iil, 370. Loudon, Arh. Brit. iv. 2312, f.

* AMft fiirett, fotlls brevioribus, conis parvis biuncialibus laxis, Du- lH«(lt-l, /, /■. I. 3.

Atiln I'Impfiillis lirevioribus, Conit biuncialibus laxis, Miller, Diet. fniti. I. 1, 1. 1.

til (IfMit Hrllnin the Black Spruce appears to be more com- IIMIiif (•(ildvatpil tlmii any other conifer of eastern North America, ttllli (li« ('tecption of the White Pine, and, judging from numerous upH'ilni'ti^ which h.ivo been sent to me from England and Scotland, M iliifii duly III Eiitope ns the Black, Red, and White Spruces.

' 'I'lii- liiiir.t illstliict of the garden forms of the Black Spruce, at hmtl. ill ItJ young stnte, is the variety Doumetii ; this is a dwarf |ilil(l(, with Khoft crnwdcd branches, forming a narrow and very fulllfmi-i (lyfntnlilnl bend, and with crowded leaves, which was first llliUcnl itliiiiil 18(1.') in the garden of the ChStcau de Bal6iie, near MiiiillliK, In France, and was described by Carri6re in the 7>ai(e I'lmir 'Jii'i, lis I'iirn nigra Doumetii, (For other abnormal forms lit (lie Hlnck Spruce, see Bcissner, Handb. Nadelh. 337. See, NJniij l/nnl. I'lirim. ser. 3, xi. 81, t., for a description of a remark- iilily Mitntini'l pyrniniilnl Form of the Black Spruce cultivated in llii- WllhcliiithUho Park and in the Karlsane Park in Cassel.)

EXPLANATION OF THE PLATE.

PI.ATR DXCVI. PiCEA MABIANA.

1. A branch with staminate flowers, natural size.

2. A ataminate flower, enlarged.

3. An anther, front view, enlarged.

4. A branch with pistillate flowers, natural size.

6. A scale of a pistillatu flower, upper side, with its ovules, enlarged.

6. A scale of a pistillate flower, lower side, with its bract, enlarged.

7. A fruiting branch, natural size.

8. A conn-scale, lower side, with its bract, natural size.

9. A cone-scale, upper side, with its seeds, natural size.

10. A seed-wing, the seed rcmoTed, enlarged.

11. Cross section of a leaf magnified fifteen diameters.

12. Winter-buds, natural size.

13. A seedling plant, natural size.

\

i|jj^^>.

^

^•*"«s-..fe.;; .

C

^

1 «'

;»«'

t

K THK I'lJVTE.

8.

9. 10. 11. 12.

K > I'rnKik &t.vli.i4jr«.

>. r >«,i<Hinat« Howen, nauirgj «t«-, ,, iv U.iwer, enlargoJ. .' .thvr. itvul *icw, «nl»ri;i^f I. ufOA^Ii oith ptMillHtc •<•

.^ ti'«i« i>f a prKtUUw ti tttMi Ki> uvulc*, rnitfgeil.

A 'I'itlft uf a ^liiiate Hoxn- knm A><j«. vttli ita brtict, onlurgwi. A fruiting litmnrh, nMunti m»ji. A i-on>t-ii<'»!fi, lutTKr «iil*. with iM lirart, naturitl tlix. A "oins-wjilp. iipiK'!" stilo. Willi it!' wetls. natural site.

I'l^xs lection oi » itai tiiiif^iflod b!itxn Uiamet^n. Wiiiter-budi. najiual s.«> A Medlipj; )>Unt niuural Mte.

^4

i! ii

■■if

:.®

s$

**

'jil/a of '''lorlh America

Tab, DXCVl.

o

9

lE. '■ nn M.

//iriiiHit s<\

PICEA MARIANA

ji.J{ii'<riU4>r i/tftwf

/•'l/i ' IhtH'nr /'(//•

^^^^"

CONIFERJt.

8ILVA OF NORTH AMERICA.

33

PIOEA RUBENS.

Red Spruce.

Cones ovate-oblong, early deciduous, their scales rounded, entire, or obscurely denticulate. Branchlets pubescent. Leaves dark yellow-green.

Pioea TUbens.

? Finus Abies aoutisBima, Muoncbhaosen, Hausv. t. 226 (1770).

PinuB Mariana rubra, Da Eoi, Obi. Bot. 39 (1771); Harbk. Baumx. ii. 129.

Finus Americana rubra, Wangenheim, Nordam. Hole. 75, t. 10, f. 54 (not Pimts rubra, Miller) (1787).

Pinua rubra, Lambert, Pintis, i. 43, t. 28 (not Miller)

(1803). Willdenow, Spec. iv. pt. ii. 507 Persoon,

Syn. ii. 579. Alton, Hort. Kew. ed. 2, v. 319. Pursh, Fl. Am. Sept. ii. 640.— Nuttall, Oen. ii. 223 Sprengel, Si/nt. iii. 885. Brotero, Hist. Nat. Pinheiro), Larices e Abetoa, 33. Hooker, Fl. Bor-Am. ii. 164. Antoi.ie, Conif. 87, t. 34, f. 2. Endlicher, Syn. Con!/. 113. Gihoul, Arb. Bis. 44. Lawson & Son, List No. 10, Abietinew, 18. Dietrich, Syn. v. 394. Courtin, Fam. Conif. 64. Parlator9, De Candolle Prodr. xvi. pt. ii. 413.

Abios rubra, Poiret, iMmarBh Diet. vi. 620 (1804).

Destontaines, Hist. Arb. ii. 580 Rafiiiesque, JVeio FU

i. 39. Lawson & Son, Agric. Man. 368. Loudon, Arb. Brit. iv. 2316, f. 2228. Forbes, Pinetum Wobum. 101, t. 35. Knight, Syn. Conif. 37. Lindley & Gor- don, Jour. Hort. Soc. Lond. v. 211. Gordon, Pinetum, 11. Henkel & Hochatetter, 5 %. Nadelh. 189 (Nel- son) f mills, Pinacew, 51. Lauche, Deutsche Dendr, ed. 2, 92. Schubeler, Virid. Norveg. i. 436.

Abies nigra, Michaux {. Hist. Arb. Am. i. 123 (in part), 1. 11 (not Du Roi) (1810). —Gray, Man. 441 (in part). Chapman, Fl. 434. Curtis, Rep. Oeolog. Surv. N. Car. 1860, iii. 27.

PisTiS nisrra, Elliott, Sk. ii. 640 (not Alton) (1824).— Torrey, Fl. N. i'. ii. 230 (in part).

PinuB alba, Elliott, Sk. u. 640 (not Aiton) (1824).

Ploea rubra, Dietrich, Fl. Berl. ii. 795 (1824). Link, Handb. ii. 478 ; Linnaa, xv. 521. Carri^re, TraitS

Conif. 240 S^n^clauze, Co7iif. 34 Regel, Bust.

Dendr. pt. i. 19. Willkomm, Forat. Fl. ed. 2, 96.— Beissner, Handb. Nadelh. 338, f. 95. Hansen, Jour, R. Hort. Soc. xiv. 437 {Pi.ietum Danictim). Koehne, Deutsche Dendr. 23.

Abies Edba, Jaume St Hilaire, Traiti des Arbres Forctiers, t. 74, f. 7-9 (not Michaux) (1824).

Abies nigrra, p rubra, Spach, HUt. Vig. xi. 411 (1842). Hoopes, Evergreens, 170.

Abies alba, Chapman, Fl. 435 (not Poiret) (1860) Cur- tis, Bep. Geolog. Surv. N. Car. 1860, iii. 27.

Pioea nigra, Provancher, Flore Canndienne, ii. 657 (excl. var. a squamea) (not Link) (1862). Peck, Trans.

Albany Inst. viii. 283 (in part) Sargent, Forest Trees

N. Am. 10th Census V. S. ix. 202 (in part). Masters, Jour. B. Hort. Soc. xW. 232 (in part). Fox, Bep. Forest Comm. N. Y., 1894, 121, t.

Picea nigra, var. grisea, Bmnet, Cat. Vig. Lig. Can. 69 (1867).

Abies Americana, K. Koch, Dendr. ii. pt. ii. 241 (not Miller nor Du Mont de Courset) (1873).

Picea nigra, var. rubra, Engelmann, Gard. Chron. n. ser. xi. 334 (1879). Watson & Coulter, Gray's Man. ed. 6, 492. Rothrock, Rep. Dept. Agric. Penn. 1895, pt. ii. Div. Forestry, 281.

Pioea Mariana, Britton, Bull. Torrey Bot. Club, xxi. 27 (not Britton, Sterns & Poggenbnrg) (1894). Britton & Brown, HI. Fl. i. 66 (in part), f. 122.

Pioea acutissima, J. G. Jack, Garden and Forest, x. 63 (1897).

A tree, usually seventy or eighty and occasionally from one hundred to one hundred and ten feet in height, with a trunk from two to three feet in diameter,* and slen ler spreading branches which, with abundant light and air, conHnue to clothe the stem to the ground, forming a narrow and rather formal conical head, or which soon perish on trees crowded in the forest, leaving the trunks naked for at least two thirds of their length, and at the timber-line of high mountains often reduced to a low semiprostrate ■hrub.^ The bark of the trunk is from one quarter to nearly one half of an inch in thickness, and is

' A Red Spruce tree near Meecham Lake, as reported by Mr. ground. This is the largest trunk of this species o{ which I have

IVemont Fuller of Duanc, Franklin County, New York, to the beard.

Secrclary of the Forest Commission of that state, has a trunk < In 1892 Mr. George Walker of Williamstown, Massachusetts,

•ircumference of ten feet three inches at four feet above the found near the base of Mt. Hopkins and about three miles from

1

i 1^

u

SUVA OF NORTH AMERICA.

CONIFERS.

broken into thin closely appressed irregularly shaped red-brown scales. The branchlets, which are comparatively stout, are light green and covered with pale pubescence when they emerge from the buds, and during their first autumn and winter are bright reddish brown or orange-brown in color and clothed with rusty brown pubescence; (^rowing gradually darker during succeeding seasons, their bark loses its pubescent covering, and when they are three or four years old it begins to separate into thin scales. The winter buds, which vary in size from one quarter to one third of an inch in length, are ovate and acute, with light reddish brown closely appressed acute scales, and are often surrounded by the elongated acicular scale-like upper leaves, which easily separate from their prominent persistent bases. The leaves stand out from all sides of the branch, pointing forward, and are more or less incurved above the middle ; they are tetragonal, acute or rounded and tipped at the apex with a short callous mucro, pale bluish green when they first appear, dark green often sligiitly tinged with yellow and very lustrous at maturity, marked on the upper surface with four rows of stomata on each side of the prominent midrib and un the lower surface less coni^picuously with two rows on each side of the midrib, from one half to five eighths of an inch long and nearly one sixteenth of an inch wide. The staniinate flowers are oval, almost sessile, half an inch long and a quarter of an inch thick, with bright red conspicuously toothed anthercrests. The pistillate flowers are oblong-cylindrical and about three quarters of an inch in length, with rounded scales thin, reflexed and rlightly erose on the margins, and obovate bracts rounded and laciniate above. The cones are ovate-ublong and gradually narrowed from near the middle to the acute apex, with concave rigid striate obovato-oblung scales rounded above and entire or slightly toothed on their thin and often flexuose edges ; they are usually from an inch and a quarter to two inches long, but vary from an inch to two and a half inches in length, and are borne on very short straight or incurved stalks ; when fully grown they are light green or green somewhat tinged with purple, but at maturity are light reddish brown and lustrous, and, beginning to fall as soon as the scales open late in the autumn or during the early winter, generally all disappear from the branches the following summer. The seeds are very dark brown and about an eighth of an inch long, with short broad wings full and rounded above the middle.

The Red Spruce is distributed from the valley of the St. Lawrence River ' and the northern shores of Prince Edward Island southward through Quebec, the Maritime Provinces, and along the Atlantic coast to southern Maine'' and Cape Ann, Massachusetts,' and through the hilly interior and the mountainous parts of New England and New York and along the Alleghany Mountains to the high peaks of western North Carolina. Comparatively rare and of small size north of the boundary of the United States and in the neighborhood of the coast, the Red Spruce, which is an inhabitant of high well drained gravelly slopes, is most abundant and attains its greatest dimensions in the elevated regions of northern New England and New York, where, mingled with the Hemlock, the White Pine and the Balsam Fir, the Larch, the Sugar Maple, the Yellow Birch and the Beech, it grows singly or in small dense groves, often forming a large proportion of the forest. On the uplands of Massachu- setts, especially on the Berkshire hills, and on the mountains which overlook the Hudson, it is not rare ; it is common on the mountains of southern New York and northern New Jersey, and is widely scattered over the Alleghany Mountains in Pennsylvania, often forming a considerable part of the

the norihwest corner of the state uf Massnchiisetta a pinnt o{ Picea Tubena with naked snake-like branches, similar in habit to sumo o{ the inonstrous forms of the Kiiropcan Pkea Abies. A portrait of this plant, which is the only example recorded of such a depar- ture from normal forma anionj; the American Spruces, was published on page 45 of the eighth volume of Harden and Forest, Young plants raised by grafts from the Williamstowu pUut are now growing in the Arnold Arboretum,

' Picea rubem was fonnil in 1895 by Mr. .J. G. Jack at St. Catharines on tbu St. John's Ituilroad in Quebec. This is the

most northern station from which this tree has been reported. It appears to bo common on the slopes of the Lniirentian hills iu the St. Lawrence valley west of the Snguenay, as far west at least as the city of Ottawa. I have no evidence beyond Lambert's state- ment that the Red Spruce grows in Newfotmdiand.

' The Red Spruce is abundant on Gerrish Island oCT the mouth of the Piacataqua River, Maine.

' In June, 1890, Mr. J. II. Sears found Picea rubens growing singly and in small clumps over an area of about fifty acres near the (own of Rockport, Massachusetts.

CONIFERS.

ablets, which are ;e from the buda, color and clothed , their bark loses e into thin Bcales. rtli, are ovate and I by the elongated ases. The leaves curved above the iillous mucro, pale J very lustrous at prominent midrib , from one half to e flowers are oval, ipicuously toothed >r8 of an inch in ite bracts rounded the middle to the or slightly toothed rter to two inches y short straight or I with purple, but he scales open late .'hes the following short broad wbgs

le northern shores along the Atlantic

interior and the itains to the high 3 boundary of the inhabitant of high le elevated regions e White Pine and grows singly or in inds of Massachu-

Hudson, it is not jrsey, and is widely erable part of the

e has been reported. It le Lniirciitinii liilU ill the ly, as fnr west at least as

beyond Lambert's state- nnndland. sh Island off the mouth

nd Picea ntbfn.i growing of about fifty acres near

CONIFER.X.

SILVA OF NORTH AMERICA.

35

i

forests which clothe their high slopes.' It is also widely distributed over the mountains of West Virginia, forming on the head-waters of the Elk and Gauiey Rivers a broad belt through which it is scattered often abundantly, sometimes occupying almost exclusively the high slopes, particularly those which face the north, and the summits of the mountains ; farther south it is small and less abundant, and at the southern limits of its range it is usually only forty or fifty feet in height and confined to the high mountains, where, occasionally fonning pure forests, it usually grows in small groves near their summits with the Balsam Fir and the Yellow Birch, and rarely below elevations of five thousand feet above the sea-level.

Plcea nihens, which is the principal timber Spruce of the northeastern United States, and, with the exception of the Wliite Pine, the most valuable coniferous timber-tree of the region that it inhabits, produces light soft close-grained wood which is not strong, nor durable when exposed to the weather ; it is pale slightly tinged with red, with paler sapwood about two inches thick, and a satiny surface, and contains remote connpicuous medullary rays, few resin passages, and thin resinous bands of small summer cells. The specific gravity of the absolutely dry wood is 0.4516, a cubic foot weighing 28.13 pounds. Now that the most valuable white pine has been exhausted in the forests of the northeastern states, the Red Spruce is their most important timber-tree, and immense quantities of its lumber are manufactured every year from trees cut in Maine, New Hampshire, Vermont, and northern New York, which supply the largest part of the Red Spruce logs, although red spruce is also manufactured in Pennsylvania and West Virginia. It is used largely for the flooring of houses and for _, dts, scantlings, and other square timbers employed in construction ; it is considered the most valuable wood produced in the United States for the sounding-boards of musical instruments, and it is one of the principal woods used in this country in the production of paper pulp. Like tLose obtained from the Black Spruce, the resinous exudations of the Red Spruce are used for chewing-gum, and from its branches Spruce beer is made.

The first real description of the Red Spruce, with an excellent figure, was published by Lambert ; it had been prepared from a tree cuHivated in England which was supposed to have been brought from Newfoundland. It was the Red Spruce, no doubt, brought down to the coast from the forests of Maine, which attracted the attention of Josselyn by its great size and its value for shipbuilding.^

Confounded for many years with Picea Mariana^ little attention has been paid to the Red Spruce

> In the Mehoopany Creek basin in Wyoming County in tho northeastern part of Pennsylvania the Red Spruce is abundant between elevations of one thousand five hundred and two thousand two hundred feet above the aea, growing with the Sugar Mnple, the Beech, the Yellow Birch, and the Hemlock. Before its destruction to feed pulp-mills it grew in large quantities and in great perfection in Bear Meadows, Centre County, and it appears to be generally scattered at high elevations along the whole of the Alleghany range in Pennsylvania.

" " Spruce is a goodly Tree, of which they make Masta for Ships, and Sail Yards : It is generally conceived by those that have skill in BuiliUng of Ships, that here is absolutely the best Trees in the World, many of them being three Fathom about, and of great length." (.Josselyn, New EnglaniVs Raritien, G3.)

" At Pmcalaivan there is now a Spruce-tree, brought down to the water-siile by our Mass-men, of an incredible bigness, and so long that no Skipper durst ever yot adventure to ship it, but there it lyes and Rots." (Josselyn, /In i4ccount o/'7'h,'o Voi/ages to New England, 67.)

' Lambert, who first distinguished the Red Spruce intelligently, clearly understood the cliarncters of the Spruces of eastern North America, and the figures in his Description of the Genus Pinus admirably show the distinctive characters of the three species, and have never beer surpassed. Until recent years, however, the bota-

nists who have written of these trees since Lambert have copied his descriptions, or have united the Red and the Black Spruces, or have considered the former a variety of the latter. The confusion with regard to these two trees dates from the time of the Michauxs. The elder saw in the uorthem states only Black and White Spruces, and the son makes his description of the Block Spruce include the Red Spruce, which he considered merely a form due to soil conditions, his figure of the Black Spruce being taken from a branch of the Red Spruce. Nuttall, in his Genera 0/ North Amer- ican Plants, and Pursh, in bis Flora A merica Septentrionalis, retained Lambert's names, but evidently had little information about these trees, and Gray, in the early editions of the Manual of Botany of the Northern Stales, ignored the Red Spruce entirely, and in the fourth edition spoke of it as a northern form of the Black Spruce. The Red Spruce does not appear ever to have been common or to have flourished very often in European plantations, and the European writers on conifers, down to the time of Bcissner, who have described this tree at all, have been obliged for want of mate- rial to follow Lambert or Michai'x. Mr. William Gorrie, however (Trans. Bot. Soc. Edinburgh, x. 353), has well described the Red Spruce from trees which had been planted about 185o near Tyne- hcad in Midlothian, Scotland, and which, fifteen years later, were from twelve to eighteen feet high and had produced cones.

86

8ILVA OF NORTH AMERICA.

CONIVEILA.

08 an ornament of northern parks and jjardenH, where, although it ((rows more slowly than mont coniforoug trees,' its great value is shown by the old specimens densely clothed with branches which are occasionally seen near farmhouses in the northern states.'

The two ipeoiei arc well (li»tiiiK«'«li<'i' ''y "'o "i'" «•"' «''»P«' "' the ■Uniiiiate tlowen, niiil \iy the aizo iiml alm|io ut the ciiiica, which nil tlio llhick Spruce are utroiigly hiHikcil at the Ijaie and are prniitcnt for inaiiy yearn, whihi wi the lied Spnico thi'y are usimlly iiiiivh UrgiT, with iioiirly Htniight iniii'h iihurtfr sti'iim, iiiid fall mostly iliiriiig llieir Bret winter. Tlii' loavei (if llie Kcd Spruce are long, dark green, and liiHtroiis, and those of the iUack Spruce are shorter anil hliio. Korius iiitrnncdiate in character hetwpcii the IUack and lied Spruces are nut known to exist. The IUack Spruce, except ut the far north, iiihahits only wet i«phaguiiin- covered hugs, while the Ucd Spruce grows tuily on well drained hillsides. The IUack Spruce is a tree of the fur north, only exist- ing precariously south of the northern hordcr of the I'liited States, while the lleil Spruce is an Appalachian tree, attaining its greatest diniensinna hetwcen northern New lliunpHliire and I'cniiHylvania. The didtinctivo characters of the two species have lieeii well pointed out hytieorg' Lawson (itf-^rarrhifs nn Ihe Dinlinclu-i' Chanirlrrn of the Ctinailian S/intfeXt l(. See, also, Canatlian Hejtfttrrhem of Srience, vi. \1-), and hy ,1. *r. .lack {Oartttn nrut luirfnt, x. iV,\). Fruiting branches nf the two spi-cics are well ligured hy IleisKiicr.

The tirst speciHe name of the Ucd .Spruce is that of I.amliert, PittnK nthra, jniblishcd in IHOIl. J'mu.i ruhra, however, in 1H0;1, was a synonym, as it had lieeii used in 1708 by Miller for another tree. For the same reason the varietal name ruhm, used by Uu lUii in 1771, nnil hy Wangenheim in 17X7, is not available. The iiuposHibitity of identifying Mnenchhauscn's Piniu Afiii'H nrutiinima, pulili.slicd ill 1770, iiiuler which he quotes as a synonym i'liikenet's Abitt mituir ptctinalit J'uliis, which u shown by I'lukcuot's figure to

be the llemliiek Spruce, makes the iiso of Miionchhansen'i varietal name also inadmissible. No other specille or varietal nanio having been used by earlier authors fur the Ited Spruce, I propose to call it Piira ruhetu.

The lied Spruce growl Ttry ilowly and probably attaina a greater average age than any other tree in the forests of the northeastern sta'-es. Kroni a numlier of meaauri'iiients made in the Adirondack region iiiiile? the direction of Mr. William K. Fox, Superintendent of the Stute Forests of New York, it is shown that the Ucd Spruce, which in this report is called Picfa niijra, may reipiire three hundred and hfty-foiir years to prudni^e a trunk only twenty-six iiiehes in diameter on tho rtump. Uf two hundred and thirty-seven trees examined in St. i.'-i%renco County, twenty- four, with a maximiim diameter of thirty inches, were from throe hundred to three hundred and llfty-fuiir years of age, while one hiiiidred others were between two hundred and fifty and three hundred years old (Fox, III/). Furot Ciimm. N. K. ISW, la.!),

'^ As an oruaiiieiital tree Pirea ntUuH can be compared with Pit'ni nrieutatii, wbii-h it resembles in its narrow pyramidal form and dense huhit and in the ri<-li dark coloring of its foliage. The White Spruce grows much more ntpidly and is of a more open habit and livelier color than the Ued Spruce, but it shows its high- est beauty and grows to a great ago only in regions of shorter summers and colder winters than southern New Fngland, where the Ucd Spruce, finding the climatie conditions which suit it, should prove the most valuable of the American Spruces in ornamental plantations.

EXPLANATION OF THE PLATE.

P1.ATE DXCVIL Pice A rudens.

1. A branch with staininate flowers, natural size.

2. A 8tuininute flower, enlarged.

3. An anther, front view, enlarged.

4. A brunch with pistillate flowers, natural size.

5. A pistillato flower, enlarged.

6. A scale of a pistillHte flower, lower side, with its bract, enlarged,

7. A scale of a pistillate flower, upper side, with its ovules, enlarged.

8. A fruiting branch, natural size.

9. A cone-scMe, upper side, with its seeds, natural size.

10. ji coiie-seule, lower side, with its bract, natural size.

11. A seed, enlarged.

12. Cross section of u leaf, magniflcd fifteen diameters.

13. Winter-bud.s, natural size.

14. AVint4>r-budH, showing leaf-like scales at their base, natural size. IC. A seedling plant, natural size.

i

CONIFEHif:.

u'wiy thau moHt branches which

iisnchhaiiien'i varietal

varietal iiamo liiivinK

uco, 1 projmso lu call

1(1 |ir(ilial>ly attaiiia u ill tlio funsta u( the leaaunMiiriitii madt) in [ Mr. William K. Koi, Yurk, it ia aliuwD that lied I'icfa nigra, may J prodiK^u a trunk only np. Of two hundred ri'nco Cuunty, twenty- icl'OB, were from threo cara uf ago, wliilo one I iind Hfty and throe N. y. 18W, IM). inn be compared with inrrow pyramidal form ig of its foliage. The ind is of A more open j, but it hIiows its liigli- ' ill regions of Hhorter 1 New Kiigland, where MIS whieh suit it, should Spruces in ornamental

%^

^fj^

.--*

f

■^^>

^

^

tall

(•OMW

It gyfrm* mom kluwly titui > •iMMiwtly I'lutlii'il wtUi bruni'hiii »•

«iH>b Ik- 1

11m

»<in,«Bi I'lukftwt'*

fl.ii ,- f.

' -ire, tnahtt* (bfl UM nf \f tivni ihliaintra'a v>

' !•• Nu uthfr «|l#rih(- -fl tAFii-tikl IWIII4 tL.t

'l'«r niiMuini fur III* U«il H|tt«*«, I |ir<i|»M* i'

Itw Hnl Mfinn* ri»** *•'/ •la«l)r »nil |>riilwlily ntUi. .■.I ... .S'^r <>,(« Uwn »njf ullMir trm in lliv fi>r«>U ••• I Alto. Kmni « Bumlxr ot niciuur*nii'nU niiwi . k r«irni I uiulrr llii> ilirwulioii of Mr Williiiin I' i ' t \t ihf Suui Kunmli ul N'mir fnrk, it in uliuwu ' I i»'irt (aJIviI /'nvii fix/rit,

<ui )fni9 til |iriHhii'« A trunk i lUi* Ntmiiji Of twfi hiit«J i Ul St. f iiwrvni'i^ ('rnnitVi twir uiiivr III thirfj inchi'*, wrrr friiiti It « . ' HflT-(iKir jMrii iif »([<i, wliila ♦'• himitnt\ AoU (Wt.v iknil t' '■into .V }■. J8»l, i:'l). ^ *■* t'lUi be coinpitrcil » ii.irr.m p^ramiitzil I. , -f \U fi>tmi;o. .* iif 4 tiiorii fti

'■lit It lihllWA it I I - >'t Tfl|(MfU of I'll.'

^'-«« KfifiUiul, «: I.- ' •Nutiliunii whii b iiuit it, ul.. *'iuvnrMi 8pru4-\-« >ti iiriiftni*

m

\ !>;

. vrr >i«J«, wiUi lU braft, enlitrgrd. :. upjH-r niili' "iii'^ ii« iivtilon. (■nl<tr);o(J. I iral »i%». ' ' ) *. ^itli itA *f»vl^, tmiiin\l Hi/A.

1" t», wilb ill bract, iialui»l iii/i>.

it. A tctiil. «*filiir);r4l,

12. CruM twlimi uf » Imf. mnKtilflixl tiftci'n i7iaiii<'ti rs. in. ^Vintll^tluttll, luuunti «U«.

1-1. WintiT-liitilrt, h}koniii< li>.%(-Iiltt- M-iiloii lit tiii-ir )>iu>o, TiF«tiit;Li »i<to. 15. A au'iUiiig plant, natural tiiu'.

, •( . V 1

Fjilv* of tJorth Anenci

T»b DXCVIl

:i>»lv III II vt I ii lir.iiii Ink

^l \f 'irni'UliatiHfn'ii w ' I tarii'Ul nttin<i tm

I l-f-

Ml till) lutwU M. of iiivitntmntrnU nibl Ml ft .Mr WilliAin ¥. i Nuw Vork, it U «)iuw»

in < «iluil /'u-Mi fif^Mi,

rtin III |triHlur«) 14 trunk r'linji Of two hiii<«J I ii*r«nt'r' Cnuiity, Iwtf

riy inchpf. were fnim t) liafH iif iif(4*, wliilo iJft-t ami tUty Hiiil f

.,.!.. V )'. IHUI. i:»»).

rj i-)4U Um ciiinpnre^l . A* iMrr>t« jiyntinidril t

.i..m i: 'f iu fi)ltAj|*0.

-' T fl •' > of 4 nion* ..

[.firf, l»iil it rihuwft its ( i<i:l^ in rn^iufu nf t^U-

MKiti N. M> KriffUitil, w : lititjttA wliit b null it, «t'

ii«a Sprujvtf in uriiaov

o

i'EKi-ion M

1

■t

Q ^

PICEA RUBENS, S,

HtmsiAf j'C'.

A I^uwreu.v .Ufwv

fnift. J Ttuieur. J'aruf.

m

COmEERJL

8JLVA Ofi' fiUHW AMimiCA.

37

PIOBIA OANA^DNBIS.

Cones oblong-cylindrical, slender, i\w\v W<ttlp« rounded, entire. Branchlets glabrous. Leaves blue-grccn, strong-smelling.

Pioea Canadensis, Britton, Sterns & Puggenlturg. Oat, PI, N. Y. 71 (1888). Sudworth, Hep. Sen. Aufio, U, fi, 1892, 329. Britton & Brown, 111. Fl. 1. fi4, f. 191, Abies Canadensis, Miller, Diet ed. 8, No. 4 (1708), Pinus Abies laxa, Muenchhausen, Hmtaii. v, S25 (1770), Finns Canadensis, Du Roi, Oba. Bot. 'M (not Ummm) (1771); Uarbk. Baume. ii. 124. Biirgsdoff, 4itMt, pt. ii. 168. Wangenheim, Nordam. Huh. 5, t. 1, i, 'i, Pinus laza, Ehrhart, Beitr. iii. 24 (1788). Piniis alba, Aiton, Hort. Keio. iii. 371 (1789). WilWt" now, Bert. Baumx. 221 j Spec. iv. pt, i. 507. HoiMhW-- sen, Handb. For^tbot. i. 402. Lambert, Pinna, \, ijt), ),, 26. Persoon, Syn. ii. 579. Stoltes, But. Afat, AM, iv. 425. Pursli, Fl. Am. Sept. ii. 641. Nqllall, thih ii. 223. Hayne, Beiulr. Fl. 177. Gulmpul, OUo A

Hayne, Abbild. Hole. 156, t. 131 Sprengtl, St/nl. iii,

885. Brotero, Hist. Nat. Pinheiroa, Liirinea u AMiiH, 34. Meyer, PI. Labrador. 30. Iloulcer, Fl. JIufrA lit, ii. 163. Torrey, Fl. N. Y. ii. 231. HigBlww, Pt, Boston, ed. 3, 386. Antoine, Conif. 80, t, 34, t^, \, -^ Endlicher, Sijn. Conif.\\2. Laweon & Son, /^i«/ Nii. II), Abietinea; 15. Courtin, Fain. Conif. 60. \.'n\i\nUnit, De Candolle Prodr. xvi. pt. ii. 414. Finns Americana, a alba, Caatiglioni, Viag. neyli fftittt

Uniti, ii. 314 (1790). Finns tetragona, Moench, Meth. 364 (1794). Abies Americana, Dn Mont de Coureet, Bot. Cult, iif,

115 (not Miller) (1802). Abies alba, Miclmux, Fl. Bor.-Am. ii. 207 (not MilJHP) (1803). Poiret, Lamarck Diet. vi. 521 . Oe)ifoiH»ill(i», Hist. Arb. ii. 580. Micliaux, f. Hist. Arb. Am. \, );)iJ, U 12. Nouveau Duhamel, v. 291, t. 81, f . 2. ll«)lli«i>(|MB| New Fl. i. 39. Lindley, Penny Cycl. i. 31, J-'oiltoK, Pinetum Woburn. 95, t. 33. Nuttall, Sylua, iit. \W, Spach, Hist. Vig. xi. 412. Emerson, 2'rees Afma, Hi j ed. 2, i. 99. Gilioul, Arb. Bis. 43. Kniglit, Sgu. ('unif, 36. Lindley & Gordon, Jour. Hort, Soa. Lnml. v. 2 1 1 1 ' Darlington, Fl. Cestr. ed. 3, 292. QordoHi PimflHIti

9, Hcdkoi «e Hnchitetter, Syn. Nadelh. 188. (Nel- wm; Reiillld, PiniicM', 47. Gray, Man. ed. 6, 471.—

Ai Mlll'fay, Jimr. Bot. v. t. 69, f. 2-7 Hoopes, Ever-

l/mim, 107, I. 20. Nordlinger, Forstbot. 442, f . iMiiAw, DeuMie Dendr. ed. 2, 93. SchUbeler, Virid. Nnri'i-g. I. 427. Alji«« Mlfirifolla, Salisbury, Trant. Linn. Sac. viii. 314

ami).

AlHtti fiibttl, Ji.umo St. Hilaire, TraitS des Arbrea For- PKlii-H. 1. 7i), f. 7-10 (not Poiret) (1824).

Pi«eft ftlbft, Link, Handb. ii. 478 (1831) i Linncea, xv. ftlf». (JiirfU'fe, TraitA Conif. 238.— Van Houtte, Fl. ihn fifrnn, xxi. 157, t. 2251. Brunet, Hist. Picea, 4, i, =i ^M\(e\mtc, Conif. 22. Kegel, Buss. Dendr. pt. i. Wi ■i^folKnliniinn, Oard. Chron. n. ser. xi. 334. Ber- Stmi\, Aim. Set. Nat. «(?r. 5, xx. 85. —Sargent, Forest fmn TV. Am.mhCenauaU. S. ix. 204. Wmitomm,

Piirnl. fl. (•(!. 2, 97 Watson & Coulter, Qray's Man.

m\i (I, 4t»2. Mayr, Wald. Nordam. 219, f. 6. Beiss- \Wfi /III mill. NuiMh. 340, f. 96. Masters, Jour. R. finish Hill'. xl». 220. Hansen, Jour. R. Hort. Soc. xiv. i'ii {/'I net inn Danicum). Koehne, Deutsche Dendr. 'M, fi fl, lit K. q. Vox, Sep. Forest Comm. N. Y. 1894,

Pimn blsra, vnr. glauca, Cnrribre, Traitd Conif. 242

(l«nn;.

PIhUM Mtbfn, var. arotioa, Lawson & Son, List No. 10,

AlilittliiPif, 111 (1851).— Courtin, Fain. Conif. 64. PiiUM ftlbrn, vnr. arotioa longifolia, Lawson & Son, List

Sii. UK AliMlimv. 19 (1851). PiltlW J'Ubfft, viir, ccBrulea, Lawson & Son, List No. 10,

rilili'lhii'ii; lit (1851). -Courtin, Fam. Conif. 64. A((i«« ltt«ft, K, K«(!li, Dendr. ii. pt. ii. 243 (1873). PJHWtt !«»«, RiiCKCMt, Garden and Forest, ii. 496 (1888).

/), ti. .Inch, (Inrilp.n and Forest, x. 63. PiOwA l^libfn pusllla, Peck, TIte Spruces of the Adiron-

llUfltH, JO (1897).

A tree, with strong-smelling foliage,' aometjinxii mf l(l((((llP(l (ititl fifty feet in height, with a trunk three or four feet in diameter, but east of tltu itu*i|»y M)Mllllftilifl« mid eBpecially toward the southeastern

' The foliage and young branchlets of the Whit SpruoB eiiiit M (tKCNjldidl of t'Iml Kiiffrlmmini, Tlio foliage of this tree has also

powerful |K)lecat odor, which, although it varies ill dugriu ii) ililtiiF- III)' ^xlfiCNt odor, but Iras strongly developed than in the White

ent ind!- 'duals, offers a sure nietho<l of distiiigiiiiiiiiiig this Ifnn t^^ li^fHit¥. all seasons of the year from the other Aiuerioau bprimes, with i\»>

! i !•

I i

-I

38

SILVA OF NORTH AMERICA.

CONIFERS.

limits of its range, reaching an average maximum height of sixty or seventy feet and an average trunk diameter of two feet. The long comparatively thick limhs sweep out in graceful upward curves and form a broad-based and rather open irregular pyramid which is often obtuse at the apex, and are densely clothed with stout rigid pendent lateral branches, the laltimat.i branchlets frequently incurving from near the middle. The bark of the trunk is from one quarter to one half of an inch in tiiickness, and separates irregularly into thin plate-like scales which are light gray more or less tinged with brown on the surface. The branchlets are stout, pale gray-green when they first appear, and glabrous or slightly puberulous;' during their first autumn and winter they are orange-brown and then gradually grow darker and grayish brown. The winter-buds, which are broadly ovate and obtuse^ are covered by hght chestnut-brown scales rounded at the apex, with thin often reflexed ciliate margins, and vary from an eighth to nearly a quarter of an inch in length according to the vigor and stoutness of the branchlets. The leaves are crowded on the upjM>r side of the branches by the twisting of those on the lower side, and point forward, especially those near the extremities of the branchlets ; they are tetragonal, incurved, and acute or acuminate at the apex, which terminates in a rigid callous tip, and are pale blue and hoary when they first appear, becoming dark blue-green or pale blue at maturity, individual trees varying greatly in the depth and brightness of the shades of blue of their foliage ; they are marked on each of the four sides with three or four rows of stomata, and are from one third of an inch in length on fertile upper branches to three quarters of an inch in length on the lower sterile branches of young and vigorous trees. The staminate flowers are oblong-cylindrical and pale red when they first emerge from the buds, but soon appear yellow from their thick covering of pollen ; they are from one half to three quarters of an inch in length at maturity, when they are suspended on slender pedicels nearly half an inch long. The pistillate flowers are oblong-cylindrical, with round nearly entire pale red or yellow-green scales broader than they are long, and nearly orbicular denticulate bracts. The cones, which are nearly sessile or are borne on very short thin straight stems, are oblong-cylindrical, slender, slightly narrowed to both ends and rather obtuse at the apex, and are usually about two inches long and from one third to two thirds of an inch in diameter, but vary from an inch to two inches and a half in length ; their scales are nearly orbicular or somewhat longer than they are broad, rounded, truncate, slightly emarg^inate or rarely narrowed at the apex, and obscurely striate, with thin usually entire margins ; when fully grown they are pale green, often somewhat tinged with red,- and at maturity they become pale brown and lustrous, and are so thin and flexible that the dry cone is easily compressed between the fingers without injuring the scales ; they generally fall in the autumn or during the following winter, soon after the escape of the seeds. These are about an eighth of an inch in length and pale brown, with narrow wings which gradually broaden from the base to above the middle and are very oblique at the apex.

The White Spruce inhabits the banks of streams and lakes and the borders of swamps, in rich moist alluvial soil, ocean cliffs, and less commonly at the north the rocky slopes of low hills; it ranges from the shores of Ungava Bay in Labrador westward to those of Hudson Bay, and from the iiiouti) of Seal River not far to the north of Cape Churchill it is scattered along the northern frontier f)f the forest nearly to the shores of the Arctic Sea, and, crossing the continental divide, reaches Belu-ing Strait in 06° 44' north latitude. Southward it extends down the Atlantic coast to southern MaiiiL',' growing often close to the shore, where it is constantly bathed in the spray of the ocean, and to northern New Hampshire, northeastern Vermont, northern New York, northern Michigan * and Minnesota and the Black Hills of Dakota, and through the interior of Alaska and along the Rocky Mountains to northern Montana.

' ill .le ^ *.crior nf Alaskii and in Ilritish Colnrobia tho branch- ^ On the coaat of Maine Picea CanaHemtix prows as far south as

lets uf the I) Mie Spnu-e are sonictinies slightly pultcruloun; in the the shores of Caseo Bay. (Sep Cnrden and Fort^H^ ix. 351, f. 47.)

cast the branch :ia appear to be always entirely ghibrons. * In the southern peninsula of Miehigiin, Pitea Canademu is

' In a swamp ear ItanfT, Allmrta, I have seen in August White common on the Au Sable Uivcr and northward {tfnte W. J. Ileal). Spruce trees bean tg bright red cones and others pale grceu cones.

I

CONIFEB^.

SILVA OF NORTH AMERICA.

In Labrador the White Spruce is widely hut not generally distrihuted, growing in the south in well-watered valleys and ascending rocky hills to elevations of two thousand feet above the sea-level, but north of the southern watershed it is confined to river-valleys.' West of Hudson Bay it often grows to a large size on river terraces to the vjry borders of the barren lands, following down the Telzoa River nearly to the shores of Doobaunt Lake ; '^ it was found by Richardson on the Copper Mine River, within twenty miles of the Arctic Sea, growing to a height of twenty feet,' and its stems choke the mouths of every arctic American river, strewing the adjacent shores with heaps of driftwood and testifying to its abundance on their shifting banks. In the basin of the Yukon the White Spruce is the largest and most valuable tree, attaining a large size on alluvial bottom-lands, where it is very abundant, while on adjacent hills it remains small and stunted.^ On the northwest coast the White Spruce is able to exist farther north than other trees, and to form scattered groves near the sea from the shore of Norton Sound to the Nootak River, where, with short stout trunks and crowded branches densely clothed with thick leaves, it lives through the long arctic winter and sometimes rises to the height of fifty feet." The White Spruce is common in Newfoundland and the Maritime Provinces, and on the streams which flow from the north into the St. Lawrence, and westward it ranges through Ontario to the borders of the treeless plains in Manitoba, where it occupies sand-hills and the dry slopes of river banks." Less abundant and less generally distributed in the central region of British America than the Black Spruce, it forms groves sometimes of large trees on the alluvial bottoms of the Saskatchewan, Churchill, and Athabasca Rivers ; ^ in the valleys of the Rocky Mountains of Alberta, British Columbia, and northern Montana, it lines the banks of streams and lakes up to elevations of five thousand feet, and attaining its largest size and its greatest beauty, sends up tall sf 're-Uke heads of dark foliage. It grows in small groves on the Cypress hills in Assiniboine ; ^ and

It

> "The White Spnice is widely distributed throaghout the Labrador peninsula, but, unlilie the Black Spruce, it is nut met with in all localities, and its distribution app?r..'8 to depend almost wholly on the character of tht <<"'>, miA only to a limited extent upon climate. It is found on both the eastern and western sides of the peninsula, and its northern limit almost coincides with that of the Blacif Spruce. Along the St. Lawrence, and inland to about latitude 51°, large trees of this species are abundant in the valleys and far np the sides of the rocky and drift-covered hills (1,000 to 2,000 feet), where they grow to commercial size along with White Birch and the Aspen. Farther northward the Black Spruce grad- ually replaces them on the rocky hillsides, and the White Spruce appears to be confined to the modified drift of the river terraces, where the trees are conspicuous for their size, being much larger and longer than the Black Spruce. On the central table-land (nearly 2,000 feet above sca-lcvel) to the northward of latitude 52", White Spruce is rarely found on the great area of archtean crystal- line rocks with its overlying soil of sandy glacial drift; and it is found only in small patches on the sides of the hills with small White Birches, and usually growing on the modified drift along the borders of the smaller mountain streams.

" On the large areas of stratified Cambrian rocks, about the upper waters of the Hamilton River, White Spruce grows freely and to largo size (3 feet diameter) on the hillsides, with a heavy rich soil formed by tlic disintegration of the ferruginous lime- stones and shales beneath, and is here found as far north as latitude 54^. On the archntan area, northward of latitude 53°, Wliite Spruce is found only in tlio river-valleys of the eastern, northern, and western watersheds, whore it grows on tho terraces that flank the rocky walls of tho valleys, and is nearly always associated with White Birch and sometimes with Aspen and Balsam Poplar.

" White Spruce trees are the only conifers found growing on the outer islands of James Bay; and this is probably due to the soil being very similar to the modified drift of the river terraces of the mainland, as the islands are formed from the drift of a ter- minal moraine, rearranged by marine action during a post-glacial subsidence. The islands along the east shore of Hudson Bay are often rocky, and, where wooded, the trees are mostly Black Spruces, with some White Spruce on the marine terraces." (Low in lilt. See, also, Low, Rep, Geolog. Surv. Can. n. ser. viii. 34 L.)

' Tyrrell, Rep. Geolog. Surv. Can, n. ser. ix. 214 F. See, also, Tyrrell, in The Canadian Magazine, vU. 524 (Through the Sub- Arclics of Canada).

Franklin Jour. Appx. No. 7, 752.

Dall, Alaska and Us Resources, 439. G. M. Dawson, Geolog, Surv. Can, n. ser. iii. pt. i. 112 B, 110 B, 121 B.

' As Abies arctica A. Murray has described the White Spruce of northwestern Alaska, which he distinguished by its broader pulvini, thicker leaves, and smaller cones, with more concave scales and bracts of a somewhat different shape (,f.iur, Bot. v. 253, t. 269 [1867]). These are slight differences, which may well have been the result of the severe climate of the region where the offi- cers of IL M. S. Herald discovered this tree^ which, judging from the figure, I cannot distinguish from ordinary northern forms of Picea Canadensis,

It is also the Pinus alba, $ arclica, Pavlatore, De Candolle Prodr. xvi. pt. ii. 414 (1868), and the Picea Ma, var. prdica, F. Kurtz, Bot. Jahrb. xix. 425 {Fl. Chilcatgebietes (1893).

Macoun, Cat. Can. PI. 469.

' Tyrrell, Rep. Geolog. Surv, Can. n. ser. viii. 12 D. I Macoun, I, c, 470.

i!(

' I ;

V

40

SILVA OF NORTE AMERICA.

CONIFERJE.

among the Black Hills of Dakota it is the largest and one of the most abundant coniferous trees, often reaching a height of more than one hundred feet in the neighborhood of stk'eams. It is common iu the region north of Lake Superior, but east of the Mississippi it nowhere extends vtry far south of the northern boundary of the United States, and is not a large or valuable tree.

The wood of Ficea Canadensis is light, soft, not strong, and straight-grained, with a satiny surface ; it contains numerous prominent medullary rays, few resin passages, and thin inconspicuous bunds of small summer cells, and is light yellow, with thin hardly distinguishable sapwood. The specific gravity ot the absolutely dry wood is 0.4051, a cubic foot weighing 25.25 pounds. In the eastern provinces of Canada, where it is probably the only Spruce which is cut in large quantities for lumber, it is used in construction and for the interior finish of buildings, and for paper pulp, and is largely exported to Europe. White Spruce limber is also occasionally manufactured in Dakota and Montana, and from this tree the miners of the Yukon obtain their lumber and the logs for their huts. The Indians of the north used the long tough flexible roots of the White Spruce, and probably also those of the Black Spruce, to fasten together the sheets of Birch bark from which they made their canoes, and to weave water-tight b. -':>t8 and vessels,' and from the bark of young Spruce-trees they made canoes when the Birch could not be found.^

The Spruce-trees which Jacques Oartier saw as he sailed up the Saguenay River in the autumn of 1535 were probably White Spruces,' and it was the White Spruce which John Mason, writing in 1620, included among the valuable timber-trees of Newfoundland.'' First described by Miller in 1731," the White Spruce is said to have been cultivated by Bishop Compton in England before the end of the sixteenth century."

Picea Canadensis excels the other Spruces of eastern North America in massiveness of trunk and in lichness and beauty of foliage ; and in regions suflieieutly cold to insure the full development of all its charms, no other Spruce-ti'ee grows more vigorously or better adapts itself, with persistent lower branches and shapely form, to decorate the parks and gardens of the north, although in the compara- tively mild climate of southern New England and the middle states, and of western and central Europe, it soon perishes or loses its value as an ornamental tree.

A number of forms of the White Spruce,' some with leaves of darker or lighter shades of blue and others of dwarf habit or with erect er pendent branches, are occasionally propagated in nurseries.

' ** Watapc is the name given to the divided roots of the spnice- fir, which the natives weave into a degree of compactness that renders it capable -<( containing a fluid. The different parts of the bark cam^a are u!30 sewed together with tiiis kind of tilament." (Mackenzie, Voyages from Montreal on .he River St. Laurence and through the Continent of North America to the Frozen ami Pacific Oceana in the . .an 17S9 and 17IIS, 31. See, also, Richardson, FranUin Jour. Appx. No. 7, 752.)

" Kichardson, Arctic Searching Kiped. ii. 310.

' " Depiiis le 10 jour junques au 28, dndict moys nous auoni csti< nauigans a mont ledict fleuve sans perdre beure ny jour, diiraiul lc(|uel temp auos vcu & trouvd d'aussi beau pays & tcrres aussi vtiyes que I'on scauroit desirer, plainc comnie diet est des beaulx arbres Uu monde, scauoir chesnes, bormes, noycrs, cedrcs, pruches, fn^sncs, briez, fandres, oziers, & force vignes." (Bref Recti ei Succincle Narration de la Naiigalion faile in MDXXXV. AtOXXX VI. Par le Captain Jacques Carlier aux lies de Canada 24.)

* " The I.iand of the North parts moat mountanye & woodye very thick ot Kirro trees, Spruce, I'ine, Lereckbout, Aspc, Ilasill, a kind of stinking wood; the three furmest goodly Timber and most con- venient for building." (John Mason, A Briefe Discourse of the NeiB-found-land.)

^ Abies ; Picea: fotiis brevioribut, coiis parvii, biuucialibus laxis, Diet. No. 0.

A bies Canadensis, picea foliis brevUmbus, conis parvLi, biuncialibus, laxis, Charlevoix, Htstoire de la Nouaelie France, et i2"»"i iv. 309, f. Loudon, Arb. Brit. iv. 2310, f. 2224.

^ The handsomest uf the numerous cultivated forms of the White Spruce is the tree with light blue leaves rather cloS'ly pressed against the branches, which has been known iu gardens Quder one name or another for nore than a century. It is :

Picea Canadensis glauca, Sudwortb, Bull. No. 14, Div. Forestry, U. S. Dept. Agric. 37 (1897).

Pinus glabra, Moeuch, Bdume Weiss. 73 (1785). Abies rulira nerulea, Loudon, Arb. Brit. iv. 2310 (1838). Abies carulea, Forbes, Pinetiim Wobum. 99(1839). Picea coTulea, Link, Linmea, xv. 522 (IS-ll). Pinus rubra, B viotarea, Eudlicher, Syn. Conif, 114 (1847). Abies albii carulea, Carrii!re, Traite Conif. ed. 2, 320 (1867). Abies Americana coerulea, UoL'Suer, Uandb. Conif 509 (1887). Picea alha carulea, Ileissncr, k!andb. Nadelh. 341 (18U1). The other forms uf the White Spruce found in European gar- dens, dwarf in habit or more or less abnormal in mode of growth or in the color of their foliage, have little to recommend them as ornamental plants. (For a description of these varieties, see Beiss- ner, I. c. 342.)

I'

|5

CONIFEILS.

:erou8 trees, t is common ry far south

ith a satiny (conspicuous wood. The ids. In the [uantities for pulp, and is Dakota and ir their huts, irobably also r made their Be-trees they

e autumn of ing in 1620, n 1731,° the I end of the

of trunk and )pment of all sistent lower the compara- and central

ades of blue 1 nurseries.

biuncialibus taxis,

\rvis, biuncialibus, ' 12"». iv. 369, f .

id forms of the

Gs rather clos-'ly nown iu gardens ry. It is : 14, Div. Foretlry,

i)-

10 (1838). 839).

<: 114 (1847). 2, 320 (1807). mif. am (1887). 341 (1891).

11 Kuropcan gar- 1 mode of growth oniniend them as irieties, see Beiss-

I

11

(|> <

f- ' '

''\

ti-i

EXPLANATION OF THK PLATE.

Plate DXCVIIL Picba CANADBmu.

1. A branch with staminate flowera, natural size.

2. A atamlnate flower, enlarged.

3. An anther, front view, enlarged.

4. A branch with pistillate flowers, natural size. 6. A pistillate flower, enlarged.

6. A scale of a pistillate flower, lower side, with its bract, enlarged.

7. A scale of a pistillate flower, upper side, with its ovules, enlarged.

8. A fruiting branch, natural size.

9. A cone-scale, upper side, with its seeds, natural size.

10. A cone-scale, lower side, with its bract, natural size.

11. A seed, lower side, enlarged.

12. Cross section of a leaf magnified fifteen diameters.

13. Winter-buds, natural size.

14. A seedling plant, natural size.

/Hi i

y

:anadensv

..'^'

■^■-

J 1

l\

>

m

n.

m

I

\nc.

1*^' i

front »>«w, enUrgftu. 4. A bruiicli willi [iUlill.it« HoweM, tifttnral ^■.f

6. A ^intilioM Howor. eciUrgcd.

a. A Wftla of » pintiiUte flowur, Uitro iildo. witb iU bra

7. A iM-nle '»f « f««til)«t« ft"w^i', upjwi .

8. A fraifiiijr lir»n>'h, i>»kit*i '•>«.

9 A ri)in-»c.al«, u|i[»tr «i(le, witli iU «ee<i«, nmumi «itA. TO. A con''-«cale, lower side, villi iu brrw^t, uiitural tvui.

11. A «e«<l, lower lide, cnlargeil.

12. Crona wi'iioti of a leaf nioKiiili'xl fiffwn diamelers.

13. W'iiiUm'-IiikIh. natural »ir,e.

14. A MtmUiiii; plant, natural sito.

tittt.

I i

nUva of North Ami-nca

T*D [lyrvii

i' F. Fii.rvn <i?/

'u'

PICEA CANADENSIS, F^ S P

Rapm^-

A AU,>irriui' Jiff.

Iffi/' . ^ T<ineuf' /'art.--

1^

!

-I Jis

\\\V:

II 1

i

|,B

If

I!)'

i.

10. ij:

w|: i 1

1 :

CONirBKA.

SUVA OF NORTH AMERICA.

43

FIOEA ENGELMANNI. White Spruce. Engelmann Spruce.

Cones oblong-cylindrical or oval, their scales narrowed to a truncate or acute apex, or obovatc and rounded, crosc-dentuto or entire. Branchlets pubescent. Leaves soft and flexible, bluc-grcen.

Pioea Eneelmanni, Kngelmann, Trans. Si. Louu Aead. ii. 212 (1863)! Gard. Chron. 1863, 1035) n. «er. »ii. 790 ! xi. 334 ; xvii. 145 i Gart»r\flora, xiii. 244 ; Roth- rock IV/ieeler't Hep. vi. 256. Carri^re, TraM Conif. ed. 2, 348. Sdn&lauie, Con\f. 24. O. M. Dawson, Can. Nat. n. aer. ix. 325. Regel, Rtiu. Dendr. ed. 2, pt. i. 33. Sargent, Forett Treei N. A m. lOM Census U. S.

ix. 205. Coulter, Man. Rocky Mt. Bot. 431 Mayr,

Watd. Nordam. 352. Lenimon, Hep. California State Board Forestry, iii. 113, t 2 {Cone-Bearers of Califor- nia); West-Amtrican Cone-Bearers, 51; Bull. Sierra Club, ii. 159, t. 23 (Conifers of the Paciflo Slope), Beisa- ner, Handb. Nadelh. 343, f. 97. Maatora, Jour. R. Ilort. Soc. xiT. 221. Hansen, t/owr. B. Ifort. Soc. xiv. 422 {Pinetum Danioum). Koebne, Deutsche Dendr. 24, f. 8, M.

Abies nigra, Engelmann, A7n, Jour. Soi. aer. 2, zxxit. 330 (not Du Roi) (1862).

Abies Bnselmannl, Parry, Trans. St. Louis Aead. U. 122 (186;t) i Am. Nat. viii. 179 i Proe. Davenport Acad, i. 149. Henkel & Ilochstetter, Sgn. Nadelh. 418.— Hoopea, Eoergreens, 177, f. 22. Wataon, King's Rep, V. 332 ! PI. Wheeler, 17. Porter Is Coulter, Fl. Colora- do ; llayden's Surv. Misc. Pub. 130. K. Koch, Dendr. ii. pt. ii. 242. Hall, Bot. Qatttte, ii. 95. Veitch, Man. Conif. 68. Lauche, DeuUetie Dendr. ed. 2, 92.

Finns oommutata, Farlatore, CandoUe Prodr. xvi. pt ii. 417 (1868).

Abies oommutata, A. Murray, Qard. Chnm. n. ler. iiL 106 (1875). Gordon, Pinetum, ed. 2, 5.

Pioea Engelmanni, var. Francisoana, Lammon, West- American Cone-Bearers, 61 (1895).

Pioea Columbiana, Lenimon, Garden and Forest, z. 183 (1897) ; Bull. Sierra Club, a. 168 (Conifers of the Pa- o\fio Slope).

A tree, often one hundred and fifty feet in height, with a trunk four or five feet in diameter, or frequently, on high mountains at the extreme upper limits of its range, reduced to a shrub with semiprostrate stems. During its early years the slender spreading branches, which are produced in regular whorls one close above another, form a narrow compact symmetrical pyramid, and in old age the trees, which generally grow only in dense forests, either gregariously or mixed with other alpine conifers, produce long naked trunks surmounted by narrow pyramidal heads of short small branches usually pendulous below, horizontal above, and nearly erect at the summit, and gracefully hanging short lateral branchlets. The bark of the trunk is from one quarter to one half of an inch in thickness, light cinnamon-red, and broken into large thin loose scales. The winter-buds are conical or often slightly obtuse, with pale chestnut-brown scales which are scarious and often free or slightly reflexed on the margins. The branchlets, which are comparatively slender, or on trees in high exposed positions often much thickened, are pubescent for three or four years ; when they first appear they are pule greenish yellow, turning light or dark orange-brown or gray tinged with brown during their first winter, and then gradually become darker, the thin bark beginning to separate into small flaky scales in their fourth or fifth years. The leaves are soft and flexible, with a strong unpleasant polecat-like odor when bruised, and stand out from all sides of the branch, pointing forward ; they are tetragonal, acute, with callous tips, slender, nearly straight, or slightly incurved on vigorous sterile branches, and stouter, shorter, and more incurved on fertile branches, and from an inch to an inch and an eighth in length. They are marked on each face with from three to five rows of small stomata, which are more conspicuous on the upper than on the lower side ; when they first appear they are covered with a pale glaucous bloom, which disappears during theii first summer, leaving them dark

A

1 1

44

SUVA OF NORTH AMEIUCA.

CntilVVMK.

|! r

bliio-griH'ti iir piilu Rteol-bliio. The Rtaminato (iowora are olilonpr^'ylindrionl, and about (Ivu oi^litliH uf MX inch loM^ anil ik i|uurt(>r of an iiuh thick, with dark purph* aiithcrN, and aru raiHod on Hh'ndcr KtiuiiN often nearly a c|iiiirtcr of an inch hniff whon fully jjniwn. Tho piHtillatu Howcru an^ oljlonK-cylindiicai, liri^ht Hcaili't, and from ono tliird to tivu fi^hths of an inch in Icn^rth, with pointod or rounded and tnont or Ivim divided or entire sealcH, their hractn iiein^ oldon^ aixl rounded, or lU'uto or acuniinuto and denticulato at the apex, or obovate-oliiorifj; and abruptly acuininatu. Thu <'()no8 are oblonj^- cyhndrical or oval, frraduaily narrowed to both cndH and usually about two inclieH lon^r, altbougli they vary in length from onu inch to tlireo invliuH, with thin flexible ittriatu HcaleH which nro Nligbtly concave, very thin, and jfeneraliy erose-dentato or rarely nImoHt entire on the marjfins, and are UHUally broadest at the middle, wed^re-Hhaped below, and gradually contracted above to a truncate or rarely acute npex, or occasionally they aru obovato and rounded above ; the conew, which are HCHsilo or very short- Btalked, are borne in great nuniberg on the upper branclieH, even the prostrato HhruliH at the upper limit)) of tree-growth being often covered with Hniall couch ; they are horizontal and ultimately pendulouH, and when fully grown are light green somewhat tinged with Hcarlet, with HcalcH which are Hpreading or apprcHHed, and light chestnut-brown and luntrous at maturity; they mostly fall in the autumn or early in their first winter and soon after thu escape of the seeds.' These are rather obtuse at the base, nearly black, and generally about half as long as their broad and very obliipio wings.

From the licH-ky Mountains of Alberta and Hritish Columbia P'ttru KiKjdmnnid is distributed southward over the interior mounbiin systems of the continent to northern New Mexico and Arizona, forming great forests at elevations of from five thousand feet at the north up to eleven thousand five hundred feet at the south, and westward through Montttna, Idaho, Washington, and Oregon, where it is usually scattered among other trees.' Attaining its greatest size and beauty north of the northern boundary of the United States, the Engchnann Spruce forms the largest part of the great forests which clotiie the high mountains of southern Alberti, those which overlook the valley of the Columbia in British Columbia, and the Selkirk Mountains.'' The Spruce forests are less extensive in the region

In the aiie of iU cunoi and in the ihape of iti conenicalei and their lirnctM. Pii-ra Emj^tmauni sIkiwh gn'iiter variiitiun than thu othir Nurlli American Hpeiieii uf Piien. In Coldrudo, Utah, and Arizona the cune-tu'ules are rhoniboidnl, more ur Iobh truncate at the apex, entire ur crose-ilentieulHte tu a f^rcater or less degree on the inar^iiiN, and appresaod or spreading;, their hracts heing UBually obluiig and rounded or acute at the a|iei, or rarely acuminate, while the cones vary from an inch to three inches in length on adjacent trees. (See Drandegce, Hot. Gaulle, iii. 32.) Farther northward, especially in northern Wyoming, northern Montana, and in Alberta, some trees bear targe eones with truncate scales, but othert- produce cones gcnemlly about an inch and a half long with oblong-obovate scales rounded aliovo and fretjuently nearly cutire on the margins, their bracts varying from oblong-rounded to acuminate. These cones, seen by themselves, might well sng- gpAt another species, but they are connected with those of the other extreme form by a long series of intcrgrading forms ; and in habit, bark, and foliage the trees which produce the different kinds arc not distingui..ihablc.

' On the mountains of the upper Columbia Basin, in the United States, Pirea Knijelinanni, although generally scattered, is less common than i^ lA on the Hocky Mountains, and often of smaller size, although on the northern slopes of Mount Hood in Oregon, where it is abundant in the Hemlock and Fir forests between alti* tude.H <if three thousand and six thousand feet, it frequently attains a height of one hundred and twenty-Hvo feet and a trunk diameter of three feet on the shores of lakes and streams, while on dry hillsides it is much smaller and stunted in appearance. Farther southward Picea Engetmanm grows near Upper Klamath Lake in

swampy ground down to elevations of about two thousand tive huudreil feet above the sea. This is tho lowest station where I have seen it, except near Priest Lake in the eslremo northern part uf Idaho, where it descends to two thousand three huiulred feet. On tho went side of the Cascade Mountains Pitrti /■.'»</« /munni, although not common, grows along the whole length of the range, and is usually found only in small groves in moist or swampy situations. It is said by Mr. A. J. Johnson tu grow in the coast range on Saddle MounUiin, a few mites south of Astoria, (Oregon, between elevations of throo thousand and six thousand feet above the sea-level.

This western form is the Pieen Columbiana of Lemmon (Clar- ilm and PiirrtI, x. 18.1), who has tried tu distinguish it from the tree of the Koeky Mountains by its smaller size, rather different habit, scaly bark, and smaller eones with " thin ubovate obtuse scales" with "scariuus wrinkled edges.'' The cones, however, of the Spruce of tho Cascades and of the Kluo Mountains of Washing- ton and Oregon which I have seen do not differ materially in size and shape from those pro<luced in Colorado and Arizona, showing less variation from them than from the cones on some trees in tho northern Itm-ky Mountains. Mr. Lommon describes the bark of Pieea Engtlvumni as *' thick, brown, and deeply furrowed," but wherever I have seen this tree from Alberta and Hritish Columbia to Arizona it has tho scaly einnainon-red bark which is character- istic of the trees of the Columbian basin and the western slope of the Cascade Mountains.

The most northern stations where I have seen Picrn Engel- manni are on tho mountains above I..aggan, on the line of the Cana- dian Paciflo Kailruad in Alberta, and on the Selkirk Mountains in

>(' '

CONirEB*

rONIKGtlA

SILVA OF NO It Til AMKHK'A.

inimcdiiituly Month uf tli« bniintlnry of thu (Iiiitixl StiituH, iiltlioiifrli tint En)^(ilrniinn Hpriico in a common tri-v ill tliu moiiiititiii forcHtH of iMontaiiii mid Idiilio,' and raii^uH wcHtward aloii)^ thu hi^h nioiiiitaiim of iiortlimi WaHhiii^toii ami Hoiitliward aloiij; lioth hIo|u>h of thu tW'adti Moiiiitaiiix to Nuuthcrii Oie^oii, and over tint I'owdur Itivur and Hluu MountaiiiH of I'aitturn WaMliin^ton and Oregon. It Ih ('(iinmon on the YcllowHtonu |iiati'au of iiorthwuHtLTii Wyoinin^,^ and Honthward oocnrH on all tint monntuiii ranjrcH whii'li riiui tun thoiiMand fiu't ahovo thu Hi'a-luvi'l. It ix thu principal and iiioNt valiialilu tiinlici'- trcc <if ('oiorado and Utah, forming ^ruat furuHtH on all thu hi^rli ran^^cH, ^ciu'raily ^rowiii)^ to itM largest iiize at ulevatioim of liutweun iiinu thontuiiid tivu hnndrcd and tun thouMind fuet, but oceaHionally dcHccndiiifr to nine thoiiHand fuut and aNcundin^ to cloven thuimand feet aliovc the Hca, and with I'liiHi* urinldld reaching; thu extrumu upper liniitH of thu tiuiher-line, where, although UHUally HcniiproNtratu, it Homctiinc8 duvulopH a tall erect Htcm. It likuwiHo formH foreitta on thu hi^rh mountaiiiH of eastern Nevada, and on thu San FranciHuo I'uaks in northorn Arizona, where it ran^rcH from niiiu thoiiHand two hundred feet up to eleven thousand five hundred feet, reachinjr with I'iiiiis (irisldtii the hi^huHt limit of treti-growth ;' it uIho ^rrows in Arizona on Mount Graham and thu Sierra Blauca, and near the Hummit of thu Mo^ollon Mountains in New Mexico.*

The wood of I'iren h'nijclmriinti is very li^ht, Boft, not Htronp, and cloHe and Htraight-grained, with a Hatiny Hurfacc ; it Ih pale yellow tingud with red, with thick hardly diHtiiigiiihhaltlu Hapwood, numeroua coniipicuouii medullary rayM, few minute runin paHsages, and incoiiHpicuoug bands of Rinall summer celU. The Hpecific gravity of the absolutely dry wood in O.'MV,), a cubic foot weighing 21. -19 poiindti. It is largely manufacturud into lumber for tiiu coimtructioii of buildingH, and al80 cxtun- siveiy used for fuel and charcoal. The bark is employed locally in ttuining leather.

J'icm KiKjclmanni, which thu botanists who tirst visited the Rocky Mountains ° mistook for one of the Spruces of the east, was first distinguished in IHG'i by Dr. C. C. Parry," who found it on Pike's Peak in Colorado. The following year ho sent secdii to the Botanic Garden of Harvard University at Cambridge, where this tree was probably first cultivated. It grows more slowly in New England, where it is very hardy, I ban the other Spruces and Firs of the Rocky Mountains,' forming a narrow symmetrical compact pyramid beautiful in shape and color; and in the Arnold Arboretum it has already produced a few cones. Unfolding its buds very early in the spring, like other trees which grow naturally only at high elevations, Pkea Knr/clmanni suffers in western Blurope from late spring frosts, but in northern Russia it has proved one of the hardiest of exotic conifers."

In its specific name this tree, the fairest of its race, braving the fiercest mountain blasts, the fiery rays of the southern sun and the arctic cold of the northern winter, with tall and massive shafts

British Columbia; but in Bouthurn Alberta and louthcrn Britiah Culuiiibia it gruws to such a largu size up Ui hi{;h altitudes and is so genurally distributed that no doubt it ranges much farther north- ward along the Kocky Muuntuius, By Mueoun ( Cat, Can. I'l. 470) it is stated that specimens collected on the l\mse Kiver plateau (latitude Co" 40' 5^1 ", longitude VIQT, altitude '2,tiOO feet) are rcfer- nlile to Picea Engelmanni, while trees on the Athabasca (latitude 7' 34 ", longitude tlS" 48 ) belong to I'icen Canadenaui, but I 1),. ' t' not been able to see any specimen of Pirea Engelmanni gath- ered north of the lino of the Canadian PaciHc Uailroad.

' St.- I.eiberg, Contrih. U. S. Nat. Herb. v. 47.

' Tvi .(ly, /'/ora o/Ihe Vellomlone Natimal Pari; 12, 74.

* Merriam, North Amerkan Fauna, No. II, llil.

* Rushy, Bidl. Torrnj Hot. Club, ix. 80.

* On the 0th of September, 1805, I^wis and Clark, being then in the second year of their transcontinental journey, were crossing the Bitter Uoot Mountains by the Lolo Trail, and found that the timber was " almost exclusively pine, chiefly of the lung-leaved kind, with ■ome spruce and a sprinkling o{ fir resembling the Sootoh Fir "

{Hutortf o/thii Ex^ifdition under the Command of Lewis and Clark, ei, Coues, ii. 590). This Spruce of the Bitter Hoot Mountains must have been Picea Entjetmnnni, which here first makes its appearance in literature. (See Sargent, Garden and Forcat, x. 1!0.)

See vii. 130.

' Picea Engetmanni grows slowly also in its native forests. A tree near the mining town of Cripple Creek in Colorado, ex- amined by General Ilcnry L. Abbot in 1890, had a trunk twelve inches in diameter Ave feet from the surface of the ground and six inches in diameter forty feet from the ground, and was two hundred and fifty years old. The log specimen cut in Colorado for tho Jesup Collection of North American Woods in tho American Museum of Natural History, New York, is twenty-three inches in diameter inside the bark and four hundred and ten years old, with sixty-eight years of sapwood, which is three eighths uf an inch in thickness. At tho end uf one hundred years tho trunk of this tree was unly five and a quarter inches in diamel and at the end of its second century uiity eleven inches.

' Andrd, (lard. Chron. n. ser. vii. S62.

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SILVA OF NORTH AMERICA.

brilliant in color, and graceful spire-like crowns of soft foliage of tenderest hue, thousand mountain-tops the memory of a good and wise man.'

COMIFEBJB.

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EXPLANATION OF THE PLATE.

Pla. .■: DXCIX. PicEA Enqelhanni.

1. A branch with staininate flowers, natural size.

2. An anther, front view, enlarged.

3. A brancli with pistillate flowers, natural size.

4. A scale of a pistillate flower, upper side, with its ovules, enlarged. 6. A scale of a pistillate flower, lower side, with iti! bract, enlarged.

6. A fruiting branch, natural size.

7. A cone from Mount Hood, Oregon, natural size.

8. A cone from the San Francisco Peaks, Arizona, natural size.

9. A cone.«cale, lower side, with its bract, natural size.

10. A cone-scale, lower side, with its bract, natural size.

11. A cone-scale, upper side, with its seeds, natural size.

12. A cone-scale, lower side, with its bract, natural size.

13. A seed, enlarged.

14. An embryo, enlarged.

15. Cross section of a leaf magnified fifteen diameters.

16. Winter branch-buds, natural size.

17. A seedling plant, natural size.

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CONIFKIUE.

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SILVA OF NORTH AMTUtWA.

41

FIOEA PABBYANA, Blue Spnioe. Colorado Spra«9,

Cones oblong-cylindrical, their scales rhomboidal, eU^ngfited, flexuose, rounded or truncate at the erose apex. Branchlets glabrous. Letiv(^i Hgid, flpinescent, blue-green, or silvery white.

Picea Parryana.

Abies Menzieeii, Engelmann, Ain. Jour. Sei. Mr. 2, zzxiv.

330 (not Lindley) (1862) ; Qard. Chron. n. »er. vii. 790.

Watson, King'* Rep. v. 333 (in part). Andrf, Gard.

Chron. n. ser. vii. 662. Porter & Coulter, Fl. Colorado;

Hayden Sure. Misc. Fiib. No. 4, 131. Brandegee, Bat.

Gazette, iii. 33. Fioea Menziesii, Engelmann, Trans. St. LouU Acad. ii.

214 (not Carri^re) (1863). Abies Menziesii Parryana, Andr^, HI. Hort. xziii. 198

(1876) ; xxiv. 63, 119.— Boezl, III. Hort. xxiv. 86. Picea pungens, Engelmann, Gard. Chron, n. ser. xi. 334

(1879) i xvii. 145. Masters, Gard. Chron, n. ser. xx.

728, f. 130 i m, 8, «, 64?, t 19, 74; Joitr. R. Hort.

8oa. %n, 223/ = tt*g«J, Hint, Dendr. ed. 2, pt i. 37

Bargent, furut 'J'fmit it. Am, \Oth Census U. S. ix. 205. -=- Co«lt#r, Man, ttoehy Mt, Sot. 431. Mayr, Wald, Nordmit, 'M. = Welssner, Handb, Nadelh. 346. Hansen, Jouf, Ji, llitft, Soo. xW. 437 {Pinetum Dani- eu„i).^%mS»W, iklltmhe Pendr, 24.

Abies EineelfflASBi g1«t«Jft, Veilcli, Man. Conif. 69 (1881).

Pioaa 9\mgm^, u Vifi4i«, tkgel, Jlusi. Dendr. ed. 2, pt. i. 37 (1883),

Picea pung9B#, fi gl^mtt, tUgel, Suss, Dendr, ed. 2, pt i. 37 (WSa),

A tree, usually from eighty to one hundred but oeeasiopally ofl§ Ihiftdred and fifty feet in height, with <i trunk which is rarely three feet in diameter, and is occasioHftUy divided into three or four stout erect secondary stems. Until the age of thirty or forty years tlie bfrtHches of Picea Parrya: n, the most variable of all the American Spruces in habit, are horiswnltal, nUmti ngii, and disposed in remote whorls, and, decreasing regularly in length from below upwftr4, tottn A !)■ :.t 'nscd symm orical pyramid, their short stout stiff branchlets pointing forward and tmkiujj^ Httfc-ioppe'' rr'-sos of roliago; later some of the branches near the middle of the tree often grow mm rapidly 'Jtu*) *' jso be^ jw them, and, spreading widely, turn upward toward the ends in graceful CHrvcH, feliadihg . eventually killing those below them. On old trees, which are generally destitute of UiW^f bfttHclies, iii.i crown is thin, rag- ged, and pyramidal, with short remote branches and stout pendeot t*KtM«hlet9) sorr.t, nes it is rounded by the lengthening and spreading of the upper branches, and of tan tl»« lowest branches n pc > dent and the upper branches erect. The bark of young trees is y^ ly or gray tinged with innauion-red and broken into small oblong plate-like scales, and on the lower part qI tM ittmUs it is from three quarters of an inch to an inch and a half in thickness and deeply divided mU) Urtml founded ridges covered with small closely appressed pale gray or occasionally bright ciunaH)0|)--r*id «*;;*les. The winter-buds are stout, obtuse, or rarely acute, and from one quarter to nearly one half of m Uieh in length, with thin pale chestnut-brown scales rounded, scarious, and often more or less f^(t^)M»♦^ at tllfe int"'^ic s. The branchlets are stout, rigid, and glabrous, and when they first uppear ar** psk ghiimus gcesn ; becoming bright orange-brown during the first winter, they gradually grow dirk«F ill tliei* set'ond season and ultimately become light grayish brown. The leaves, which stand out from ftll sides ot the branchlets and point forward, are strongly incurved near the middle, especially those on tlw U\tpt^t side of the branch which form a flatter and more compact mass of foliage than tl'oso om (Im* l«*ef side } they are stout, rigid, tetragonal, acuminate at the apex, which terminates in a long call«l4« sliatp tip, from an inch to an inch and an eighth long on the sterile branches of young vi^; irous t.rm«i, aitd (»ft«n not more than half an inch long on tho fertile branches of old trees ; they are u..4rke4 UH n^U (it their four sides with from

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CONIFERS.

four to seven rows of stomata, moie conspicuous on the upper than on the lower surface, and when they first appear are dull bluish green on some individuals and light or dark steel-blue or silvery white on others, the blue colors gradually changing to a dull blue-green at the end of three or four years. The stjiminate flowers are oblong-ovate, from one half to five eighths of an inch long and about one third of an inch thick, with yellow anthers tinged with red. The pistillate flowers are oblong-cylindrical and an inch in length, with broad oblong or slightly obovate scales which are pale green, truncate or slightly emargiuate at the denticulate apex, and acute bracts. The cones are produced on the upper third of the tree and are sessile or short-stalked, oblong-cylindrical, slightly narrowed at the ends, and usually about three inches long, varying, however, from two to four inches in length and from an inch to an inch and a half in thickness, with flat tough rhomboidal scales which are flexuose on the margins, and acute, rounded, or truncate at the elongated erose apex, green more or less tinged with red when fully grown at midsummer, and slightly spreading after they open early in the autumn, when they are pale chestnut-brown and lustrous ; they mostly do not fall from the branches until their second winter. The seeds are an eighth of an inch long and about half the length of their wings, which gradually widen to above the middle and are full and rounded at the apex.

Picea Parri/ana grows along the banks of streams and on the first benches above them singly or in small groves at elevations of between six thousand five hundred and nine thousand or occa- sionally ten thousand feet above the sea-level. Nowhere very abundant, it is generally scattered along the mountain streams of Colorado and eastern Utah, and northward t<> those of the Wind River Mountains of Wyoming.

The wood of Picea Parnjana is very light, soft, weak, and close-grained, with a satiny surface ; it is very light brown or often nearly white, with hardly distinguishable sapwood, and contains numerous prominent medullary rays, few small resin passages, and inconspicuous bands of small summer cells. The 8j)eci}ie gravity of the absolutely dry wood is 0.3740, a cubic foot weighing 23.31 pounds.

Pirea Parri/mia was discovered on i'lko's Peak, Colorado, in 18G2, by Dr. C. C. Parry, whose name it bears, and by whom seeds were sent the following year to the Botanic Garden of Harvard University at Cambridge. In the garde is of the eastern and northern United States and in those of the central prairie region of the continent, and of western and northern Europe, Picea Parryana has proved very hardy and has grown rapidly ; its handsome pyramidal habit, with regularly whorled branches and broad frond-like masses of crowded leaves, and the blue color of the foliage ow the young branches of s )nie individuals, have commended it to the lovers of ornamental trees, and no conifer of recent introduction has been so generally planted in the United States during the last twenty years.' The bluest individuals lose, however, at the end of a few years much of their peculiar color; and the feeble growth of the lower branches on the oldest trees in cultivation, now thirty or forty feet in height, show that those branches will soon perish, and that Picea Parryana, although charming in its early years, is less well suited to become a permanent ornament of parks and gardens than trees which, producing more vigorous lower branches, maintain to old age the conical form, perfect from the ground u;>, which ik pasential to the greatest beauty of conifers of pyramidal habit.'

' In Eurupn*)!) f^^ni'ons varietftl namefl have been attached to icedling p! iuu of / i' n Parryana riifTering slightly in color from what is iniiKiJcTi-J ti '.» till' tyjiicttl form, but nono of them have mud) v'.jIiio or signiflcaniM-, as seedlings of this tree aro always very variable and display innumerable tints in their foliage. Saveral of t!.r' varieties are desoribud by Bcissner (Handb. Nadelh.

345), who also describes a plant with pendulous branches as Picea punyens glauca penilula.

A long-lcAvcd vigorous seedling plant raised in Germany is described by I^dien as I'icfa pungem, var. KUnig Albert von Sachtm {Garttmflora, xl. 09, f. '£i [18U1]).

' Garden and Foreu, iv. 190.

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CONIFERiV,.

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iny surface ; IS numerous immer cells, ids.

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EXPLANATION OF THE PLATE.

Platb DC. PiCBA Pabrvana.

1. A branch with staminate Howers, natural aize.

2. An anther, front view, enlarged.

3. An anther, side view, enlarged.

4. A branch with pixtillate flowers, natural alze.

G. A scale of a pistillate flower, lower side, with its bract, enlarged.

6. A scale of a pistillate flower, upper side, witli its ovules, enlarged.

7. A fruiting branch, natural size.

8. A cone-scale, lower side, with its bract, natural size.

9. A cone-scale, upper side, with its seeds, natural size.

10. Vertical section of a seed, cidarged.

11. An embryo, enlarged.

i'i. A leaf divided transversely, enlarged.

13. Cross section of a leaf magnified lifteeii diameters.

14. Winter-buds, natural size.

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6. A «p«le of a jiwiilkte tii.wiT. up(«r aula, witik Ita orule*, Diiljugt j

7. A f railing liraix li, iiAturkl «<i«.

H. A roiii!-ic»le, l<>v»er »i(U. with iln br»f4. n*>.i:Tiil «i»e. 9 A p«n«-«<alM, u(i(v»r side, wiUi iu :<'■■■•'• 'm> i l -i'- 1(>, Vortical wjction of « nvoili enlarge I

11. An eniliiyo. eiilarg?J.

12. A leaf (li»i(U'<l timwveniely, «nlarEe(l.

13. Crow iection of a leaf m»giii!ied fifteen Ji*in«ters.

14. Wiuter-buda, natmiU the.

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BILVA OF NORTH AMERICA.

61

PICEA BREWERIANA.

Weepiog Spruce.

Cones oblong, acute, their scales rounded, entire. Branchlets slender, elongated, pendent, pubescent. Leaves flattened, stomatiferous only on the upper surface.

Fioea Breweriana, Wktson, Proo. Am. Aead. zx. 378 (1886). —Sargent, Oard. Chron. n. aer. zzt. 498, f. 93; Qardm and Foreit, ii. 496; iii. 63, f. 16, 16. Hsyr, Wald. Nordam. 366. Lenunon, Rtp. California State Board Fortitry, uL 116, k 4-6 (Con»-Btaren of Califor-

nia); Weit-Ameriean Con»-Bearen, 62; Bull. Sierra Clvh, U. 168 (Conifert of the Paeyfie Slope). Beiwner, Hanib. NaddK 360. Ilaaton, Jour. R. Sort. Soe. idr, 221 St PmI, MiU. BeuUeh. Dendr. GetdL 1896, 42, t

A tree, nsually from eighty to one hundred and occasionally one hundred and twenty feet in height, with a trunk trom two to three feet in diameter above the swelling of its enlarged and gradually tapering base, and furnished to the ground with crowded branches ; at the top of the tree these are short and slightly ascending, with comparatively short pendulous lateral branchlete, and form a thin spire-like head, and below they are horizontal or pendulous, and are clothed with slender flexible whip- like branchlets which are often seven or eight feet in length and not more than a quarter of an inch in thickness, and are furnished with numerous laterals of the same character and habit. The bark of the trunk is from one half to three quarters of an inch in thickness and is broken into long thin closely appressed scales which are dull red-brown on the surface. The winter-buds are c -n!cal, often a quarter of an inch long and an eighth of an inch thick, with thin light chestnut-brown scales. When they first appaar the branchlete are coated with fine pubescence, which generally does not disappear until their third season, and during their first autumn and winter they are rather bright red-brown, and then gradually g^w dark gray-brown. The leaves are abruptly narrowed and obtuse at the apex, straight or slightly incurved, rounded or obscurely ridged and dark green and lustrous on the lower surface, flattened and conspicuously marked on the upper surface with four or five rows of small stomata on each side of the prominent midrib, from three quarters of an inch to an inch and one eighth in length and from one sixteenth to one tenth of an inch in width. The staminate flowers are oblong, about five eighths of an inch long and a quarter of an inch thick, and dark reddish purple, with conspicuously toothed anther crests. The pistillate flowers are oblong-cylindrical, obtuse, and an inch in length, with obovate scales rounded above and reflexed on the entire margins, and oblong bracts laciniately divided at theb rounded or acute apex. The cones are oblong, gradually narrowed from the middle to both ends, acute at the apex, rather oblique at the base, from two and a half to five inches in length and from three quarters of an inch to an inch in thickness, with thin broadly obovate flat scales longer than they are broad and slightly thickened on the entire mar^ns ; suspended on straight slender stalks about a quarter of dn inch long, when fully grown the cones are deep rich purple or green more or less tinged with purple, and at maturity they are light orange-brown without lustre, and, opening late in the autumn, usually remain on the branches until the second winter, the scales becoming often strongly reflexed and so flexible that they can be easily compressed between the fingers. The seeds are acute at the base, full and rounded on the sides, about an eighth of an inch long, very dark brown and about one quarter the length of their wings, which are broadest toward the full and rounded apex.

Picea Breweriana is scattered in small groves through an area of a few hundred acres of dry mountoin ridges and peaks near the timber-line on the northern slope of the Siskiyou Mountains, at an elevation of about seven thousand feet above the sea, at the head of one of the small south forks of the

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,8IL7A OF liORTH AMERICA.

CONIFEIL&

niinois River and just south of the northern boundary of California, where it vas discovered * in June, 1884, by Mr. Thomas Howell." There is a grove also a few miles farther south on the head-waters of a small northern tributary of the Klamath River and on the southern slope of the Siskiyou Mountains at an elevation of seven thousand five hundred feet.' This tree covers a mile square of mountain side at the head of Elk Greek, a tributary of the Klamath, on a high peak just west of Marble Mountain, in Siskiyou County, California, where it was discovered in 1897.* It grows on the Oregon coast ranges on the divide between Caiion Creek and Fiddlers' Gulch at the head of one of the western forks of the Illinois River,* and on the eastern end of the Ghetco Range at elevations of between four and five thousand feet above the sea.* In Oregon it grows also on the north slopes of the Siskiyou Mountains on Sucker Creek, and on high mountain-tops south of Rogue River.'

The wood of Picea Breweriana, which is considerably heavier than that of the other North American species of Picea, is soft, close-grained, and compact, with a satiny surface ; it is light brown or nearly white, with thick hardly distinguishable sapwood, and contains numerous thin medullary rays, broad widely scattered conspicuous resin passages, and broad and conspicuous bands of small summer cells.* The specific gravity of the absolutely dry wood is 0.5141, a cubic foot weighing 32.04 pounds.* Picea Breweriana most resembles in leaf structure and in the form of its cone-scales the flat- leaved Picea Omorika of the Balkan peninsula, the least known of European conifers, as this Weeping Spruce is the most imperfectly known conifer of North America. Already less widely scatttjred and less multiplied than any other Spruce-tree, it seems destined soon to perish by fire, which has no doubt confined it to the few isolated and inaccessible mountain peaks where it has found its last resting- place.'* In its specific name this beautiful tree, which differs from all other Spruces in its long pendent

> The raal diioorenr of Piaa Brttoerima wu probably Fiofe*. ■or WillUm H. Brewer, who, in 1863, found a Spruoe-tree with long pendulous branchlets on BlKok Butte to the north of Straw- berry Valley, and at the western baM of Ht Shasta, California. (See Engelmaun, Brewer (r WaUoa Bot. Col. ii. 122.) EfforU to redifloover this tree have failed, and it is only known from the leaves and branohlets collected by Professor Brewer, who did not find cones. The branchlets resemble those of Picea Breweriana in their pubescent covering, and the leaves are andistinguishable from those of this species. If the surmise that the tree discov- ered by Brewer in 1863 is Picea Breweriana a correct. Black Butte would be the most southern station known for this species, which would have a range north and south of nearly one hundred miles.

> Thomas Howell (October 9, 1842) was bom in Cooper County, Miasouri, and was the youngest of the five children of Dr. Benja- min Howell, the descendant of a Welsh family which had early settled in Now Jersey, and a mineralogist of some reputation. Dr. Howell, with his family, left Missouri in 1860, crossed the plains with an ox-team to Oregon, and settled on Sauvie's Island iu the Columbia River on one of the donation land-claims which then were given by the government to citizens of the United States in order to encourage American emigrution to Oregon. A self-educated man, as schools were few and far between in the Oregon of fifty years ago, Mr. Howell manifested a strong love for plants from his early boyhood, although he did not begin the study of botany until 1877. In 1881 ha published a list of all the flowering plants of Oregon, Washington, and Idaho. This was followed in 1887 by a catalogue and check- list of all the plants then known to occur in Oregon, Washington, and Idaho, and embracing 2,1S2 species and 227 varieties. In 18U7 he began the publication of a Flora of Norlhweil America, covering the same territory, and not yet completed. Fifty plants new to science discovered by Mr. Hovrell testify to his aotivity

and snooesf as a field botanist. His name is commemorated in twenty-eight species and one genus of his discovery. \

' This small grove of scattered trees was found on the watershed of the KUmatb in September, 188S, by Mr. T. S. Brandegee. This is probably the most accessible station of this tree. It can be reached in a day from Waldo, in Josephine County, Oregon, by following the Happy Camp Trail, which crosse* the Siskiyou Moun- tains from the waters of the Illinois River to those of the Klamath, and then taking one which near the summit leaves it for Big Meadows ; this place is about four miles to the westward of the point where the summit of the Siskiyou is crossed, and beyond it the trail passes close to the trees.

* Jepson, Erythea, vi. 12.

' T. H. Douglas, Garden and Foreit, y. 691, f. 102. See, also. Garden and Foretl, v. 606.

* Teite A. J. Johnson.

' Teste A. J. Johnson. The station above Rogne River valley, which was discovered by Mr. Johnson in 1896, is about fifty miles north of the Siskiyou Mountains.

' Probably Picea Breweriana is a slow-growing tree, the log specimen cut by Mr. Brandegee in 1886, near B\^ Meadows, for the Jesup Collection of North American Woods in the American Museum of Natural History, New York, is thirteen and a quarter inches in diameter inside the bark and one hundred and sixty-six years old. The sapwood, which is hardly distinguishable from the heartwood, is three inches and seven sixteenths in diameter, with sixty-one layers of annual growth.

* Sargent, Garden and Forest, iii. 366.

Fires are prevalent and very destructive in all the dry moun- tain region which forms the natural boundary between northwest- ern California and sou' , aastorn Oregon, and which is now probably the only home of Picea Breweriana. They have already done in- calculable damage to the forests of this region and are increas- ing every year in frequency and destructiveness as the number of

! f

COmFERA.

red ' in June, »d-water8 of m Mountains aountain side

e Mountain, )regon coast western forks )etween four

te Siskiyou

other North ight brown idullary rays, imall summer !.(M pounds." cales the flair this Weeping icatt<)red and has no doubt last resting ong pendent

lommemontc^i in

7-

on the watershed r. S. Brandegee. thia tree. It can >UDty, Oregon, by le Siakiyou Moun- le of the Klamath, leavea it for Big ' westward of the id, and beyond it

(. loa. See, alio,

gne Rircr valley, 9 about fifty miles

ing tree, the loj; Bi^ ^leadows, fur I in the American een and a quarter Ired and aixty-nix ^uishable from the in diameter, with

all the dry moun- itween northweat- ib is now probably already done in- and are increas- ■a the number of

CONTFBRA.

SILVA OF NORTH AMERICA.

S8

flexible branches, oommemorates the services rendered by Professor William H. Brewer ' to American dendrology.

■ettlers and of miners and mine prospectors increases. It seems hopeless, therefore, to expect that the few iaoUted tiees of this species can long escape their ravages.

The danger of the extermination of Pieta Breaeriana is height- ened by the fact that it haa proved ditBcult to raise artificially. Several hundred thousand seedlings were grown by Hr. Robert Douglas of Waukegan in tSOl, but they all gradually perished during their first and seoood yean. An attempt to raise this tree

on a large scale in the Arnold Arboretum from seeds has been equally unsnccesaful, and all efforts to carry the seedlings through their early stages have failed in England. Hr. A. J. Johnson has transferred a few small trees from the Siskiyou Mountains to his nursery at Astoria, Oregon, where they are now growing thriftily ; and some of these plants are also flourishing in gardens near Port- land, Oregon. > See viii. 28.

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EXPLANATION OP THE PLATE.

Plate DCI. Picba Brbwkbiana.

1. A branch with ataminate flowen, natural size.

2. An anther, front view, enlarged.

3. An anther, side view, enlarged.

4. A branch with pistillate flowen, natural aize.

6. A scale o{ a pistillate flower, upper side, with its ovules, enlarged.

6. A scale of a pistillate flower, lower side, with its bract, enlarged.

7. A fruiting branch, natural size.

8. A eon»«!ale, upper side, with its seeds, natural size.

9. Cross section of a leaf magnified fifteen diameters.

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PICEA BKEWERIANA

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EXPLA.NAnoH OF THF PTATT.

I'lATIt DCr. J*ICKA RkKWKIIIAIIA.

1. A bnnrh with aUminikls Hiiwurii, natural site.

2. An unthor, front vitw, enlargBd. S, An anlhi'V, siile view, enliri^uil.

•1, A lirar.cli itili-. iiirtilluti" fl »ir». nrDrnl »i«e.

5. A Male of a piatiiUte rlowft ii|>iH.» 'xi" with il* ovnltM, AoUrgMt.

f>. A laalt! of a piatiliata Aownr. lowitr tide, with it* bntct, «ulaii^.

7. A fruiting h'aiipli, naturitl t'lie.

0. A ivine-ai-itle, upper Hide, with it* aeeila, natural sizii,

9, CtoH sectiun of a leaf magnilied fifteen diaiuetem.

Silv*. of North America.

Ub.DCI.

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Ruffifm .re.

PICEA BREWERIANA ,Wats.

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BILVA OF NORTH AMERICA.

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PIOEA BZTOHENSIB. TIdeluid Bprno*. Bltka Sprao*.

Cones oylindrioal-OTal, their scales oblong-oval, rounded and denticulate above the middle. Branchlets glabrous. Leaves flattened, acute or acuminate, silvery white and stomatiferous on the upper surface, often slightly stomatiferous below.

FloM BitohHwis, ChnikN, TraUi C(m\f. 260 (185S)

Bartnud, Ann. 8ei. Nat. ttt. S, n. 85. Engdmuin, Qard. Chron. n. tar. si. 344 1 Brewtr Ji Wattm Bot. Cat. U. 122. Sargent, Forttt Trtt* N. Am. lOtA Ceruu$ U. 8. iz. 206. M»yr, Wold. Nordam. 338. LarnnoD, Rep. California SlaU Board FortHry, iii. 116, 1 3 (Con». BearerM of Cal\fomia) \ Wut-Amtriean Con^-Btnmt, 62 i IS\M. Sierra Club, il. 167 {Conyfen of the Paeiflo Slope). Buinner, Ifardb. Nadtlh. 390. f. 106. Mu- ten, Jour, B. Hort. Soe. xir. 224. Harder, Aet. Hort. Petrop. sii. 113 (PI. Radd.). Koehne, DeutMcke Dendr. 24. Hempal & Wilhalm, Bdume und Strdueher, i. 86, f. 43.

Finua SitohenaiB, Bongard, Vig. Siteha, 46 (Angnat, 1832) ; Uim. Phyi. Math. Nat. pt. ii. Aead. Sci. St. Pitere- hourg, U. 164. Hooker, Fl. Bor.-Am. ii. 164. An- toine, Contf. 08. Endlicher, Syn. Conif. 123. Lede- bour, Fl. Bolt. iii. 672 Dietrich, Syn. t. 396.

Abiea trigona, Raflnesque, Allant. Jour. 119 (Antamn, 1832) i ^eio Fl. I 37. Endlieiier, Syn. Conif. 124.

Abies (aloata, Raflnexque, Atlant. Jour. 120 (Autamn,

1832); New Fl. i. 38. Endlicher, Syn. Con\f. 127

Carriire, Traiti Conif. 268.

Abies MenaiesU, Lindley, Penny Cyel. 1, 32 (1833). Lawson & Son, Agrie. Man. 378. Forbei, Pirtetum Wobum. 93, t 32. Nuttall, Gylaa, m. 131, t 116.— Knight, Syn. Conif. 37. Lindlejr A Gordon, Jour. Hort. Soe. Lend. v. 211. Newberry, Pae\fle R. R. Rep, vi. pt iii. 66, 90, {. 21, t 9. Gordon, Pinetum,

6. Cooper, Pae\fle R. R. Rep. sii. pt ii. 26,69 (in part). Lyall, Jour. Linn. Soe. vii. 131, 133, 143.— Henliel A HoehaMttor, Syn. Nadelh. 187. (Nelaon) Senllia, Pinaeete, 48. Hoopea, Rvergreent, 166 (in part). Wataon, King'i Rep. ▼. 333 (in part). Velteh, Man. Conif. 73. Sohubelar, Virid. Norveg. i. 431.

Plnus Mensiesll, D. Don, Lambert Pinue, iiL t (1837). Hooker, Fl. Bor.-Am. ii, 162. Antoine, Con\f. 86, 1 33, f. 1. Hnol(«r A> Amott, Bot. Voy. Beeehey, 394.- Endiicher, Syn. Con\f. 112. Lawaon A Son, Litt No. 10, AbietinecB, 16. Dietrich, Syn. y. 394. Courtin, Fam. Conif. 61. Parlatore, Z)e CandoUe Prodr. xri. pt ii. 418.

FlauB Mensieal^, Tar. oriapa, Antoine, Conyf. 86, t 36, f. 2 (1840-47).

Abies Bitohensis, Lindley & Gordon, Jour. Hort. Soe. Land. v. 212 (1860). K. Koch, Dendr. ii. pt iL 247 (ezd. ayn.). Laache, Deuttehe Dendr. ed. 2, 93.

Ploea MetuiiesU, Carriire, Traitt Conif. 237 (1866).— Maatera, Gard. Chron. n. aer. zzt. 728, f. 161, 162.— WUUconini, Font. Fl. ed. 2, 98.

Fioea Mensiesii, var. orispa, Carri^re, Traiti Conif. 237 (1866). Hoopea, Evergreen*, 168.

Fioea AJanenais, Bertrand, Ann, Soi. Nat. ait. 6, zz. 86 (not Trantretter & Meyer) (1874).

Tsuga Bitohensis, Regel, Riui. Dendr. ed. 2, pt L 40 (1883).

Pioea Sitkaensis, WitUtoin, Sitt. Math.-nat. Akad. Wiu. Wien, zeiz. pt i. 628 (1891).

A tree, usually about a hundred feet in height, with a conspicuously tapering trunk which is often three or four feet in diameter above its strongly buttressed and much enlarged base, the Tideland Spruce is occasionally two hundred feet or more tall, with a trunk fifteen or sixteen feet in diameter, and at the extreme northwestern limits of its range it is sometimes reduced to a low shrub.* The branches of young trees are slender and horizontal, with rigid leading shoots, and are set close together on the stem, forming a rather loose open pyramid ; on older trees the lower branches, which are thickly clothed with pendent slender lateral branchlets frequently two or three feet long, sweep out in long graceful curves; the upper branches are short, and, ascending, form an open spire-like head which surmounts a stem often naked for half its length or is frequently covered to the ground with branches which are occasionally thirty or forty feet long on trees which have grown in open situations.

> A good idea of the enlarged and buttreaaed baae of a large wrongly called the Dougloa Fir, ia published on page 211 of the tmnk of Picea SUchenii; and of the bark of this speciea, here fourth Tolume of Garden and Forat.

i 1 ,■

56

HILVA or NOHTII AMERICA.

CONiriR.*.

The bark of the trunk ii from one i|unrtiir to one half of an inch in thickneu, and ii broken on the mirface into large thin h>oMily attaohuil dark red-brown or, on young trees, nometimei bright cinnamon- red Rcalei. Tlie wintt<rlMid« am ovatit and lUMite or cuinival and from one quarter to nearly one half of an inch in length, with pale uhuitnut-brown luitroua Mcule« which are ovate, acute and lometimei tipped with short muoroi, Kourioiw on the nmrginii and ui'tvn more or leu reflexed above the middle. The braiichleta are ituut, rigiil, gluhruun and palo green when they first appear, becoming light or dark orange-brown during their first autumn and winter, and then gradually turn dark gray-brown. The leaves stand out from all sides of the branches, often nearly at right angles to them, and frequently bring their white up|>or surface to view by n twist at their base, and are straight or slightly incurved, acute or acuminate, with elongated callous tips t they are slightly rounded on the lower surface, which is green and lustrous and occasionally niarkuil, especially on the loaves of leading shoots and fertile branches, with two or throe rows of sniull incon.tpicuous stomatu on each side of the prominent midrib, and on the upper surface they are ilattonud, obscurely ridged, and almost covered with broad silvery white bands of numerous rows of stomuta | in length they vary from half an inch on fertile branches to an inch and an eighth on vigorous l>iWor branches and in width from one sixteenth to one twelfth of an inch. The staniinate flowers uro protlucod in great quantities toward the ends of the pendent lateral branchlets, and are oblung-oylindrical, dark rod, short-stalked, surrounded at the base by the much enlarged bud-scules which form conspicuous involucres around both the male and female flowers, from throe quarters of an inch tu an inch and a half in length and often half an inch in thickness. The pistillate flowers are homo on the rigid terminal shoots of the branches of the upper half of the tree and aro olilong-cylindrical, about an inch long and half an inch thick, with nearly orbicular denticulate scales often slightly truncate above and completely hidden by their elongated acuminate bracts. The conos hung on short straight stalks and are cylindrical-oval, usually from two and a half to four inches in length and from an inch to an inch and a half in thickness, with thin stiff oblong- ovttl scales rounded toward tliii apex, denticulate above the middle and nearly twice as long as their lanceolate dontirulato rigid bracts ; whon fully grown at midsummer the cones are yellow-green, often tinged with dark red, especially on the side exposed to the sun, and at maturity they are lustrous, pale yellow or reddish brown, and fall mostly during their first autumn and winter and soon after the escape of the seeds. Thesu are full and rounded, acute at the base, pale reddish brown, and about an eighth of un inch long, with narrow oblong only slightly oblique wings from one half to one third of an inch in longth, and four or live cotyledons which are three-sided, the two upper sides being concave and stomutifcrous and the lower rounded.

Picea SilihenslH usually inhaltitN moist sandy and often swampy soil, or, less frequently at the far north, wet rocky slopes. Maintaining itself farther to the northwest than any other coniferous tree of the Pacific forests, J'ivm SUrhrHHiM forms groves on the eastern end of Kadiak Island in longitude Ifil" west, and extends southward through all the coast region of Alaska* and British Columbia west of the coast ranges," and through western Washington and Oregon to Mendocino County in California.' Small and stunted, and Honietimes only a shrub toward the extreme northwestern limits of its range, it l)ecomos on the coiutt of southeastern Alaska, where its principal companion is the western Hemlock, the largest and most abundant tree in this part of the great coniferous forest which stretches from Cross Sound to Cupti Mendocino, growing at the sea-level often to a height of more than a hun- dred feet and ascending to cluvntions of three thousand feet, but decreasing in size as it ascends or leaves the immediate neighborhood of the ocean.* Very abundant in the northern coast region of British

KoUirook, SmUhtmian Htj>. IHnT,4.%1,4M(/'V./(J(Mfai). Mee-

The most ■outhern point from wbiob I bare a«<n specimens of

bin, Proe. Phil. Acad, xi«. Vi, V. KiirU, /M, JuM. ill. 42fi (Fl. Picea Sitchemit is Caspar, on the coast of Mendocino County, Cali-

■Chilcatgiebtlu). Funston, CimlrUi. II, S. Niil, llrrh, lil. .128. fornia. The cones from this locality are the smallest 1 bare seen,

' G. M. Dawson, Can, Sat, ii. »«r. Is, 'A'M, Maooun, Cat. Can. being only an inch and a half long.

PI, 470. * See Gorman, Pittmia, iii. 67.

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CONiriRJi.

SILVA OF NORTU AMERICA.

Columbia, farther Routh it ii principally confined to the low undy alluvial plaini at the mouth* of fctreamii, un which, min^lin); with the western Arbor Vitw, it fi^rowB to its largest siie along the coast of Washington and Oregon, and to moist bottom-lands which it follows inUnd to the foothills of the Cascade Mountains of Washington and northern Oregon, sometimes ascending on the Nis4{ually and other streams which flow into Piiget Sound to elevations of two thousand feet above the sea. Houth of the valley of the Columbia liiver it is confined to the neighborhood of the coast, and although the Tiileliind Spruce grows in northern California to a very large size on the rich alluvial plains at tlia mouths of streams and in low valleys facing the ocean, where it is associated with the Redwood uiid the White Fir, it is less common and of less magnificent proportioui than on the shores of I'ugut Sound. South of Cupe Mendocino it is not common.

The wood of I'icea SitchensiH is light, soft, not strong, and straight-grained, with a satiny surfitoe | it is light brown tinged with red, with thick nearly white sapwood, and contains numerous proniiimnt medullary rays, few resin passages, and inconspicuous narrow bands of small summer cells. The sptii'lHo gravity of the absolutely dry wood is 0.4287, a cubic foot weighing 2G.72 pounds. It is the prini^ipitl lumber manufactured in Ahtska, where, as it splits easily, it is also largely used for fuel. It ia manufactured into lumber on Puget Sound, and is used in construction, in the interior (IniNh of buildings, for fencing, for the dunnage of vessels, ia boatbuilding and cooperage, and for wouiluic ware and packing-cases.

I'icea Sitchensia was discovered on the shores of Puget Sound in May, 1702,' by Aruhihuld MenzioH,' the surgeon and naturalist of Vancouver, during his voyage of discovery round the world, although it was not described until forty years later. It was introduced into European gardens in 1831 ' by David Douglas,* and has already grown to a large size in several of the countries of wuNtern and central Europe." In the eastern United States it suHers from the cold o\ severe wiotera and from heat and drought in summer, and rarely survives more than a few years.

The greatest of all Spruce-trees, this inhabitant of the northwest coast is surpassed by few other trees in thickness and height of stem. No tree in the American forest grows with greater vigor or shows stronger evidences of vitality,' and there are few more beautiful und impressive objects in tlio forests of temperate North America than one of these mighty Spruce-trees with its spire-like head

The " Norwegian Hemlock " niontioned by Vancouver among the trees be law when he landed on the abore of Puget Sound wai probablj this Spruce {A Voyage of Ducovery to the Northern Pacific Ocean and Around the World, i. 240). It waa well described in the journal of Lewii and Clark, who passed the winter of 180G at the mouth uf the Columbia River, where Picea Silchemis is abun- dant, and who saw a specimen " forty-two feet in circumference, at a point beyond the roach of ao ordinary man. This trunk fur the distance of two hundred feet won destitute of limbs ; the tree waa perfectly sound, and at a moderate calculation its stature may be estimated at three bundrad feet" (Narratwe of llie Expedition under I 'immand of Lewii and Clark, ed. Coues, Ui. 820).

■' See ii. 00.

' Loudon, Arb. Brit. iv. 2321, f. 2232.

* See ii. M.

» M'Lnren, Tram. Scollinh Arborimltural Society, x. 212. Web- ster, Trans. Scottiih Arboriculiural Society, xi. 57. Dunn, Jour. H. Hort. Soc. liv. 84. Hansen, Jour. R. Hart. Soc. xiv. 438 {Pinetum Danicum). —J. G. Jack, Garden and Forest, vi. 14. See, also, R. Hartlg. Fonl.-Nat. Zeit. i. 428.

' On the shores of Puget Sound young trees often make leading shoots from three to four feet in length ; and so vigoroiu is the growth of this Spniee in the humid coast region of the north- west that the lateral branohleta aometimea develop into small trees

and stand erect on the branobea of large individuals. Of tliras trees measured by John Muir, at Wrangcl, Alaska, one was sevas hundred and sixty-four years old, with a trunk Ave feet in dlaiiia* ter ; the second was five hundred years old, with a trunk all fuat three inches in diameter ; and the third was three hundred and cighty-flve yearn old, with a trunk four feet in diameter, A trai* measured by bim, which bad grown on the edge of a meadow UH tit* Snoqualniie River in Washington, was one hundred and eighty tufii high, with a trunk four feet six inches in dinineter, and waa twil hundred and forty years old. Another tree, also measured by hlin near the city of Vancouver, in British Culunibia, was only fiir|y> eight years old, but had a trunk three feet in diametar. Of twQ trees examined by Gorman in Alaska {Pillonia, iii. 07), No. I, uilt on the mainland, waa one hundred and sixty feet tall, with a Iruiill diameter of three feet eleven inches, and was two hundred ailii seventy-seven years old, while No. 2, cut on Hasaler Island, had K trunk four feet and half an inch in diameter fourteen feet abuva the surface of the ground, and waa four hundred and tliirly'fimr years old. The first bad grown in dense woods, well proteoted from the wind, nnd the second on a hillside exposed tu ttarea northeast gales in autumn and winter. The heart of the Utter wan thirty-two inches from the southwest side and only alxteau aud one half inches from the northeast side.

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58

SILVA OF NORTH AMERICA.

CONIFERjE.

raised high above its broad base of widely sweeping and gracefully upturned branches resting on the surface of the ground, its slender branchlets loaded with handsome cones nodding in the slightest breeze, and its leaves, now silvery white and now dark and lustrous, shimmering iu the sunlight.

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EXPLANATION OP THE PLATE.

Plate DCII. Picea SircBBNgis.

1. A branch with ataminate flowerg, natural size.

2. An anther, front view, enlarged.

3. An anther, aide view, enlarged.

4. A branch with pistillate flowers, natoral size. 6. A pistillate flower, natural size.

6. A scale of a pistillate flower, lower side, with its bract, enlar)^.

7. A scale of a pistillate flower, upper pide, with its ovules, enlarged.

8. A fruiting branch, natural size.

9. A cone-scale, lower side, with its bract, enlarged.

10. A cone-scale, npper side, with its seeds, enlarged.

11. Vertinal section of a seed, enlarged.

12. An embryo, enlarged.

13. A leaf divided transversely, enlarged.

14. Cross section of a leaf magnified fifteen diameters.

15. A seedling plant, natural size.

16. Winter-buds, natural size.

CONIFERJE.

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-«i'f|»iiijjf uiid ijfiM/ufiilly M)itttriif<il firHtH'liHH renlin); on the . . lili'U l<«ii<iii wjlli li.iii'la<iMt» (i(i(ii.i» riiMl'liri)' in llic i.li)r|)t«st mie awd iKiw liirtt iiixl liialiKiu, nlildiiiDiiiri^ in llie aunlijjlit.

EXPI-ANATION or VHV H-AIK,

Platc rX'U. l*Hm/k ntiiii.«kit»Mi

1. A bninfh trii^ aUwiiMto Howait, •«l«M'itl MMi

3. An uitlwr. frvoi «i««, aiilorgad'

9. An ■n'Jiai ^'il>* >><w, •nlwrgail.

4 A hrMicli wi:^ i'>«>ill*Ui lluwrr*, H4i<>liii <»>*

f'. A pMiilWn- r' •,.• u«w>r*l »i»«.

it A MMii- I .«< (lowar, liiwiN clit* i>i*l« ■(■ tfnM>t, milarK«d.

!* A '>^)ti19g hf«».- *i I ft^'l''*t tti**

'». \ •-<i«i>«-a)> lixrcr U'tv, Willi Mm UHU* Ufl.,-,,, I

10. A <H>n»-soitt«, ii|^M*r villi!, wttli iu »i'wi«. i-.j.^..- i

11. Vertioal Mction u{ » »M(1, euUrgwl

12> All rriibryo, eiilargpil. i

13. .\ leaf itlvideU trantTen.))/, eiiUl'iftit -

14. ('row acvtiixi uf <. leitf aut^ciitiwl HI««M) iHnnm^ti* I.V A •««illii<^ jrUni u:tt>ir<iJ mm

lfl> Wi<it«r~b«da, imbtral •>«•

Silva. of North Amenca,

Tab DCll.

C f^ Fit.r<m t/f/

PICEA SITCHENSIS , C;

ZV»? . //ifn^/t/

A.tfit.tvi'iof rurnr^

I"}p J.lanetit Pari.i.

i!.i

I vM

!Nl

I!*

( :

! y i I'

;ili

m

coNirai

F

anthe; minal furnis

Tauga, Trot Bent Prai Jout

Abies, Abk

T

surfacf brancb terete, ovate, minute aiigula arrang on thi disticl stem I resin < both 8 in eai chests

the bi

arrang

above

minal;

ing 01

long 1

pendi

loose!

both

persis

attacl

» In

ia B€pi leaved

1: 'l

ill,!

CONIVBBJt.

BILVA OF NORTH AMERICA.

59

TSUGA.

Flowers solitar}', naked, monoecious ; the staminate axillary, stamens indefinite, anther-cells 2, transversely dehiscent, surmounted by gland-like tips ; the pistillate ter- minal, ovules 2 under each scale. Fruit a woody strobile maturing in one season ; seeds furnished with resin vesicles. Leaves petiolate, persistent.

Tsuga, Carribre, Traiti Conif. 185 (1855). Engelmann, Tram. St. Louis Aead. ii. 211 (excL aect. Peucoides). Bentham & Hooker, Qen. iii. 440. Eichler, Engler & Prantl. Pflanxenfam. ii. pt i. 80 (in part). Masters, Jour. Linn. Soe. zzz. 28.

Abies, A. L. de Jiuaiea, Gen. 414 (in part) (1789). Link, Abkand. Akad. Berl. 1827, 181 (in part).

Pinus, Endlieher, Gtn. 260 (in part) (1836). Heisner, Qen. 3C2 (in part). Baillon, Biat. PI. zii. 44 (in part) (1892).

Heaperopeuoe, Lemmon, Sep. California State Board

Forestry, iii. Ill {Cone-Bearers of California) (1890).

Van Tiegliem, Bull. Soo. Bot. France, iit. 2, ziii. 414.

Tall pyramidal trees, with thick deeply furrowed astringent bark, bright cinnamon-red except on the surface, soft pale wood, elongated nodding leading shoots, slender scattered horizontal often pendulous branches with laterals three or four times irregularly pinnately ramified, the ultimate divisions slender, terete, glabrous, or pubescent, the whole forming broad flat gracefully pendent masses of foliage. Buds ovate, acute, minute, covered by closely imbricated dark chestnut-brown lustrous scales, the two outer minute, lateral, opposite, those of the inner ranks scarious, accrescent, early deciduous. Leaves flat or angular, obtuse and often emarginate or acute at the apex, spinulose-denticulate or entire, spirally arranged round the branch, appearing approximately two-rankea by the twisting of their petioles, those on the upper side of the branrh then usually much shorter than the others, or in one species not distichous and of nearly equal length, narrowed abruptly into short petioles closely pressed against the stem and articulate on prominent and ultimately ligneous persistent bases, containing a single dorsal resin duct between the midrib and epidermis,' stomatiferous only on the lower or in one species on both surfaces, persistent, but soon deciduous in drying. Flowers naked, monoecious, solitary, appearing in early spring before the leaves from buds formed the previous summer and covered by numerous chestnut-brown scales, those of the inner ranks chaff-like, persistent, and forming involucres at the base of the flowers. Staminate flowers in the axils of leaves of the previous year near the ends of the branchlets, subglobose, raised on elongated slender drooping stems, composed of numerous spirally arranged short-stalked two-celled subglobose anthers opening transversely, their connectives produced above the cells into short gland-like tips ; pollen-grains discoid or bilobed.' Pistillate flowers ter- minal, short-stalked, or subsessile, erect, composed of spirally arranged nearly circular scales bear- ing on their inner face near the base two naked collateral inverted ovules, rather shorter than or as long as their membranaceous acute bracts. Fruit an ovate oblong, oval or oblong^cylindrical obtuse pendulous or rarely erect short-stalked or sessile cone maturing in one season, composed of concave loosely imbricated woody obovate-oblong or suborbiculiir scales, decreasing in size and sterile toward both ends of the cone, thin and entire on the margins, much longer than their minute bracts, persistent on the central axis of the cone after the escape of the seeds. Seeds geminate, reversed, attached at the base in shallow depressions on the inner base of the scales, ovate-oblong, compressed,

In the single npecieit with rounded acute leaves the resin canal between the midrib and the epidermis. (See Van Tiegbem, Bull. is separated from the midrib b; a few cells, while in the flat- Soc. Bot. France, s^r. 2, xiii. 414.) leared Tsugas the resin canal occupies nearly the whole space ' Engelmann, Brewer (f Walton Bot. CaL ii. 120.

■!.

!;j1

-4

Ii

eo

8ILVA OF NORTH AMERICA.

CONIFKILA.

in falling bearing away portions of the membranaceous lining of the scale forming obovate-oblong wing-like attachments longer than the seeds and nearly surrounding them ; testa of two coats, the outer crustaceous, light brown, the inner membranaceous, pale chestnut-brown and lustrous. Embryo axile in conspicuous fleshy albumen ; cotyledons from three to six, stomatiferous on the upper surface, much shorter than the inferior radicle.'

The genus Tsuga is now confined to temperate North America and to eastern and southern Asia, seven species being distinguished. In North America two species occur in the eastern part of the continent and two in the western ; in Japan Tsuga diveraifolia ' forms forests at high elevations in centrd and northern Hondo, and Tsuga Araragi * is scattered over the southern mountains ; and over the high inner ranges of the eastern Himalayas Tsuga dumoaa* is widely distributed. The

i '

> Tlie species of Tiugt may be grouped in two sectioni : HiCROPKUCK (Spach, Hist. Vig. xi. 424 [1842]. Eutsuga,

Engelmann, Bnwer (r WaUon not. Cat. ii. 120 [1880]). Leaves

tlat, obtuse, stomatiferous only on tbe lower surface, appearing

two-rankeil by tbe twisting of their petioles, of two lergtlu ;

oones oTate-oblnng, fertile scales few. IIesperopeucb, Engclmann, I. c. 121 (1880). Leaves rounded

or keeled above, acute, stomatiferous on both surfaces, their

petioles slightly or not at all twisted ; cones obloDg-cv iindrical,

fertile scales numerous.

' Masters, Jour. Linn. Soc. xviii. 614 {Conifers of Japan) (1881); Jour. R. Hort. Soc. xiv. 255. Mayr, Monog. Abiet. Jap. 61, t. 4, f. 13. Beissner, Handh. Nadelh. 3C6. Koehne, Deutsche Dendr. 11. Sargcot, Garden and Forest, z. 491, f. 63.

Abies diversi/olia, Maziniowicz, BuU. Acad. Sci. St. Pt'lersboury,

lii. 229 (1H68) {.WeV. Biol. vi. 373). Franchct & Savatior,

£num. PI. Jap. i. 468.

Tsuga diversi/olia is a tree seventy or eighty feet in height, with a short trunk often three or four feet in liiameter, dark red deeply furrowed hark, very slender branchlcts covered wi'h rufous pubescence, short narrow emarginate leaves, and cones, which are rarely more than half an inch in length. On the Nikku and other high mountains of central Japan, it is the principal treo in great forests which extend from clevatious of about Ave thou- sand feet above the level of the sea nearly to the upper limits of tree-growth, its most northerly home in Japan being on the moun- tains which surround the Uay of Aomori. (See Sargent, Forest Fl. Jap. 81, t. 25.) The Hemlock found by Dr. Augustine Henry in the province of Ilupch in crntrol China (Xo. 6907), although its leaves are rather longer, sccnis to be of this species. The woods produced by tbe two Japanese Hemlocks, which do not apiiear to be i'stingtiished in commerce, are said to be hard, tough, and valuable, Ihey are used only in the construction of ex]>ensivc houses, and the remoteness and inaccessibility of the region where these trees grow make the transport of their wood difficult and eipensive (Uupont, Essences Foreslieres <lu Japan, 17).

Tsuga diversi/olia was discovered in 1860 on the slopes of Mt. Fugi-san by &ir. J. 0. Veitcb, the companion of Sir Rutherford Alcock in the first ascent of that mountain made by Europeans, although it was not distinguished from the other Japanese Hemlock until seven years later. (See J. G. Veitch, in Alcock, The Capital of the Tycoon, ii. Appz. G. 483.) Less commonly cultivated in tho gardens of the United States and Europe than T. Araragi, it has proved perfectly hard;- in New England, where, although still shrubby in habit, it has produced abundant crops of cones.

* Koehoe, I. c. 10 (1893). Sargent, Harden and Forest, x. 491, f. 62.

Pinus Araragi, Sie'jold, Yerhand. Batav. Oenoot. Konst. Wet. xii. 12 (1830).

Abies Tsuga, Siebold & Zuccarini, Fl. Jap. ii. 14, t. 106 (1842). Gordon, Pinetum, 10. Lindley, Oard. Chron. 1861, 23. A. Murray, The Pines and Firs of Japan, 84, f. lSO-171. Maximowicz, I. c. 230 ({. c. 374). Miquel, Ann. Mus. Bot. Lugd. Bat. iii. 167 (Prd. Fl. Jap.). Francbet & Savatier, I. c. 468.

Abies Araragi, Loudon, Encycl. of Trees, 1036 (1842). K. Koch, Dendr. ii. pt. ii. 240.

Piti'is Tsuga, Antoine, Conif. 83, t. 32, f. 2 (1840-47)

Endlicher, Sgn. Conif. 83. Parlatore, De CandoUe Prodr. rvL pt. ii. 428.

Tsuga S.cboldii, Carri6re, Traite Conif. 186 (1855). Mas- ters, Jour. Linn. Soc. xviii. 612 {Conifer of Japan), Beisauer, I. c. 391 f . 106.

Tsuga Tsuja, A. Murray, Proc. R. Hart. i'-v. ii. 608, f. 141-153 (1862).

Picea (Tsuga) Sieboldii, Bertraud, Ann. Sci. Nat. s^r. 6, xx. 89 (1874).

Pinus Sieboldii, W. R. M'Nab, Proc. R. Irish Acad. ser. 2, ii. 213, t. 23, f. 0 (1875).

A species of more southern range and of lower elevations than Tsuga diversifolia, the second Japanese Hcmluek, Tsuga Araragi, is found on the mountains of south central Hondo, usually in small Bcatteied groves among deciduuuj-lenvcd trees or mixed with the Mountain I'ine, Pinus densijiora. It is a beautiful tree, from sixty to eighty feet in height, with a trunk usually not more than two feet in diameter, covered with pale bark, drooping branches, lustrous orange-brown glabrous branchlcts, leaves longer, broader, and more lustrous than tlmsc of Tsuga diversifolia, and cones nearly an inch in length. Introduced into Kiirope in 1853 by Von Siebold, it is occasionally found in Furoj)eHn collections, apporing, however, less successful in them than in the eastera United States, where this Hemlock is one of the most graceful and satisfactory of the exotic conifers cultivated in American gardens, and where it promises to grow to a large size.

A dwarf buaby form of this treo with short branches ond shorter and more crowded leaves, found by Von Siebold in Japanese gar- dens, has been iutrodiced into those of the United States and Europe. It is

Tsuga Araragi, var. nana. Pinus Tsuga, B nana, E.idlicher, I. c. ( 1847). Parlatore, I. c. Tsuga Sitboldii, B nana, Carriire, /. c. (1855). Beissuer, (. c. 395.

Abies Tsuga nana, Gordon, I. e. Suppl. 13 (1862). * 7>u^ dumosa. Pinut dttmoia, D. Don, Prodr. Fl. Nepal. 65 (1625). Lam-

rough

/"</. 52' In

layan

severe!

in a fcv

Gard.

stand I ' Sai « Til

peculla

stems,

species

covmax.

bovate^blong ;wo coats, the ous. Embryo upper surface,

and southern ustem part of gh elevations lOuntains; and ributed. The

demxA. Kontl. Wtl.

Jap. ii. 14, t. 106 arJ. Chrm. 1861,

•1,84, f.lB9-171.— el, Ann. Mut. Bot. bet St, Savatier, /. c.

1036 (1842). K.

f. 2 (1840-47).— CandoUe Prodr. xn.

180 (1866). Mtts- Japan). lieiasuer,

•V. ii. 508, f. 141-163

M. Nat. lit. 5, XX. 89

rrisA Acad. set. 2, ii.

lower elevations thnn iloL'k, Tsuga Araragif ,1 Iluiido, usiiully in avcd trees or mixed t is a beautiful tree, uuk iisiiuUy not more

pale bark, drooping neblets, leaves longer, '^Mtga diversi/olia, and

into Kiirope iu 1863 Fiiropean eoUci'tiona,

than in the eastera the moat graceful and in American gardens,

: brnnchcB and shorter bold iu Japanese gnr- le United States and

147). I'arlatore, /. c. 1866). Beissncr, I. c.

3 (1862).

li. 66 (1826). Lam-

CONIFERA.

8ILVA OF NORTH AMERICA.

61

genus probably ofjce occupied a more important position in northern forests, for traces of what are uelieved to be extinct species have been found in the Jurassic rocks of Spitzenberg, northern Europe, aiti Sibena.'

The bark of Tsuga is rich in tannin, and that of the American species is largely used iu tannmg leather, and occasionally in medicine. As a timber-tree the most valuable of the genus is Tsuga heterophylla of the northwest coast region of Nor^h America.

Tsuga is not injured by the attacks of many insects ' or by numerous fungal diseases.*

All the species are cultivated for tbis decoration of parks and gardens, and no other conifers surpass the Hemlocks in grace and beauty. They can be easily raised from seeds, although the young plant*^ grow slowly.

Tsitga, the Japanese name of the Hemlock-tree, was first used by Endlicher* to designate a section in his ge.ius Finns, and afterward by Carri^re, who separated the Hemlocks into a generic group, as the name of his genus.

bert, Pinut, ed. minor, ii. 80, t. 40. Fulatore, Dt CandoUe

Prodr. xvi. pt. ii. 420. Pinm Brunoniana, Wallicb, PI. Aiiat. Bar. iu. 24, t. 247

(1832). Antoine, Corn/. 82, t. 32, (. 1. £ndUcber, Syn, Conif.

84. W. R. M'Nab, Proc. Ii. Irish Acad. set. 2, ii. 213, t. 23,

f. 5. Abia Brv^uni'ina, Lindloy, Penny Cyct. i. 30, f. (1833).

Madden, ^our. Agrie. ar^ Horl. Soc. Ind. iv. pt. iv. 06 {Hima- layan Cnni/era). Gordon, Pinetum, 13. Abies dumosa, Loudon, Arb. Brit. iv. 2326, t. U233, 2231

(1838). K. Koch, Dendr. ii. pt. ii. 262. Abies species, Griffith, /(. Not. ii. 141 (1848) ; Icon. PI. Asiat.

iv. t. 376 (Taxi on plate).

Tsuga Brunoniana, Carriire, Traile Conif. 188 (1856). Mas- ters, Gard. Chron. a. ser. xxvi. 500, f. 101. liooker f. Ft. Brit.

Ind. v. 064. Beissncr, Handb. Nadelh. 397. Picea (Tsuga) Brunoniana, Uertrand, Ann. Sci. Nat. sdr. 6,

XX. 89 (1874).

Tsuga dumosa is distributed over the inner ranges of the Hima- layas from Kumaon to Bhotan, at elevations of between eight thousand and ten thousand five hundred feet abovo the level of the sea, in Sikkiui furming great forests with Abies Webbiana. It is a stately pyrar.iidal tree, sometimes one hundred and twenty-flve feet in height, with a trunk eight or nine feot in diameter, spread- ing branches, pendulous branehlets, and erect or horizontal cones. (See Hooker f. Himalayan Journals, n. ed. ii. 121 ; Gard, Chron. n. ser. xxvi. 72, f. 14.) The wood is white, tinged with pink, soft, and not durable; in Sikkim it is made into shingles, and the tliiek rough bark is employed for roofing (Brandis, Forest Fl. Brit. Ind. 527. Gamble, Man. Indian Timbers, 408).

In Europe, wliero it was introduced sixty years ago, the Hima- layan Hemlock has not proved very hardy, and usually suffers severely from late spring frosts, although it has produced cones in a few sheltered positions in southern England. (See Fowler, Gard. Chron. 1872, 76.) It has not yet shown itself able to with- stand the climate of the United States.

' Saporta, Origine Paleonlologique des Arhres, 74.

^ The Hemlock-trees of eastern North America appear to be peculiarly exempt from attacks by boring insects in the living stems, and nothing practically is known of parasites on the two species which inhabit the northwestern part 7 the continent. The

insects fonnd in the tmnka of Hemlocks are nsnally borera, which prey only upon dead or dying wood, and do not affect living treea. These insects are also found on the allied genera of conifers.

Various species of leaf-eating insects occasionally feed upon the foliage of Tsuga, but few of them are sufHciently abundant to attract attention. The Inrvo) of a Tineid, Gelechia abielisella, Packard, cu* off small groups of Hemlock leaves, fasten them together by silken threads, and, living within the protecting case thus formed, devour tho parenchyma of adjacent leaves.

A scale-insect, Aspidiotus Abietis, Comstock, is sometimes found in abundance on the lower surface of the leaves of Tsuga Cana- densis.

" Tsuga Canadensis is attacked by a number of interesting fungi peculiar to this host, besides several others found also on other related genera. Among the former is the rust, Peridermium Peckii, Thucmcn. This ajcidium, or cluster-cup, is found iu summer on the under side of tho leaves, and resembles Peridermium columnare, Albertlni & Scliwcinltz, of Europe, which Infests the leaves of Abies Picea, and is connected with Catyptospora Gveppertiana, Kuehn, on species of Vacclniura. Peridermium Peckii appears to be a distinct species, although it is not known with what tcleutosporic form it is connected. Two otiier rusts have been observed on the leaves of Tsuga Canadensis in Massachusetts (sec Farlow, Proc. Am. Acad. XX. 32'J), one of them appearing to be the same as Chrysomyxa Abietis, Rees, which infests Picea Abies in Europe, and the other, Caorna Abietis-Canadensis, Farlow, which is related to Cceoma Abietis-pectinatce, Rees. A disease of tho leaves of Tsuga Cnna- densi-i appears to be due to the attacks of Propolidium Tsug(t, Sac- cardo, a Bmall dark brown Discotnyccte which Is developed on the under side of the leaves, and causes them to fall in large numbers.

Tsuga Canadensis is subject also to tho attacks of a few other species of Ascomycetes, and of a considerable number of Poly- porcaccsi, mostly not confined to this host. Polypoms Pdotce, Schweinitz, infests Tsuga Canadensis on the mountains of the mid- dle states.

Three species of fungi have been reported as infesting Tsuga Mertensiana, Anthostemella brachystoma, Ellis & Everhardt, Lasio' sphaeria stuppea, Ellis & Everhardt, and Blitrydium signatum, Sac- cardo,

* Syn. Conif. 83 (1847).

I mi.

I; ' S

llh

?! f (''

:^

!

SILVA OF FORTH AMERICA. comifkra

CONSPECTUS OF THE NORTH AMERICAN 8PECIE&

MiCBOPIDOB.

Leaves flat, obtuM or emarginato at the apex, (tomatitaroni only oa the lower surface ; cones ovateH>blong or oroL Cones pedunculate.

Cone-soales orbicular«blong, about as wide as long, their bracts broad and triincata. 1. T. ClIfADBinia. Cone-scales oblong, much longer than wide, spreading at right angles after maturity,

their bracts obtusely cuspidate 2. T. Cakolimiaha.

Cones sessile.

Cone-scales oblong, longer than broad, often abraptir eontracted near the middle,

their bracts slightly cuspidate 3. T. hbtcbofhtlla.

Hbrpkbopeucb.

LeaTcs convex or keeled above, bluntly pointed, atomatiferona on both surfaces. Cones oblong-cylindrical.

Cooe-ecales oblong-obovate, longer than broad, tbnir bracts short ouspidate . 4. T. IIuiTiuraiAi.1.

i \

CONIFEIUt.

lANADENBIS.

;aboliniaha.

:inBBOrBTLLA.

fBltTI(miAI.A.

COMiraiiA

81LVA OF NORTH AMERICA.

TSUf»A CANADENSIS.

Hemlock.

CoNes ovato-oblong, pedunculate, their scales orbicular-oblong, nearly as wide as

long

Tauga Otinadenais, Curikrs, Traiti Conif. 189 (ezel. lyn. Bonganl) (IS*"'). S^n^Uuta, Conif. 19. EngdroAnn, Bot. OtuK U, vi. 224. R«g«l, Run. Dendr. ed. 2, pt i. 89, I. 10. G«rg«nt, Forat Trtt» tf. Am. 10<A Censua V. 8. ir. 206. -Willkumm. Font. Ft. ed. 2, 103.— WttMn & Coulter, Gray'* Man. ed. 6, 492. Mkyr, Wald. Nordam. 19S, t 6, (. Beiuner, Handb. Nadelh. 308, f. 107-109. Muten, Jour. R, Hort. Soe. ziv. 2S6. Hanien, Jour. R. Hort. Soc. x'-,. 442 (Pinetum Danioum). Koehne, Deuttehe Dmdr. 11, f. 6, B, D-H, M. Rothroek, Fortit Leavu, iv. 169, t. ; R»p. Dept. Agrie. Penn. 1890, pt ii. Div. Forulry, 188, 282, t 31, 38. BriUon & Brown, lU. Fl. i. C6, f. 124.

Pinus Oanadensia, Linncui, Spee. ed. 2, 1421 (excl. lyn.) (1703). Hoeneh, Bdume Weiu. 72. Wangenbeim, Nordam, UoU. 39, t. 10, f. 36. Schoepf, Mat. Med. Am«r. 143. Ehrhart, Beitr. iii. 23. WiUdenow, Berl.

Hium*. 219 ; Spee. W. pt. i. 605 ; Enum. 989 Aiton,

Hort. Kew. iii. 370. Borkliauien, Handb. Forttbot. i. 382. Lambert, Pinui, i. 60, t. 32. Penoon, Syn. ii. 679. Htokei, Bot. Mat. Med. !▼. 425. Bigalow, Ft. Boiton. 236. Punh, /";. i4m. Sept. ii. 640. Nuttall, Oet. ii. 223. Hayne, Ve.uir. Fl. 176. Elliott, Sk. ii. 639. --Sprengel, Si/it. iii. 885. Brotero, Hut. Nat. Pinheiroi, iMrieei e Abetoi, 32. Nees von Eaenbeck, PI. Med. t 83. Hooker, F%. Bor.-Am. ii. 164 (ezd. hab. northweit America and var. p). Torrey, Fl. N. T. u. 230. Antoine, Conif. 80, t 32, f. 3. Endlieher, Syn.

Conif. ^ Gihoul, Arb. Rit. 46. Lawton & Son,

Liet No. 10, AbietinecB, 9. Dietrich, Syn. v. 392. Courtin, Fam. Conif. 64. Parlatore, De CandoUe Prodr. xri. pt ii. 428 (ezel. lyn. Bongard). W. R. M'Nab, Proe. R. Iriih Aead. ler. 2, ii. 212, t 23, f. 3. Herder, Act. Hort. Petrop. xii. 119 (PL Radd.) (excL bab. Sitka).

AbiM Americana, Miller, Diet. ed. 8, No. 6 (1768).

PinuB AbiM Canadenaia, Muenchhausen, Hausv. t. 223 (1770).

Pinus Americana, Da Roi, Ob>. Bot. 41 (1771) ; Harbk.

Bawnn. ii. 107. Bargidorf, Anleit. pt ii. 139. Caa- tt-/':ani, Viag. ntigli Stati Uniti, ii. 314.

Finus-Abiea Americana, Manhall, Arbuit. Am. 103 (1786).

Piniu! Mariana, Gnrtner, Fruet. ii. 69, t 91, f. 1 (not Da Roi) ri'91).

Pinus pe. .iiila, Haliibury, Prodr. 399 (not Aiton) (1796).

Abies Canadensis, MichaDz, Fl. Bor.-Am. ii. 206 (not Miller) (1803). Foiret, Lamarck Diet. yi. 622. Dei- fontainei, Hi*t. Arb. ii. 680. Du Mont de Coaraet, Bot.

Cult. ed. 2, vi. 474 Michauzf. Hitt. Arb. Am. i.l38,

1 13. Nouveau Duhamel, t. 293, t 83, (. 1. Richard,

Comm. Bot. Conif. 77, t 17, f. 2 Link, Handb. ii.

479. Audubon, Birdt, t 197. Lawson & Son, Agrie. Man. 378. Raflneaque, New Fl. i. 39. Forbea, Pine- tum Wobum. 129. Spacb, Hi*t. Vig. zi. 424 Em- erson, Trees Mats. 77 ; ed. 2, i. 92, t Nuttall, Sylva, iii. 133. Knight Syn. Conif. 37. Lindley & Gordon, Jour. Hort Soe. Lend. t. 209. Darlington, Fl. Cestr. •d. 3, 29^. Gk>rdon, Pinetum, 14. Chapman, FL 434. Curtig, Rep. Oeolog. Surv. N. Car. 1860, iiL 27. Henkel & Hochatetter, Syn. Nadelh. 163 (ezoL •yn. Abies aromatied). (Nekon) Senilia, Pinaeea, 30. Gray, Man. ed. 6, 471. Hoopea, Bvergretns, 184, f. 23. K. Koeh, Dendr. ii. pt ii. 249. Nttrdlinger, Forttbot. 467, f. Veiteh, Kan. Conif. 114, f. 29.— Lauche, Deutsche Dendr. ed. 2, 94. SchUbeler, Virid. Norveg. i. 429.

Abies peotinata, Poiret, Lamarck Diet. yi. 623 (not Gili- bert) (1804). Brotero, Hist. Nat. Pinheirot, Lariees e Abetot, 36.

Abies tazifolia, Rafineaqne, New Fl. i. 38 (not Poiret) (1836).

Abies taxifoUa, var. patula, Rafineaqae, New Fl. i. 39 (1836).

Picea Canadensis, Link, Linn<Ba, xr. 624 (1841).

Pioea (Tsuga) Canadensis, Bertrand, Ann. Sci. Nat. sir. 6, zx. 89 (1874).

A tree, usually siity or seventy and occasionally one hundred feet in height, with a trunk from two to four feet in diameter, gradually and conspicuously tapering t'^ ward the apex. During its e.arly years the comparativ'ely long and slender branches, ivhich are horizontal or pendulous below and ascending above, form a broad based rather obtuse pyramid, and continue to clothe the stem to the ground unless they are overshadowed by other trees, which gradually destroy the lowest branches, until the trunk, often naked for two thirds of its length, bears only a small narrow spire-like crown of short ascending

'!:'

I i

,, I ; :

Hi

lllillHI

.1

J'

1 ' ■• I

w

i^

it

ii

f

^

i

it

! I

M

fi/XFvl 0/* NOIiTH AMERICA.

CONIFIRA.

branrhes. The bark of the trunk, which varies in color trom cinnamon-red to gray more or leas tingoii with purple, iH from one half to throe quarters of a inch in thieknesB, and deeply divided into narrow rounded ridges covered with thick closelv oppressed scales. The branchlets, which are very slender, when they first appear are light yellr>v>-brown and coated with pale pubescence; during their first winter they are ratl<»r d-i'kor. a:;a in their third season become glabrous and dark gray-brown tinged v.ith purple. The winter-buds are broadest at the middle, rather obt ?he8tnut-brown,

slightly puberulous, and about one sixteenth of an inch in length. Thi , which are light

yellow-j^reen when they first emerge from the bud, are oblong, rounded and rarely emarginato at the npex, entire or often obsci. °r.iy denticulate above the middle, dark yellow-green and lustrous on the upper surface, which is obscurely grooved, especially toward the base, marked on the lower surface with five or six rows of stomata on each side of the low broad midrib, from one third to two thirds of an inch long and about one sixteenth of an inch wide, and fall during their third season from the persistent bases which at firnt are dark orangc-culor, and, gradually growing darker, continue to roughen the branches slightly for three or four years longer. The staniinate flowers, which with their stalks are about three eighths of an inch long and have light yellow anthers, appear in May a little earlier than the pistillate flowers, which are an eighth of an inch in length, and pale green, with broad bracts coarsely laciniatc on the margins and longer than their scales. The cones are suspended on slender puberulous peduncles often a quarter of an inch long, and are ovate-oblong, acute, from one half to three quarters of an inch in length, pale green, with orbicular-oblong scales almost as wide OS they are long, and broad truncate bracts slightly luciniate on tl.e margins ; late in the autumn those portions of the scales which have been exposed to the light become dull gray-brown, while the remainder are bright red-brown ; oiicning and gradually losing their seeds during the winter, they mostly remain on the branches until the following spring. The seeds are one sixteenth of an inch in length and usually marked with two or throe large oil vosicles, and .ire nearly half as long as their wings, which are broad at the base and gradually taper to the rounded apex.

Tmiya Cunadens'iH is distributed from Nova Scotia and New Brunswick to the northern end of Like Teniiscainang on the Ottawa River,' and westward through Ontario ' to eastern Minnesota ; ' south- ward it ranges through the northern states to Newcastle County in Delaware, southern Michigan and centra' Wisconsin, and along the Appalachian Mountains to northwestern Alabama.* Common in the maritime provinces of Canada, and most abundant in New England, northern New York, and western F'ennsylvania, where it is frequently an important element of the forest, the Hemlock of northeastern . Vmerica attains its largest size near streams on the slopes of the high mountains of North Carolina and Tennessee. Often an inhabitant of rocky ridges, which it sometimes covers when they face the north with dark dense groves where other trees arc rarely found, it lovos also the steep rocky banks of narrow river gorges, and is scattered through upland forests of White Pine and deciduous-leaved trees and less commonly on the borders of swamps in deep imperfectly drained soil.

The wood of Tsuga Canadensis is light, soft, not strong, brittle, coarse, crooked-grained, difficult

Provanchor, Ft. Canadienne, ii. GCO. Brunet, Cat. Veg. Lig. Can. 58. Macoun, Cat. Can. Pt. 471.

AgasHiz, Late Superior, iti Physical Character, Vegetation, anil Animftl.1, 105.

Yjuyf. Canaiteiitit wa« found in April, 1890, by Mr. II. H A}'rcs, to tho westward of Lake Superior, in Carlton County, Min- nesota. (See (lariim and FuresI, iii. 496, &J4.)

In the journal of the expedition under General Lewis Cms, #hich traverjted wb.at is now Carlton (;nunty in 1820, the Hemlock is spoken of as being abundant in this part of Minnesota, from which it rjow I)pp<-ar8 to have almost completely disappeared, (nte Hchoolcral;, Narrative Jwimat of Travel) from Detroit Northcetl tkrauih the Great Chain nf American Laket, 20G, kOT, 2!0. .See,

also, E. O. Hill, Garden and Forest, iii. 663. Ayret, Garden and Forest, vi. 418.) Nicollet, in 1841, speaks of the occasional occur- rence of tho Hemlock on the Mississippi River, above the Crow Wing, which is much farther west than it is now known {Hep. H'jilnigraphic liasin Upper Mississippi River, 64 ^Senate Doc. 184.')]); and Upham refers doubtfully to the eiiatence of tho Hem- lock at several place' 'u eastern Minnesota (/{171. Gealog. and Nat. lliil. Surv. Minn. 188.1, pt. vi. 13a [Cat. Fl. il/inn.]).

* In July, 1880, Tsnga Canadensis was found by Dr. Charles Mohr growing in deep rwVy valleys and gorges at the head-waters of the western fork of tho Sipsey River in the northern part of Winston County, Alabama.

CONIFKB«.

more or leas

divided into

hii'h are very

during their

k gray-brown

leHtiiut-brown,

ich are light

ginate at the

BtroiM on the

r surface with

o thirds of an

son from the

continue to

which with

)ear in May a

Kilo green, with

are suspended

ig, acute, from

almost as wide

n the autumn

'own, while the

0 winter, they

nth of an inch

s long 08 their

arthern end of nesota ; ' south- Michigan and /ommon in the rk, and western nf northeastern North Carolina 1 they face the !ep rocky banks eciduous-leaved

;rained, difficult

-Ayrei, Garden and he occasional occur- 'er, above the Crow 8 now known (fifp. ; 64 [Senate Doc. iatence of the llrm- ep. Geolog. and Nat. inn.]).

ind hj Dr. Charles I at the hend-watera be northern part of

COMUrKRJl.

SJLVA OF NORTH AMERICA.

85

to work, liable to wind-shake and splinter, and not durable when expoaed to the air. It is light brown tinged with red or often nearly white, with thin somewhat darker lapwood, and contains broad conspicuous bands of small summer celln and numerous thin medullary rayi. The specific gravity of the absolutely dry wood is 0.4239, a cubic foot weighing 26.42 pounds. It is now Urgely manufactured into coarse lumber employed for the outside finish of buildings ; it is also used for railway-ties , and occasionally for water pipes.' Two varieties, red and white hemlock, which, however, appear to be produced under precisely similar conditions, are recognized by lumbermen.

The astringent inner burk affords the largest part of the material used in the northeastern states and Canada in tanning leather,' and from it is prepared a fluid extract sometimes employed medicinally as an astringent.* Canada pitch, an opaque resin obtained from the wood, was formerly used in medicine,* and from the young branches oil of hemlock is distilled."

This Hemlock was first described by Plukenet in ItiOl ' from a tree cultivated in hia garden in London by Bishop Compton,' to whom it had been sent from Virginia by John Banister.* It* value had been recognized, however, much earlier by the settlers of Canada and New England, and Pierre Boucher ' and Josselyn extolled its virtues soon after the middle of the seventeenth century.

' 8e« Am. Jour. Pkarm. mm». 377.

' The bark ol 7 tu^a Canadtntit, which rariei ooiMiderably in the unount of tannin it contains, is used in enormous quantities in the manufacture of heavy leather, and also in the production of the flDer grades of leather, when it is miied with Oak bark to modify the red color of leather tanned entirely with Hemlock bark. An extract of the bark is used by tanners instead of the bark itself, to strengthen their bark liquors. It i* also employed by dyers to modify the shades of logwood coloring, especially when copper sulphide is used oa a mordant. (See Bastin & Trimble, Am. Jour. Pharm. Ixix. (M. See, also, for the tannin of Hemlock bark, I'rooter, Text-book of Tanning, 31. Mulligan & Dowling, Chemical Gazette, xvii. 430. Mafat, Bull. Soc, Indus- trieUe de Mulhouse, Ixii. 130. Olivier, Recherchef pour lervir a I'Hitloire Nalurelle, Chimique et Induilrielle du Hemlock.)

See Johnson, Afan. Med. Bot. N. Am. 269. Millspaugh, Am. Med. PI. in llomteopathic llemedief, ii. 164, t. 164. I'arke, Davis & Co., Economic Mat. Med. ed. 2, 03.

< Canada pitch, formerly often known as Hemlock resin, is an opaque brittle resin which is obtained from Ttuga Canadensis by boiling the wood and bark from around knots with water, and skimming off the resin which rises to the surface. It is also said to be obtained from incisions made in the trunks of living trees in the same manner that turpentine is obtained from Pine- trees. Canada pitch was formerly used as a substitute for the similar Burgundy pitch in the manufacture of medical plasters, and was collected in considerable quantities. It has now, bow- ever, disappeared from the United States PharmacopiBia, and is replaced by asphalt or rubber in the manufacture of medical plas- ters. (See KIlis, Jour. Phil. College of Pharmacy, ii. 18 [On Hem- lock Resin]. Stearns, Am. Jour. Pharm. xxxi. 28 [Medical Plants nf Michigan^ Bentley & Trimen, Med. PI. iv. 264, t. 264. U. S. Disperu. ed 17, 1174. Bastin & Trimble, /. c. 91.)

* Oil of Hemlock, which is contained in the loaves of Tsuga Canadensis, and appears to be identical in chemical composition with the volatile oil of Black Spruce leaves, is obtained in winter by distilling in water in small portable copper stills and worms set up in the woods the branches of Tsuga Canadensis cut up into small pieces. Kight pounds of branches yield on an average an ounce of oil, or about three pints to one running of a still, which occupies from thirteen to twenty-four hours. (Seo Steams, {. c. Bertram Sc Walbaum, Archiv. de Pharm. ccxxii. 294. Hunkel, Pharmaceutical Review, xiv. 34. Bastin & Trimble, I. c. 90.) Oil

of Hemlock is used in considerable quantities as a flavoring and for disinfecting purposes, and occasionally in medicine to produco abortion.

' Abies minor pectinatii fotiis, Virginiana, eonis pants, >ufrra(un> dis, Plukenet, Phyt. t. 121, f. ; (excl. syn. Hernaiidei) Aim. Dot. 2. Ray, Hist. PI. iii. Dendr. 8. Miller, Diet. No. 3. Duha- mel, Traili des Arbres, i. 3.

Abies foiiit solitariis confertis ohtusis membranaceis, Clayton, Fl* Virgin. 191.

' See i. 6.

Sec i. 6.

' " II y a encore une autre espeoa qu I'on appelle Prusse; ea sent ordinaircment de gros arbres qui out trente ou quarante piedi do haut sans branches : ils ont une grosse ^corce et rouge: ce boia ne pourrit pas si facilement que les autres ; c'est pourquoy on s*cn sert ordinaircment pour bastir. Ce qu'il y a de mal dans ea buis, c'est qu'il s'en trouve quantity de rouilld, ce quo le fait rebuter. De celuy-Uk il en vient par tout, en bonne et mauvaiM terre ; il ne produit point de gorame." (Histoire Vert et

Nalurelle des Maurs et Pro<luclions du Pays de la Noueelle-t . 'nee vulgairemenl dite le Canada, ed. 3, 61.)

'" '■ Then she Playstered it with the Bark of Board Pine, or Hem- lock Tree, boyled soft and stampt betwixt two stones, till it wni as thin as browu Paper, and of the same Colour, she annointed tha Playster with Soyles Oyl, and the Soro likewise, then she laid it on warm, and sometimes she made use of the bark of the Larch Tree." (Josselyn, New England's Rarities, 62.)

" Hemlock Tree, a kind of Spruce, the bark of this Tree serves to dye Tawny ; the Fishers Tan their Sails and Nets with it.

" The Indians break and heal their Swellings and Sores with it, boyling the inner B irK i f young Hemlock very well, then knocking of it iKtwixt two stonos o a Playster, and annointing or soaking it iu Soyls Oyl, they apply it to the Sore : It will break a Sore Swell- ing speedily." (Jossel/n, New England's Rarities, 64.)

"The Hemlock-Tree is a kind of spruce or pine ; the bark boiled and stampt till it be very soft is excellent for to heal wounds, and so is the Turpentine thereof, and the Turpentine that issueth from the Cones of the Larch-tree (which comes nearest of any to the right Turpentine) is singularly good to heal wounds and to draw out the malice (or Thorn ns Helmont phrases it) of any Ach, rubbing the place therewith, and strewing upon it the powder of 5a;e-leaves." (Josselyn, .4n Account of Two Voyages to New England, p. 67.)

is

h

M

I

I !

66

aiLVA or NORTU AMERICA.

OONWBRA

For a oantury uid half a favorite ornamant of Ui« parlu and gardani of Um United Stetei and Europe,' Ttuga Canadttuia haa ihown in iiultivation a tendency to leniinal variation, and a number of the abnormal forma whiiih have been iirMluueil in nurMnea or have been found growing in the foreet are preaerved by tli« uultivatora of curioun plante.' In beauty none of them, however, equala the normal form, whiuh in atetely grace haa no rival among the inhabitante of the gardena of the northern United Htatea, when, with ita long lowor branohea aweeping the lawn, it riaea into a great pyramid dark and aombre in winter and light in early aummer, with the tender yellow tenea of ite drooping branchlete and vernal foliage.

Serioua inroada have alraaily iHien maile into the Ilemlook foreate of the northern and middle atatea, and the Ituat trooa have everywhure been deatroyml t4t aiipply the tenner, who finda in the aatringent bark of thiit tree one of the moat valuable materiula for hia induatry.'

> LoadoB, Arh. Hril. tv. 'JWi, I. (u Ahin Camultuti).

' The kbiionntl ouIUoImI fiirnia uf 1'iugn rannritntit dU- tiaguialMd in toma uaaai hj d«»rf (lid iiiim|MMt Iwbit, In nthon bjr futigiata bniiohaa and by unuiualljr briNwl iir narniw laavaa, or bj fulmga alightljf inarkad wUli whilx. AbiiMt al||htafn uf lh«a« (orma an ouUivatxd, but niina ii( thain haa any partli'Mlar Iwaiity or value. (S«a Itvluhar, llaiulh. Nmlilh. 40U. - Hudwurth, IhJI. No. 14, U. S. I)rpl. Agrif. /Mx, fnmln, 411) Mora diatlnot a variety nith ■hnri |>eMduliMia liraiiiihlata fcirminK a <leiiH aoahioD from twu lo tbraa taat lu halghl and twenty feet acmaa, wbioh waa fuunii about thirty yeara aifii on the Kiahkill Miinntaina In New York, and whiuh, inlnxluued Into (anlana by Mr. Henry Winthrop Hargent, ia umiaalunally to ha aeen In Ameriuan oullao- tiona, where it la uaually known aa Harumt'a llainliiek.

* rtu^a CatuutimiM, whiuh ia iHiiMiniinly diatribnted and waa unoe abundant over a territory fully half a mllliun M|iiare milea In area, ia one of the moat valuable tr»ea of the eaatern fnreit. It la eatimated that In the year IMMT 1,'JUIMIIXItona of Imrk of thi re« were harvaaled ; and althaii||li a Urn* (larl of IIm limber of tho traaa out ud ttriiiiMd uf tbalf bark la alluwad lo rot on tha

ground. It ia bellavad that the aTernga annual value of the mm- larial of all kinda obtained from thia llemloak la not laaa Ihao •30,000,000.

The Mieda uf the llamloek, although thay are produeed In great abundanee, do not germinate freely in open aituationa or on ground which haa been recently burned over, and tha young ■aed!iiii(a grow ilowly, planta under favorable cunditiona being not more than three or four inchea high at tha end of their fourth ae»- rum. The young planta are eaaily deotroyed by Are and brawling anin>aia, and the proepeot for the natural mtumtion of the Ilem- look fureata ii not pramiaing. (See Prentiia, (lardm and ForttI, ill. IfiT.) F.vtin under the moat favorable oonditiona the Ilemlook Increaaea alowly both in height and in trunk diameter. The •peoimen In the Jeiup Collection of North American Woodi In tha American Muirum of Natural lliatory. New York, obtained In northern New York, ia thirteen and one half inohea In diameter Inside the bark and one hundred and liity-four yean old, the lap'- -od being two ioohaa in thiokneaa with twenty-nine layen uf aaawJ gnwth.

. r

\ \

r

COHIfBRJi.

•d SUtaa and I m number of

in the foreat ar, ftqiialii the

the northern pyramid dark iig branohleta

n and middle findi in the

fklaa of th« m»r I !■ BOt l«H (haa

prodttoad in Rrmt •ituationa or on >, utd tho young mditiom baing nut if tbeir fourth m»- fln and browiing ration of the IIbui- 'lardm and ForttI, itionii tlis llamlook ik diameter. The rican Wooili in the Yurk, obtained in inobea in diameter gur jean old, the reatf-oine layen of

U \

!^,

i>

.F' t

EXPLANATION OF THE PLATE.

Plate DCIII. Tsuoa Canadensis.

1. A branch with stamiuate flowers, natural size.

2. A Btaminate flower, enlarged.

3. An anther, side view, enlarged.

4. An anther, front view, enlarged.

5. A branch with pistillate flowers, natural site.

6. A pistillate flower, enlarged.

7. A scale of a pistillate flower, lower side, with its bract, enlarged.

8. A scale of a pistillate flower, upper side, with its ovules, enlarged.

9. A fruiting branch, natural size.

10. A cone-scale, upper side, with its seeds, natural size.

11. A seed, natural size.

12. Vertical section of a seed, enlarged.

13. An embryo, enlarged.

14. Cross section of a leaf magnifled fifteen diameters.

16. A leaf divided transversely, enlarged. IG. Winter branch-buds, enlarged.

17. Seedling plants, natural size.

IeII! ! (!

:!|iii I'

'h Americtk

T5UGA CA'IADr--

in

1:!

ill

i.

I

!

liiM

m iLi

8.

'.». 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 16. 16, 17.

K ctftatiuave tiowitr, <inUi^"id

An author, siJe view, enlargoil

An hjiiUpi, front view, enlaiguj.

A hraniti with (liMjIUlfl flimjra, iMuil^ «*"<

A pistiUiite ti'iw.'f. onlftfij*'

.4 *i»Iii> <>< a. pMlilUto Hi»r>'), iii«.

X seulfi of A pistitlula llowrr, upijn

A fruiting branch, nuturiil niiu.

A cone-scale, upper kide, wiili il;i msmU, ftttlMfHl »iii«

A s«e(l, natural one.

Vertical section of a mbiI, euli.r|{>'il

An embryo, anlarjfeil.

Crmn iieclion of a leaf rnatfiiiAcit lifbtuo 4>4>W<4«Mf

A U»f •livicli'il traiisventel) fuitti^mS

Winter branch -hoiii, I'nlaTjfta

^•KlUng pUuUi, natural eiiw.

Silva of North America.

Tab.DCIII

■'?

.

(-, }!. yu.rtm (/<V.

£rruHi/nehf sc.

TSUGA CANADENSIS, Cam

.-/ .'Uo

-riHi,r itimr

/ni/t.^/. Taneur P<iri.t:

i y

Iralm'

'H

i

lii

ii;

!i

i

1 i

1

1

■"i

1

CONIFER,

r

m

i

angles

Tsuga (1881

u. a

(•zcl ner, .

A

two fe

handso

inch ai

flat coi

when t

disappi

bark it

loose SI

dark c

The le

upper I

or eigl

inch 1(

other

they f

flowen

and ei

are su

the a{

puberi

they s

wide,

are oi

are oi

to the

J

hundi

highe

> Th

Overflo eral je

COMIVBILS.

8ILVA OF NORTH AMERICA.

m

TSUOA OABOLmiANA.

Hemlock.

Cones oblong, pedunculate, their scales longer than broad, spreading at right angles at maturity.

Tsuga Ctffoliniana, Engelmann, Bot. Ocmette, -n. 223 (1881). Sargent, Fomt Treea N. Am. lOtk Census U. S. a. 207 ; Oard. Chron. n. ser. xxvi. 780, f . 163 (ezcl. f. 6). Hayr, Wald. Nordam. 196, t 6, f. Beias- ner, Handb. Nadelh. 406, t. 111. Hasten, Jmir. R.

Hort. See. ziv. 265. Hansen, Jour. R. Bort. Soe. ziv. 446 (Pinetum Danicum). Koehne, Veuttehe Dendr. 11, f. 5, O. Britton & Brown, lU. Fl. i. 66, f. 126. Chapman, Fl. ed. 3, 468. Abies Caroliniana, Chapman, Fl. ed. 2, Sappl. 650 (1887).

A tree, usually forty or fifty and occasionally seventy feet in height, with a trunk rarely exceeding two feet in diameter/ with comparatively short stout and often pendulous branches which form a handsome compact pyramidal head. The bark of the trunk is from three quarters of an inch to an inch and a quarter in thickness, and is reddish brown on the surface and deeply divided into broad flat connected ridges covered with thin closely appressed plate-like scales. The slender branchlets, when they first appear, are Ught orange-brown, coated with short dark pubescence which nearly entirely disappears during their first season or continues to cover them until they are three years old, when the bark is dull brown more or less tinged with orange and then hegins to separate into the small thin loose scales of the older branches. The winter-buds are obtuse, nearly an eighth of an inch in length, dark chestnut-brown, and covered with pubescence which is thickest near the margins of the scales. The leaves are entire, retuse or often emarginate at the apex, very dark green and lustrous on the upper surface, which is conspicuously grooved, and marked on the lower surface with a band of seven or eight rows of stomata on each side of the midrib ; they are from one third to three quarters of an inch long, the difference in length between those on the same branchlet being usually less than in the other flat-leaved Hemlocks, and about one twelfth of an inch wide, with orange-red bases from which they fall during their fifth year. The staminate flowers are tinged with purple and the pistillate flowers, which are about an eighth of an inch in length, are purple, with broadly ovate bracts scarious and erose on the margins. The cones are oblong, from an inch to an inch and a half in length, and are suspended on short stout peduncles ; their scales are oblong, gradually narrowed and rounded at the apex, rather abruptly contracted at the base into distinct stipes, thin, concave, striately grooved and puberulous on the outer surface, twice as long as they are broad, and pale brown at maturity, when they spread nearly at right angles to the axis of the cone ; their bracts are rather longer than they are wide, wedge-shaped below and nearly truncate or slightly cuspidate at the broad apex. The seeds are one sixth of an inch in length, with from fifteen to twenty small oil vesicles on the lower side, and are one quarter as long as the pale lustrous wings, which, broad or narrow at the base, are narrowed to the rounded apex.

An inhabitant of the rocky banks of streams, usually at elevations of between two thousand five hundred and three thoustmd feet above the level of the sea, but sometimetj ascending a thousand feet higher, the Carolina Hemlock is nowhere very common, although it is widely scattered along the Blue

> The trunk of a tree of this Hemlock growing on the banks of Overflow Creek, near Highlands, North Carolina, measured sev- eral years ago by Mr. F. H. Boyntoo, had a oiroumferenoe three

feet above the ground of eight feet nine and three quarters inches. I have not heard of a larger specimen.

I I

70

SIL7A OF NORTH AMERICA.

CONIFEILS.

Kidge from southwestern Virginia' to northeaster Georgia;' usually growing singly or in small Hcattered groves ot' a few trees, it is associated in the forest with the northern Hemlock, the White Pine, Gum-trees, Maples, and Hickories, and is probably most abundant in South Carolina on the streams which form the Savannah River.'

The wood of Tauga Caroliniana is light, soft, not strong, brittle, and coarse-grained ; it is pale brown tinged with red, witl<. thin nearly white sapwood, and contains narrow inconspicuous bands of small summer cells and numerous thin medullary rays. The specific gravity of the absolutely dry wood is 0.4275, a cubic foo*^ weighing 26.64 pounds.*

Unnoticed by the bot^anists wh'> frequently explored the southern Appalachian Mountains during the last half of the eighteenth and the first half of the nineteenth centuries, Tauga Caroliniana was first distinguished in 1850' by Professor L. R. Gibbes.' It was introduced into northern gardens in 1881 through the Arnold Arboretum and has proved perfectly suited to the climate of New England. 01 denser habit than the northern Hemlock, and with longer darker green more lustrous and more persistent leaves, it promises to excel even that tree as an ornament of parks and gardens.

I r

' In June, 1892, Ttuga Caroliniana was found bj- N. L. and Elizabeth G. Britton and Anna Murray Vail in the north fork of the Houston River valley, Smythe County, Virginia, at an altitude of two thousand two hundred feet above the sea ; and the follow- ing year it was detected by Mr. John K. Small near Broad Ford and along Comer Creek, Smythe County, and ou Farmer Mountain on New River, Carroll County, in the same state.

" In August, 1895, Ttuga Caroliniana was found by Mr. John K. Small near Tallula Falls, Habersham County, Georgia, at an eleva- tion of only sixteen hundred feet above the sea-level.

' See Sargent, Garden and Foral, ii. 267, f.

* Probably Ttuga Caroliniana, like the northern Hemlock, usually grows slowly. The log specimen in the Jesup Collection of North American Woods in the American Museum of Natural History, New York, procured from western South Carolina, is four- teer. and one half inches in diameter inside the bark, and one hun- dred and seventy years old. During its last twenty years, however, this trunk increased four and a half inches in diameter, the sapwood being seven eighths of an inch in thickness, with only nine layers of annual growth.

'' In 1842 a specimen of this Hemlock, without fruit, was col- lected by Professor Af^ Gray on BlufiF Mountain, North Carolina, but was not distingnished by him from the northern species. In 1850 Professor Gibbes found it in both North and South Carolina ; and in 1850 he sent specimens to Professor Gray Vfith the sugges- tion that the tree should be called Pintu laia, a name which was never published. At a meeting of the Elliott Society, held in Charleston, .South Carolina, in July, 1858, he reported his discov- ery. (.See Proc. Ellioti Soe. i. 280, where occurs the first printed mention of this tree.)

" licwis Reeve Gibbes (August 14, 1810-November 21, 1894), the oldest child of I./ewis Ladson Gibbes and Maria Henrietta Drayton, was boni in Charleston, South Carolina. The foundation

of his classical education was laid at the Grammar School of the University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia in the years 1821 1 ud 1822, but he was fitted for college at the Pendleton Academy, South Carolina, between 1823 and 1827. In this lost year he was admit- ted to the junior class of the South Carolina College at Columbia and was graduated in December, 1829, with the highest honors. At the end of 1831, having previously perforuied the duties of principal of Pendleton Academy, giving instruction in the classics and in nialhematics, he began the study of medicine at Charleston, but before the close of another year was appointed tutor in mathe- matics in the College of South Carolina. I.iOsing this position by reason of a revolution in the college in December, 1834, when all the officers were re';;uested to resign, on the following day he was made professor of mathematics in the new organization, but resigned during the next year, and in 1836 visited Paris for the purpose of completing his medical education and studying physica and botany. Returning to Charleston in 1838, with the intention of practicing medicine, he was appointed professor of mathematioF In the College of Charleston, where he retained his chair until July, 1892, teaching physics, chemistry, and mineralogy. Botany and various depai tnients of zoology were also among bis special studies. Between 1848 and 1853 Professor Gibbes was engaged in making observations for the Coast Survey to determine the differences of longitude between Charleston and various paints on the Atlantic coast. He was the author of numerous papers on astroLoroy, physics, and zoi^logy, printed in various scientific periodicals and in the Proceedings of learned societies. His most important bo- tanical papers arc A Catalogue of the Phtmogamous Plants of Colum- bia, South Carolina, and its Vicinity, published in October, 18.35, which contains the names of about nine hundred species, accom- panied in some cases by critical notes, and the Botany of Edingt Bay, published in 1859 in the Ilrst volume of the Proceedings of the Elliott Society.

^H

CONIFERS.

or in small k, the White olina on the

d ; it is pale 9U8 bonds of »ly dry wood

itains during oliniana was

n gardens in ew England.

lus and more

lar Sohool of the ie jreare 1821 t nd I Academy, South >Br be WHS admit- e at Columbia and st bonon. At the utiea of principal e classics and in \t Charleston, but 1 tutor in matbe- i; this position by nber, 1834, when following day he organization, but ted Paris for the studying physics »itb the intention Dr of raathematicii ia chair until July, jgy. Botany and bis special studies, igaged in making the differences of s on the Atlantic rs on astroLomy, lo periodicals and ost important bo- » Plants of Cotum- in October, 18,35, id species, accom- Bnlany of Edingi he Proceedings of

'■i ' I

EXPLANATION OF THE PLATE.

Plate DCIV. Tsuoa Caroliniana.

1. A branch with staminate flowen, natural siia.

2. A staminato flower, onUrged.

3. Au anther, lower side, enlarged.

4. An anther, front view, enlarged.

5. An anther, side view, enlarged.

6. A branch with pistillate flowers, natural size.

7. A pistillate flower, enlarged.

8. A scale of a pistillate flower, lower side, with its bract, enlarged.

9. A scale of a pistillate flower, upper side, with its ovules, enUrged.

10. A fri'iting branch, natural size.

11. A cone-scolo, upper side, with its ueds, natural nze.

12. Vertical section of a seed, enlarged.

13. An embryo, enlarged.

14. Cross section of a leaf, niagnified fifteen diameters. 16. Winter branch-buds, enlarged.

16. A seedling plant, natural size.

I

II

n

•i^'.

/y/.

W^

'==^

./ V

•^

y

v^

■/i^'' i^-

r-

^»*f*«<,rt»'''''**"<««n,-

^

cja

Kii-

t*

■*ijfr

,<S#

I

:lg):

M

it

fill!

;i

KXPMIOAV

vri-:.

* i»w ina(« H. ' -

(^►."v*:. (rmit vioir. pnlmrijod. A:, watiior, niile virw. I'lilari^l. 0 A branch wiUi )iiatilia(p H<>w«n. natniiii "fr 7. A pistillnto Hoffor, Hiilarijml

H. A «!alc cif a pittilUw Htwcr. towm (idH. wHh i<>' -innt, twltrc''' 0. A BciUe of It piiUllnU' rii>«er, up|wr (ide, witti it* otoIm, ciiUrKiNl.

10. A (luitiiif; branch, imt'iral iii7e.

1 1. A eonF-Hcivle. U|i|>ci' «iilci, with it* leetli, natiiral h\m.

12. Verlit-al Bi-rtioii of u swhI, ftiliirgnd.

13. An riiiliiy', uilar(jpd.

1-1. ''row aeciiiin «f a leaf, nia(rni(ind R(ta«i> <liam*t«r«. 111. Winter braiirhbiida. eiilaitffd Ifv A KetHlling pt»ot, iiAtiir*) suo

HillH

ml

m\

Silva of Nurth Aniencs

Tab DCIV

d> ^

('. f.'. Fii.rttn ,M

/tapuif .

TSUGA CAROLINIANA, En^elm.

.'/ liuH-ri'ii.r iiirt\r ^

Imp. J. Tan^ur Paris.

If

%

" -T

CONirBHJt

SILVA OF NORTH AMEIilVA.

7a

T8U0A HETEROPHYLLA. Hemlook.

CoNKH oblong-oval, Hossilo, thoir houIos longor than broad, otlen abruptly contnuitud nour the middlu.

TaugA hetarophylia.

Pinua CanaduDais, ll<in|{*ril, y^g. Sitrhu, 4H (not Liiinaut)

(Aufpiit. 1H32); JU^. I'hi/M. Math. Nat. pt. ii. Arad.

Sri. St. I'ftemhtmrij, ii. KiJt ( Vfij. Silchii). Hooker, t'l.

Bor.-Am. ii. IM (in part) Ledebour, t'l. Rom. iii. 6(IH

(•«p|. «yn.). Herder, ^(i<. Unrt. I'etrop. xii. 119 {PI.

Hailil.) (in part). Abies heterophylla, Ituflneiiqiiv, AtUnt. Jour. i. 110

(Autumn, 18:12) : New Kl. i. 37. Kndlicher, 5yn. Con\f.

124. Corri*ro, Traitd Cmif. 2(15. Abies mioropliyUa, Kulini'iique, Atlunt. Jour. i. 110 (Au- tumn, 18112) i New n. i. .'18. Kndlichvr, Syn. Conif.

12(1. Carritrc, TraM Vonlf. 2(17. Abies Mertenslana, Ourdon, Pinetum, 18 (ex<;l. syn. lion-

Kurd) (nut Lindley & (iordon) (1858). A. Murray, I'rM.

U. llort. Soc. iii. 144, f. 8, 10, 12, 14, 16. Lyall, Jour.

Linn, Soe. v\\. I<'i3, 143. Hcnkcl & Horhstcttcr, iV^».

Nailelh. 152. Cooper, Am. Nat. iii. 412. Hna|)«s,

Euergreem, 192. K. Koch, Dendr. ii. pt. ii. 260. Hall,

Bot. Gazette, ii. 94. Lauche, Deutiche Dendr, ed. 2, 94. Abies Canadensis? Cooper, Smilhionian Rep. 1868, 202

(not Miller nor UcsfonUinea) (1869) ; Pacific R. R. Kep.

xii. pt. ii. 69. Abies Bridgesii, KcIIori;, Proe. Cat. Acad. ii. 8 (18(i;i). Abies Albertiana, A. Murray, Proe. Ji. Ilort. Sae. iii. 14!>.

(. H, 7, », 11, 13, in (1863). U»«on, PInelum IMl. II, 111, t., f. 1-18. —(NeUn) Naniila, /'I'mimi', .11.

Tsuga MurteDBinna. Curriire, Trail* ('»»(/', «d, 2, 'j/MI (IH()7). KiiK»linunn, llrewer A ft'iiliim Ihl. I'ul, II, 120 1 Hot. Oiinetle, vi. 224. KelloKK. '/Vw« -(/' ( ■iilh fomia, 41. KckcI, Riiim. I lend r. «i\. 2, pi. I. JItt, ~ Hur* (font, t'nreiit Trem N. Am. lO/A t'lfntm I', S. Ik. 207, Maiitem, tiard. Chniii. n. ler. xiiii. 179, f. Mfl i nur. M, xii. 11, f. 2! Jour. R. llort. Soi: xlv. yrtrt, Mwyr, Wald. Nonlam. 3;»8, t. 0, J. Lenini.in, Wk/i. fiilljUr- nil! State Hoard Foretlrij, iii, 125, t. 7, H {('uiin-llriirrrt of CtiliJ'ornia) \ Wrat- American CiiHii-llMreri, 53 \ Hull, Sierra Cluh, ii. 159 (r,iH(/fM of the I'lieljle Sto/m), .— Ueiaaner, llandb. Nadr/h. 403, f. 110. lUnaan, ,four. /{. llort. Sor. xiv. 447 (Pinetum iJunlium). Kiiii|ilii<i Dnilache Dendr. II, f. 5, ,1.

Tauga Albertiana, Si<n^clau7.e, Conif. 18 (18117),

PinUB Mertenaiana, Furlature, l)e t'andulle I'rodr, Kvl. pt. ii. 428 (not Bongard) (1808). W. U. M'Nah, Pro,; R. Iri»h Acoil. .er. 2, ii. 211, 212, t. 23, I, 4. Hurdir, Art. llort. Petrop. xii. 119 {I'l. Hadd,).

PinuB Pattoniana. W, R. M'Nah, Proe. Ji, Irltfi Amid, »cr. 2, ii. 211, 212, t. 23, f. 2 (not I'urhitora) '( 1875).

Abies PattonU, W. R. M'Nah, Jour. Linn. Soo, %h, 2<)N (1882).

A tree, frequently two hundred feet in height, with a tall trunk from six to tun fuot in (liiiiiietKr, and short sleiidor usually pendulous branches which form a narrow pyramidal head. 'J'liti liaik on young trunks is thin, dark orange-hrown, and separated by shallow fissures into narrow Hut platim wliioli break into delicate scales ; and on fully grown trees it is from an inch to an inch and u Imlf in thickness and deeply divided into broad Hat connected ridges covered with closely appronNtid ai'iiltm which are brown more or less tinged with cinnamon-red. The branchlets, which are vciy nhmijur and pale yellow-brown for two or three years, and ultimately become dark reddish brown, with thin Hcaly bark, are coated, when they first appear, with long pale hairs, and are pubescent or pubornlmm I'lii' five or six years. The winter-buds are ovate, about one sixteenth of an inch in length, and briglil chcstniit-brown. The leaves are rounded at the apex, entire or minutely spinulosn-dentiuulate uhiivc the middle, conspicuously grooved, dark green and very lustrous on the upper surface, marked licliiw with broad white bands of from seven to nine rows of stomata, abruptly contracted at the liaati iiilti slender petioles, from one quarter to three quarters of an inch long and from one sixtumilli to one twelfth of an inch wide. The st^irainate flowers are yellow, about an eighth of an inch in lenglti and rather shorter than their slender pendulous stipes. The pistillate flowers are purple and puhertiloim, with broadly ovate bracts which are scarious and nearly entire on the margins and rather longtir tliiiii

( ; i

If

i

IP

74

SILVA OF NORTH AMERICA.

CONIFERJE.

the acute scales. The cones are oblong-oval, acute, sessile, from three quarters of an inch to an inch in length, and slightly puberiilous on the outer surface of the scales, which are longer than they are broad, often abruptly narrowed near the middle, thin, striate on the outer surface, green more or less tinged with purple toward the margins until fully grown, and light reddish brown at maturity ; their bracts are dark purple, puberulous, and rounded and abruptly contracted at the apex into short points. The seeds are about an eighth of an inch in length, with only occasional oil vesicles, and are from one half to one third as long as their narrow wings.

Tsuga heterophylla is common in southeastern Alaska,' where it forms with the Tideland Spruce the largest part of the great coast forest which extends from the sea-level up to elevations of about two thousand feet, sometimes one species and sometimes the other predominating. In British Columbia it is very abundant on the coast ; it extends up the valley of the Fraser and other rivers in the southern part of the territory to the limit of the region of abundant rains, and, reappearing on the Selkirk and Gold Ranges, spreads eastward along the Kicking Horse to the western slopes of the continental divide.''' It is one of the commonest and largest trees in the coniferous forest which extends from the coast of Washington and Oregon to the western slopes of the Cascade Mountains,^ and in the Redwood forests of the California coast as far south as Cape Mendocino, finding its southern home in Marin County. In the interior 7'su(ja htLrophylla ranges eastward along the mountains of northern Wash- ington to the western slopes of the Rocky Mountains of northern Montana and to the Coeur d'Alene and Bitter Root Mountains of Idaho.'* Althoug'". it is most abundant and of largest size in the moist valleys and on low slopes near the coast, Tmga heterophylla in the interior, where it sometimes ascends to elevations of six thousand feet above the sea, attains a large size when it is abundantly supplied with moisture, and in northern Montana and Idaho and in southern British Columbia often forms a consid- erable part of the forests, in wiiicb it is associated with the White Fir, the Douglas Spruce, the Mountain Pine, the western Larch, and the Engehaan Spruce."

The wood of Tmga heterophylla is light, hard, and tough ; it is pale brown tinged with yellow, with thin nearly white sapwood, and contains thin inconspicuous bands of small summer cells and

large piirt of the forest growth, heiiig mingled with the Engelmiuin Spruce, the Pattoii Spruce, and the Muuntiiiu Kir.

•' The most southern point on tlic western slope of the Cascade Mountains at which Tsuga heterophytltt has heen noticed is at the nortliern base of Huckleberry Mountain in the valley of Union Creek and about twelve miles southwest of Crater Lake (Cuville mlill).

* Leibcrg, Contrih. U. S. Nat. Herb. v. 54.

' Without regular and abundant supplies of watei Tsuga helero- phytla remains small and stunted, and in the search for moisturo trees which have sprung up on dry slopes will send their roots for great distances near the surface of the ground to springs at lower levels.

In the coast region, where this tree delights in the humidity which every breeze brings in from the ocean, the forest lloor is so deeply covered with musses and with many strong growing slindm that the delicate seeds of the Hemlock often Hud their only oppor- tunity to germinate on the trunks of fallen trees, which, in eonse- qnence, are fretpiently covered with miniature Hemlock forests. Some of these seedlings, nutrc vigorous than their companions, survive the hardships of overcrowding, and, sending their roots into the ground around the trunks which had been their seed-beds, grow into great trees. Like those of some tropical Kig-trees, the seeds of the Hemlock sometimes germinate in the humid coast forests high in the air on the broken stems of trees, and, sending stout and vigorous roots down to the ground, continue to live long after their kosta have disappeared.

' Kothrock, Smithsonian Rep. 1804,433 (Fl. .•Kojiia). Moelmn, Proc. Pkil. Acad. 1884, 93.— K. Kurtz, liol. Jahrh. xix. 41i5 (Ft. Chiiratgehieles). Gorman, Pitlonia, iii. 68.

The most western point on the Alaska coast where Tsuga hetero- phylla luis been observed is on Htuchinbruok Island at the month of Prince William Soiiuil in latitude 60° 13' north, where it was Ken by Ur. J. M. Macoun on Juno 18, 18iW. Tho Spruce forest, however, extends along the shores of I'rince William Sound and cov- ers the eastern extremity of Kadiak Island, where the Pacific forests end, and it is not impossible that the Ilcndock nniy still be found farther tu tho westward, although on the shores of Yakutat Bay, in latitude 60°, it is said to be less abundant and of smaller size than the *<pruce. (See Funston, Contrih. U. S. Nat. Herb. iii. 3:28.) It is •'L .union but of small size on the lower seawanl slopes of the moun- tains at the head of the Lyim Canal, a hundr, ^ miles north of Sitka and also near the sixtieth degree of latitude. On Haranoff Island it grows to a very Urge size a few feet above the sea-level ; and between Cross Sound and Cape Mendocino, a distance of nearly fifteen hundred miles, it is one of the commonest trees in the humid coast region, in Alaska usually asctindiiig above the Spruce, its eoista"' companion at the north, and southward min- gling also with the i uglas Spruce, the White Fir, and the Arbor Vita3, and in California with the Redwood.

" G. M. Dawson, Can. NcU. u. t«r. ix. 324. Macoun, Cat. Can. PI. 471.

On the western slope of the Selkirk Mountains of British Co- lumbia the HemliK'k is abundant and of large size up to elevations of about five thousand feet above tho sea-level, often forming a

CONIFEItS.

ich to an inch than they are n more or less aturity ; their short points, tnd are from

deland Spruce

of about two

Cohimbia it

the southern

e Selkirk and

inental divide.*

from the coast

the Redwood

home in Marin

orthern Wash-

Coeur d'Alene

ze in the moist

tetimes ascends

y supplied with

orms a consid-

, the Mountain

ed with yellow, pimer cells and

with the Engelmonn

fit.

lupo of the Cascade

en noticed is nt the

:he valley of Union

Iratcr Lake (Cuville

wntei Tsttga heterO' search for moisture send their roots fur d to springs at lower

hts in the hnniidity lie forest fhior is bo ■onjj growing shruhs ind their only ojipor- *ees, which, in conse- re Hemlock forests, in their conipanions,

seiuling their rt>ots been their see<l-heds, 'epical Kig-trces, the

in the humid coast f trees, and, sending continue to live long

CONIFERS.

8ILVA OF NORTH AMERICA.

75

numerous prominent medullary rays. The specific gravity of the absolutely dry wood lit 0,5 1H2, n cubic foot weighing 32.29 pounds. Stronger, more durable, and more easily worked tliuil tho wood of the other American Hemlocks, it is now largely manufactured into lumber used printiipillly ill tho construction of buildings. The bark, which is used in large quantities, furnishes tho inuHt Vllluitltle tanning material produced in the forests of British Columbia, Washington, and Oregon.' From tho inner bark the Indians of Alaska obtain one of their principal articles of vegetable food.''

The earliest mention of the western Hemlock was published in 1798 in the account of VailPOllVOr^ voyage of discovery.'' In May, 1792, he had seen it near the shores of Puget Sound j and ill July of the following year Mackenzie,* in the first journey made by a white man across the oontinoiit of North America, noticed it near the Pacific coast in about latitude 52° north.° The first det>(ii'ipti(ill of tliift tree, however, was not published until 1814 in the journal of the transcontinental espudUioii iiiulvr the command of Lewis and Clark, who passed the winter of 1805 near the mouth of the Columbia River, where the Hemlock is still one of the commonest trees of the forest."

The noblest of Hemlock-trees in girth and height of stem, Tsuga heterophylla^ BurpaMSR nil iti

> Bastin & Trimble, Jour. Pharm. Izi. 354. " See %i. 93.

* " The parts of the vegetable kingdom applicable to useful purposes appeared to grow very luxuriantly, and consisted of the Canadian and Norwegian hemlock, silver pines, tho Turauiahao and Canadian poplar, arbor-vitie, common yew, black and common dwarf oak, American ash, common hazel, sycamore, sugar, moun- tain, and Pennsylvauian maple, oriental arbutus, American alder, and common willow ; these, with the Canadian elder, small fruited crab, and Pennsylvanian cherry-trees, constituted the forests, which may be considered rather as encumbered, than adorned, with underwood." (Vanoouver, A Voyage of Discovery to the North Pa- cific Ocean and Round the World, i. 249.)

Alexander Mackenzie (1755 ?-March 12, 1820) is believed to have been born in Inverness, Scotland. At an early age he en- tered the employ of the Northwest Fur Company, and, CKining to America, was first stationed in 1779 at Toronto, and then at Fort Chippewayan, at the head of Lake Athabasca, where he remained for eight years. In January, 1789, ho started with a small party of Indians and half-breeds to explore the unknown country to the north. Skirting Great Slave Lake, which was still covered with ice, and floating down the river that has since borne his name, he reached in six weeks the sliores of the Arctic Sea, whence he re- turned the same season to bis post on Lake Athabasca. After a year spent in England studying astronomy and surveying in pre- paration for a more difKciilt journey, in which ho hoped to cross the continent, Mackenzie left Fort Chippewayan on July 10, 1792, and after great hardsli'ps and many dangers reached on .Tunc 22, 1793, the shores of tlie Pacific Ocean, in latitude 52° 25' north. Fearing nn attack of hostile Indians, he started homeward the following day, and retraced his steps to the cast.

Having nninsscd a comfortable fortune in tho fur trade, Mac- kenzie returned to Knglaud in 1801, and published the account of his travels. He was knighted in 1802, and remained during the remainder of his life in the service of the Company in whose employ ho had gained fame as one of the most undaunted and successful explorers who have trod the North American conti- nent.

^ " Here the timber was also very largo ; but I could not learn from our conductors why the most considerable hemlock trees were stripped of their bark to the tops of them. I concluded, indeed, at that time that the inhabitants tanned their leather with it. Here were also the largest and loftiest elder and cedar trees that I had

ever seen." (Mackenzie, Voyages from Monlreiil an the ninnf Kl, Lawrence and through the Continent of North Amerion In Htf l''fnim and Pacific Oceans in the years 1780 and liU,1, U17)

"The other wood was hemlock, white birolli tWM N|)etjie8 of spruce, firs, willows, etc." (Ibid. 303.)

See History of the Expedition under Command itf' /tPHilt utiil Clark, ed. Coues, iii. 830.

' An unfortunate confusion between the names of (jip twM ttetii' locks of western North America has long eKisted, )hirm»tff), JH lllfl Vegetation de I'lsle de Sitka, first described three Bjwuiiiit iif I'lmis collected by Mortens on Ilaranoff Island, near the tiiwil iif ^itliit. This paper was read In May, 1831, before th" AnnilfMiy lit Hi, Petersburg, and was first published as a pamphlet III Allfilliili IMIlS), the Tolunio of the Memoirs of the St. Pcteisliiii'g At<niti<lllf, III which It finally appeared, being dated 1833. Oiiu iif tJitiAit s)ieiiics, Pinus Sitchensis, Is the Picea Sitchensia of Curriere| HlliiUwr, I'inui Canadensis, mistaken for the Hemlock of eastern Niil'lll Alllfl'li'lt, la clearly the western Hemlock; tho third species, Piiiili Mpflphninm n. sp. with /olia " ollusiuscuta, supra plana, tulilui iieri'ii meiliii jirn- minulo, inlegerrima," and " sirobili solilarii, seitiles, iililimni, iililuni, 1^, polticares pi. min." cannot be rcferied to Ilia saillP plltllt M lltill- gard's Pinus Canadensis, although such a refei'enpe, lt|>t itiliipteil by Gordon in 1858, after the introductinii of the wpulft'll tleiii- lock Into English gardens, has been accepted liy nil i>iilist<l|lieilt authors who have written on this tree. The fiiut, ||iiwt<¥eri llmt there are two species of Hendock on Ilaranull' IhIhImI HIillPHfA to have escaped the attention of botanists from Mfi'tmi'il tiiii(> until tho summer of 1807, when In company with Mes^F^, Williitlii M. Canby and John Mulr I found the Tsuga Pattintiimif ttt HHIIttcltiiiiief Engelinaun, etc., growing near the town of hilka with llif Hil-eiilleit Tsuga Mertensiana, and It became ut mice eleur (JMt tliiiigiit'il's description of Pinus Mertensiana could belong iiiily In tht* I'ltttuH Spruce. Therefore this tree should be known us Tmiffn Meflelinlilliiti while another name must bo found for Itongnrd's /VfiiM f Viiiiii/pii- sis. That of Uaflncsque, published In IH.'tL', 4/iW hiiltriililii/llil, is the next oldest name. The possibility of identifying )h|i ll'^ti lie' scribed by Rafincsque under this ...ime has iisMtllly li^iill lliillhteit, but bis description was based on tho following HI'Milllllt III Ihe jouriuil of Lewis and Clark :

"The second is a much more common speoies, slid siiimllliiles at least one half of the timber in this iieighhiirliiniil, l( ii)ii<iiiit tu resemble the spruce, rising from 100 to IHO feet, mill \ipina fi-iiiii four to six in diameter, straight, round, »lid reglilitrl^ llt|ie>rltlg|.

I

i-

' ill I

?'

Ii!

'ft

( ;■ i

i

I

I f.

76

iSILVA OF NORTU AMmtWA.

CONIFERJE.

associatea in the forests of northwestern America in the grHOHfttI ^^m^ of its long and drooping hranehes and in its delicate lustrous foliage. Introduced i»t« ituHivHiioii hi 1861 by John Jeffrey,' Tmga heterophylla flourishes in the gardens of temporata KMr»|w, wliere It has grown rapidly, and where, with long lower branches resting on the ground, HltiiMl«r drtMijfiiig branchlets, and pendent leading shoots, it well displays the beauties of its vigorous yuullt,"

The bark is thin, of a dark color, much divided in small longitudi- nal interstices ; the bark of the boughs and young trees is some- what smooth, but not equal (in this respect) to tlio balsam-flr ; the wood is white, very soft, but difficult to rive ; the trunk is a sim- ple, branching, and diffuse stem, not so proliferous as pines and flrs usually are. It puts forth buds from the sides of the small boughs, as well as from their extremities, the stem terminates, like the cedar, in a slender pointed top. The leaves are pctiolute ; the foot-stalks short, acerose, rather more than half a line in width, and very unequal in length; the greatest length seldom eioeeds one inch, while other leaves, intermixed on every part of the bough, do nut exceed a quarter of an inch. The leaf has a small longitudinal channel on the upper disk, which is of a deep and glossy green, while the under disk is of a whitish green. It yields but little rosin. What is remarkable, the cone is not longer than the end of a man's

tkumli t it M mH, ttfUlllIf, nf «n nt«i« form, and produced at the ends of i\m »m»\\ ft»i)(»." ( M. Cones, iii. BJJO.)

Thera j* uii (tllicf (few IH the forests of I'aoiflc North America but this iUwUtf^t Ut m\mU Ihl* description can be applied, and there taaim Ui \m m ttilicf finifM but bi ailopt Ksflnesque's specific iiauiu »*|i| uitll (Iw WfK(«<»N Mdiiliick Tnuga helerophylla and Pat- ton's SprtfuB 'I'mi/il Mtflfmlmn, although such a change of names will iierlaiHJy (ikiw liJ^Mjr fiiiittisliig.

' Keu »i <).

' Hue I»'hwImf, Umil, Chl-nH. 1072, 7B (as A¥m Albertiana)

Dunn, Jintr. U. //w Mic. lU. 70 (as Abia Albeniana).

lu tba enuW'' t/liMcrf niates Tnuga helerophylla has not yet sbuwi) it4 wbijil)) Ui l-«titlt^i> (he hot drr : ummers or the changes of uur UAUtrlMH wi«l«r tllHli«(«« atKl rarely survives here more than a few ye»Mr

1.

2.

3.

4.

5.

6.

7.

8.

9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18.

EXPLANATION OF TIIK I'LATK,

Plate DCV. Tsi/ua UKvmo^'ll¥l,l,^^!

A branch with staminata flowurt, nKMr^t ^iMli

A staminate flower, enlarged.

An anther, front view, enlarged.

An anther, side view, enlarged.

A branch with pistillate fluwera, n»t<tr»l liif4>i

A pistillate flower, enlarged.

A scale of a pistillate Auwer, u|i|H)r sidd, witll IM (rt(M|p«, enlnrged.

A pistillate flower, lower siilu, with il4 Umt, fllU^Kut,

A fruiting branch, natural eym.

A cone-scale, lower side, with its hriidt, imUm\ nUPi

A cone-scale, lower siile, with its hl»<iti mUm\ nHf-

A cone-scale, upper side, with its sa(»(«, lwl.tlfMl nHei

Seeds, enlarged.

Vertical section of a seed, enlarged.

An embryo, enlarged.

Cross section of a leaf, nmgriillud Afmnii AimwitH:

Winter branch-buds, enlarged.

Seedling plants, natural siij).

r s

CONIFEItS.

and drooping

John Jeffrey,'

n rapidly, and

and pendent

M-',

\i-:

id produced at the

I

iflc North America

an he applied, and

llallncsque'B specific

lerophytla and Pat-

a change of nomea

ibUt Albertiatui), •niana).

hytla has not yet ■H or the changes of fes ben more than

-^V-

'UrOft f£^

'.i^

■S*"^

- - i

^S'

•^

vy

t '' I

1 1

11

III

SJLVA OF NORTH AMERldA.

<!0N1FE

: ii(»rthwcsteri> Atncriwi in tho gra<-«fui Hwwp of ito lon^ and droojiing

.. (i/f lustrous folia^>. lut'nducfd into cult.iv;iti(>u in li^^»l iij .(<ihii Jott'rey,'

■,<>Uii;>hi<s in tliu jjardons ot UnnpcraU) Euroj)e, whore it hius j^njwii nipidly, an<i

;; iuwer branches renting on the ground, slender drooping branchleta, iind pt-ndcut

ii wuil displays the beautica of its vigorou:* youth.''

-'■ tlii't. uf & tturk eolur, much ilivuled iu f>iiuU longittttli- , (.ui-hliM* ; tlic barU of the Ikmi(;1i9 ami yiiunR Ireea wiliK-- -.ni •niiK'tb, but not ciiiinl (in (liia roupcrt) to tlin lm)iJ«inft.- ; tu« wiiot] ij wluio, vftn iioft, Ixit diflicult to rive; the tiuiik Lst^'ru- |>lo, hraiK'tiinfff tioU ditTusn xti'iii, nut m proltftirnuii »« pAmt \b-.i tirs iiituall/ At* It puu f(>rlh buus from ttin fiide* •it' tlH.' ^j*>A- iMAjf^bi, »« w(tt) w frwii their oztr^^miti*'*:*. tti« iitooi t'lrmmiA^inft, ci(j« the e««l«r, io a ftleiMter )M»U(tfil l^-^fi Thtf 1e»rii9 ikr» pcuaiat# , tV fnttt'tftalli* «l>-»\. t- - . ' ' * ■'-■'• Snif Uiwin «Mt.ti,«i>4

»*Cf *Hi#«Ift»i U ' X «-ldfl» ««0V«^ «tHi

timinl) ; If. M noft, flfixible, of nn ovate fonn, luii! prndnri-d nl tbt> eiid> ui lU oiiutll twigs." (V,A. Cuiii!i>, iii. hiUl.)

Thi'r* (», i**i otlii.t troH ia thu fari-ats of Puci'm' NoHti Aiuoricii but Uii* ({<yiul(M.'k to wbirh tbi.l tliisiuriiitiuu ran b«i ^ipptinil, and tbfin' wwnfji to b> no othrr courso but to tidopt U<«lioi<K,iit.''it .ipecific iiRuti« uid Cftll ihn <fv<»4tt'rn Urnikx-k TAuifa hfterifiktuiii and Pat- U»a*ii Spm^ti 'I'st4g'.i .^ferte^imml, aUliough such * '•ba-'jcr of names mill ccrtaiiily prove highly oont'iiaiitg.

> Sw u U

' S»r »'»»lrr, fJ«r</. CTron. 18/2, 75 («» /tiliim Albertiam). .■-. Ja»', ^. ffig( Six- liv, 78 (as Abien Alhertiuw:). ' tn» oiMrm Oiu««l tstalc« V'jui/u hetcrophyllu ban not yet &ijv»'.t n it* ''r^ tht' hot dry sununera or th« chang(!i< of

evir vn^f^tf. i<M»«, And mrely Hur%iti>ti \».n nioru than

. ;i «r vvbra.

EXPLA»fATIO« or T»E PLAf*.

Pj.atk IX,'\'. Thitoa UimiBOt HVLi.A,

1. A brunch with islaniinate liotrem, natural she.

2. A fitaniiuate flowi*r, rnlarjjr'<|.

3. An wither, fnna vjow, f;nlar}re<l.

4. An iuithor, side vinw, enlarKtYJ.

5. A b'aiirli vritti pistillate Hiiwr-. .•..<,•». ' «• H. A potillate flo«pr. t'uJ*;i^'» !

< A »c»li; of a jiuitJlUte li-.nn S. A fAi-tiiLun llower, lowfr ,«i ^ A fruiting brnnrh, iiaturBl aifk. " itie iower .li-'- '

I*, iftirwr ■.

1.-

1". W mt^r bfa.-ii'-; - 18. Herdlini; plaiiU'

''iftMn liiametert.

■uni ilroopint^

I rapidly, autl •ut'l pendent

U |M'()<1i1C(h{ At llld

(' North America I" i<i>plii!)il, and

ft*- j^ «^ nattiea

Oi/ •; Albrrtiaru}). ■li/inn).

thylla UoM Dot yt;t s or tll« cluiiip^n of .'(; hen. ii^ir-: tlian

Si'.va of North America.

Tab, DCV,

{' F ?\iron liW

HAfpUV sf'.

TSUGA HETER0PHYLLA,Sar6.

o

.-i !fi,>rr,s,.r ./ir»'.r^

Imp. ./ TufU'ur. Ptir/.r

( i

\i \

>

■'

..

■■

f

*

'

i'i

' F

11 \

V

! '

ir

iiJiiii

^il!H

CONIFERiB.

8ILVA OF NORTH AMERICA,

77

TSUQA MERTENSIANA. Mountain Hemlock. Fatten Spruce.

Cones oblong, cylindrical, sessile, their scales oblong-obovate, longer than broad. Leaves bluntly pointed, stomatiferous on both surfaces.

Tauga Mertensiana (not Carri^re).

Finus Mertensiana, Bongard, Fl. Siteha, 64 (August,

1832) ; M(m. Phys. Math. Nat. pt. ii. Acad. Set. St.

Pitershourg, ii. 163 (Fl. Siteha). Hooker, Fl. Bor.-Am.

ii. 164. Endlicher, Sijti. Coiiif. 111. Ledebour, Fl.

Boss. iii. 668. Dietrich, Sijn. y. 394. Abies Mertensiana, Lindley & Gordon, Jour. Eori. Soc.

Land. v. 211 (1850). A. Murray, Proc. B. Hart. Soc.

iu. 146. Abies Pattoniana, A. Murray, Bep. Oregon Exped. 1, t. 4,

f. 2 (1853) ; Edinburgh New Phil. Jour. n. aer. i. 291,

t 9, f. 1-7. Lawson, Pinetum Brit. ii. 157, t. 22, f.

Hoopes, Evergreens, 172. K. Koch, Dendr. ii. pt. ii.

253. Gordon, Pinetum, ed. 2, 30, 421. HaU, Bot.

Gazette, ii. 94. Veitch, Man. Conif. 116, f. 31, 32.

Laucbe, Deutsche Dendr. ed. 2, 96. Abies Mertensia, Carri^re, Traiti Conif. 232 (1866). ? Pioea Californioa, Carri^re, Traiti Conif. 261 (1855). Abies Hoolieriana, A. Murray, Edinburgh New Phil.

Jour. n. ser. i. 289, t. 9, f. 11-17 (185iiy. Lawson, Pi- netum Brit. ii. 153, t. 21, 22, f. 1-22. (Nelson) SenUb,

Pinaeeee, 31. Veitch, Man. Conif. 115, t. 32. Abies Williamsonii, Newberry, Pacific B. B. Bep. vi. pt.

iii. 53, t 7, f. 19 (1857) Cooper, Am. Nat. iii. 412.

Abies Pattonii, Gordon, Pinetum, i. 10 (1858) ; Suppl. 6.

Henkel & Hoclistetter, Syn. Nadelh. 151 (excl. syn. Akiea

trigona). Tsuga Pattoniana, S^n^clauze, Conif. 21 (1867). Engel-

mann, Brewer & Watson Bot. Cal. ii. 121 ; Gard. Chron.

n. ser. xvii. 145. Kellogg, Trees of California, 37.

Kegel, Buss. Dendr. ed. 2, pt i. 40. Sargent, Pmest Treef N. Am. 10th Census V. S. ix. 208. Mayr, Wald. Nordam. 356, t. 6, t'. Beissner, Ifandb. Nadelh. 407, f. 112, 113. Masters, Jour. B. Hort. Soc. xiv. 255. Han- sen, Jour. B. Hort. Soc. xiv. 448 (Pinetum Danicum),

Koehne, Deutsche Dendr. 11, f. 5, A. Coville, Contrib. V. S. Nat. Herb. iv. 223 (Bot. Death Valley Exped.). Lemmon, West-American Cone-Bearers, 53 ; Bull. Sierra Club, ii. 160, t. 23 (Conifers of the Pacific Slope).

Tauga Hookeriana, Carriiro, Traitd Conif. ed. 2, 262

(1867). S^ndclauze, Conif. 21 Hansen, Jour. R.

Hort. Soc. xiv. 446 (Pinetum Danieum). Lemmon, Erythea, vi. 78.

Pinus Pattoniana, Parlatore, De CandoUe Prodr. xn. pt ii. 429 (1868). W. B. M'Nab, Proc. B. Irish Acad. ser. 2, u. 211, 212, t 23, f. 2.

Tsuga Roezlii, Carri^re, Bev. Hort. 1870, 217, f. 40. Masters, Jour. B. Hort. Soc. xiv. 256.

Picea (Tsuga) Hookeriana, Bertrand, Ann. Sei. Nai. »6r. 6, XX. 89 (1874).

Pinufl Hookeriana, W. B. M'Nab, Proc. B. IrUh Acad. ser. 2, ii. 211, 212, fc 23, f. 1 (1876).

Hesperopeuce Pattoniana, Lemmon, Bep. California State Board Forestry, iii. 126, t 12 (Cone-Bearers of California) (1890).

Tsuga Pattoniana, var. Hookeriana, Lemmon, West- American Cone-Bearers, 54 (1895) ; BuU. Sierra Club, ii. 160 (Conifers of the Pacifte Slope). Gorman, Pitto- nia, iii. 69.

A tree, usually from seventy to one hundred but occasionally one hundred and fifty feet in height, with a slightly tapering trunk four or five feet in diameter,' or at high elevations nearly stemless, with stout wide-spreading almost prostrate branches. In youth and often on the margins of gfroves, or in other positions where it can enjoy abundant space for the free development j^ its lower limbs, it is clothed for a century or two from top to bottom with gracefully pendent slender branches, which are furnished with drooping frond-like lateral branches with erect ultimate branchlets, and form an open pyramid surmounted by the long drooping leading shoots ; or when crowded in the forest the tall trunk, naked often for two thirds of its lengfth, bears only a short narrow pyramidal crown. The bark of the trunk is from an inch to an inch and a half in thickness and deeply divided into conuected rounded ridges broken into thin closely appressed scales, and is dark cinnamon-red with

' The largest recorded measurement of this tree is of a speci- men growing ou the California Sierras near the margin of Lake Hollow, at an elevation of nine thousand two hundred and fifty

feet, which Muir found to be nineteen feet seven inches in circum- ference at four feet above the ground. (See Muir, The Mounlaint of California, 207.)

78

SILVA OF NORTH AMERICA.

CONlFEItiK.

blue nr purple shadings. The buds are acute and about an eighth of an inch in length, with light chestnut-brown sc.iles which in the outer ranks are furnished on the back with conspicuous midribs produced into slender deciduous awl-like tips. The branchlets are thin and flexible, or stout nnd rigid when the tree has grown slowly in exposed situutionH at high elevations ; for two or three years tliey are light reddish brown and covered with short pale dense pubescence which disappears aa the thin bark begins to break up into loose scales, and at the end of four or ftve years they become grayish brown and usually very scaly. The leaves, which stand out from all sides of the branches and are remote on leading shoots and crowded on the short lateral erect branchlets peculiar to this species, are rather abruptly narrowed into nearly straight or slightly twisted petioles, and are raised on persistent bases as long or rather longer than the petioles ; they are rounded and occasionally obscurely grooved, or on young plants sometimes more conspicuously grooved on the upper surface and rounded and slightly ribbed on the lower surface, entire, rather bluntly pointed at the apex, often more or less curved, stomatiferous above and below with about eight rows of stomata on each surface, light bluish green or on some individuals pale blue, from half an inch to an inch in length, about one sixteenth of an inch in width, and irregularly deciduous during their third and fourth years. The staminate flowers are about one sixth of an inch long, with violet-blue anthers furnished with very short basal projections, and are borne on slender pubescent drooping stems from one quarter to nearly one half of an inch in length from buds produced in the axils of the crowded laaves near the extremities of the short lateral branchlets. The pistillate flowers are erect, about a quarter of an inch in length, with delicate lustrous dark purple or yellow-green bracts gradually narrowed above into slender and often slightly reflexed tips. The cones, which are produced in great profusion on all the upper branches, are sessile, cyliudricol-oblong, narrowed toward the blunt apex and somewhat toward the base, erect until more than half grown, pendulous or rarely erect at maturity,' from Ave eighths of an inch to three inches in length ^ and from three quarters of an inch to an inch in diameter, with thin delicate scales which are as broad as they are long or somewhat narrower, gradually contracted from above the middle to the wedge-shaped base, rounded at the slightly thickened and more or less erose margin, striate and puberulous on the outer surface, and usually bright bluish purple or occasionally pale yellow-green in the exposed parts until the cones ripen, adjacent trees often producing exclusively cones of one and of the other color, especially those growing on the mountains of Washington and Oregon, where the form with yellow cones appears to be more abundant than in other parts of the country ; the scales are four or five times as long as their bracts, which are rounded, rather abruptly contracted at the apex into short points, wedge-shaped and thickened below, with prominent midribs, dark purple above the middle and brown below, or on the form with yellow-green cone-scales brown throughout ; at maturity the scales turn dark brown and spread nearly at right angles to the axis of the cone or become much reflexed. The seeds are light brown, one eighth of an inch long, and often marked on the surface next their scale with one or two large resin vesicles ; their wings are nearly half an inch in length, broadest above the middle, gradually narrowed below and only slightly or not at all oblique at the rounded apex. Tsuga Mcrtai»iana is usually a tree of high altitudes, growing on exposed ridges and rslopes at the upper border of the forest, where it is often completely buried in snow during many months of every year, and where its tough and flexible branches and slender leading shoots resist for centuries

' Appniuntly the erect cones are found only on trees which have grown slowly in exposed situations, and tlieir position is evidently due to the thickness of the sliort lateral branchlets on which they are terminal and whicli are sonictiuios so rigid that the weight of the cones does not maku them pendent. Trees with erect cones acem to have been Hrst noticed by Mr. M. W. Gorman, who found them, in 1895, small and stunted on slopes and I'lifTs near the snow* line at altitudes of from three thousand to three thousand Ave hun- dred feet above the sea un the mountains near Yes Bay, Alaska.

Similar trees have been seen by Mr. Gorman on the east slope of the Cascade Mountains above Lake Chelan in Washington at eleva- tions of seven tlionsand feet ; and I have seen a small tree at the sea-level near Sitka which displayed the same peculiarity.

'* The cones of Tnugn Afertenniaua are usually from two to two and a half inches in length. The smallest 1 have seen were gathered in August, ISOo, by Professor S. V. Piper on dry ridges of Mt. Itainier in Washington at an elevation of seven thousand feet above the

CONIPEItVK.

th, with light

icuous midribs

tout niid rigid

ree years they

'8 as tiie thin

)ecome grayish

nches and are

lis sp(>cies, are

on persiHtent

fly grooved, or

ed and slightly

ar less curved,

luish green or

enth of an inch

late flowers are

isal projections,

of an inch in

he short lateral

ielicate lustrous

ilightly reflexed

les, are sessile,

irect until more

three inches in

scales which are

e middle to the

pn, striate and

I yellow-green in

I of one and of

where the form

e scales are four

t the apex into

ibove the middle

at maturity the

or become much

the surface next

length, broadest

le rounded iipex.

;es and nlopes at

nany months of

list for centuries

ti on tbo cast slope of Wasliingtoii nt clevn- n a siuall tree at the ! peculiarity. y from two to two and seen were gathered in ' ridges of Mt. liainier usaud feet above the

COmtKUM.

8ILVA OF NORTH AMERICA.

79

the fiercest mountain gales. In such exposed positions it forms low dense thickets, with wide-spreading linibs clinging close to tlio ground, but on more sheltered slopes at lower altitudes it sends up tall and stately stems and sometimes forms nearly pure forests of considerable extent. In southeastern Alaska, where it finds its most northerly home,' the Mountiin Hemlock grows on the coast mountains up to elevations of nearly two thousand feet, and occasionally descends to the level of the sua ; * southward it ranges along the coast mountains of British Columbia 'to the Olympic Mountains of Washington, usually growing only at elevations of more than two thousand five hundred feet above tlio sea. It is abundant on the w-jstRrn slopes of the Selkirk Mountains in the interior of southern liritish Columbia, wh<>ro it is a conspicuous feature in the forests of Tsiuja helerophyWx, Abies liiHiiiv.drpa, I'inus alhicaulis, and Picea Eiujdmanni ; from the Selkirk Mountains it ranges to northern Montana* and to the Ca-ur d'Alcrd and Bitter Root Mountains of northern Idaho;' southward it extends to the Powder River Mountains, and along the Cascade Mountains of Washington and Oregon, growing with Abies luaiocarpa usually between five and seven thousand feet above the sea on ridges and along the margins of alpine meadows in groves of exquisite beauty," and pushing the advance guard of the forest to the edge of living glaciers, while at lower altitudes it attains a large size and mingles with Abies amabilis and occasionally with hardy stragglers from the forest of Abies nobilis, which clothes the lower slopes of these mount lins.' On the southern part of the Cascade Range it rctii '.."H an altitude of eight thousand feet abo' e the sea, and a thousand feet lower and below Crater Lake, in latitude 42° 55', it forms the noblest forest of this Hemlock which has yet been seen, with trees often one hundred and fifty feet in heig'it and from three to five feet in trunk diameter. It is common on Mt. Shasta, in northern Californii), where it forms extensive groves near the timber-line at eight thousand feet above the sea, and occu>'s near the high summits of the Siskiyou Mountains, and at an elevation of eight thousand feet o.i the mountains in the rear of Crescent City ; * on the Sierra Nevada it forms groves, usually on northern slopes and between elevations of from nine thousand to ten thousand feet above the sea, near the timber-line of all the high peaks, probably finding its most Houtiicrly home in the canon of the south fork of King's River."

The wood of Tsuga Merte.nsiana is light, soft, not strong, close-grained, and susceptible of receiving a good polish ; it is pale brown or red, with thin nearly white sapwood, and contains thin inconspicuous bands of small summer cells and numerous obscure medullary rays. The specific gravity of the absolutely dry wood is 0.4454, a cubic foot weighing 27.76 pounds. It is occasionally manufactured into lumber.'"

' See P. Kurtz, Hot. Jahrh. lix. 426 (Fl. Chilcatgebiele$).

The nioHt western point on the Alaska const where Tsuga Mer- leniiana has been seen is BiiratiolT Island, where it was first dis- covered and where it grows with 'J'tuga hetcrophylla and Picea SttrhtntHtg. It probably extends, however, to the neighboring Chi- chiigof Island and possibly to the westward of Cross Sound. It is conmioii up to the snow-liiie on the mountains at the head of the Kynn Cuiuil one hundred miles north of Sitka in latitude 60° north, thn most northerly station from which this tree has been reported (G. M. Dawson, Garden and Forest, i. 59; Rep. Geolog. Sure. Can, n. ser. iii. pt. i. Appx. i. 18U U. Maooun, Jiep. Geolog. Suru, Can. D, ser, iii, pt. i. Appx. iii. 2'M U).

" The only stations at the sea-level for this tree which arc known to mo are HumnofT Island and the shores of Yes Bay in latitude tHy lA' north, where it was first collected by Mr. M. W. Gorman.

' Maeouu, Garden and Foreil, ii. 5'J5 j Cat. Can. PI. pt. iv. .162.

* Tnuga Mertenniana was found in northern Montana by Mr. n. U. Ayres in Septcml)er, 1893, on the divide between Thompson and Little Hitter Koot Creeks, at an elevation of between six and Mven thousand feet above the sea-level.

* Tiuga Merteimana appears tu have been first noticed in Idaho

by Mr. Sereno Watson, who fonnd it in 1880 on the Lolo Trail toward the northern extremity of the Bitter Root Range. In Idaho it is confined to the high divides of the Bitter Root and CoDur d' Alene Mountains from that of the Clearwater River on the south, where it is said to form more than seventy-five per cent, of the forest growth, northward to the upper St. Joseph and to the divide between the St. Joseph and Cceur d'AIene Rivers, being more abun- dant on the Clearwater and the St. Joseph than farther north. (See Leiberg, Contrih. U. S. Nat. He.b. v. 53.)

' In August, 1896, I found Tsuga Merlen.^iana growing with Tsuga helerophglla on the east slope of the Cascade Mountains of Wasliington, near the mouth of the Cascade tunnel on the Hue of the Great Northern Railroad, at the remarkably low elevation of two thousand two hundred feet.

' See Fiper, Garden and Forest, iv. 382, f. 63 ; also Garden and Forest, x. 1, f. 1, 2.

' Teste A. J. Johnson,

Teste John Muir.

^^ The inaccessibility of the alpine slopes which are the usual home of this tree has protected it from the lumberman, although the wood has considerable value for purposes of construction. On

80

SILVA OF NORTH AMERICA.

CONIFEIUC.

The bark contains enough tannic acid to make it commercially valuable as a tunning material.

Tsuga Mvrtensiana was discovered on Baranoff Island in the neighborhood of the town of Sitka in 1827 by K. H. Mertens.' It wuh next found on the mountains south of the Eraser River ' in 1851 by John Jeffrey,' by whom it was introduced into European gardens, where, as well as in those of the eastern United States, it has proved hardy. In cultivation, however, Tnuga Mertenmana grows very slowly,* and, altliough it has already produced its cones in England," gives little promise of ever assuming the airy grace of habit which makes it the loveliest cone-bearing tree of the American forest.

^

Kuiu laluid, AInaka, small quantities of lumber known as red spruce have been matlo from it. (S«o (iornian, PxUimiat iii- OH.)

> Karl lleinrioh Mertens (May 17, 17U0-September 17, 1830) was the son of Ur. Franz Karl Mertens, who wan the bead of an institution of learning in Urcnien and the author of botanical papers, and who is commemorated in the genus Mnteiutia. He was born in llremen, where he received bis earlj education, and ac- quired a fondness for natural history, especially botany, which he studied later in Paris with Jussieu, Uesfuntaincs, Lanuirck, and Mirbcl, and where he made the acquaintance of Dawson Turner, by whom ho was invited to London and introduced to Hubert Brown, Sir Joseph Hanks, aiul the elder Hooker. Returning to Germany in 1H17, he commcncpd the study of medicine in Gottin- gen and then in Halle, where he took his doctor's degree in IS'JO, and began to practice his profession in Berlin, which, however, he soon left to make his home in his native city. An intense love of natural history and a desire for travel made the prospect of a quiet professional life in Bremen unbearable, and Mertens went to St. Petersburg in the hope of being appointed naturalist to the eiplor- ing expedition which was flttcd out there under command of Kotze- bue. Failing to obtain this position, ho remained for two years in Russia praoticing his profession, and fiimlly in the spring of 182G was made naturalist and physician to the expedition which sailed that year under Captain Lutki on the S<imiavino to make a scientific journey of exploration around the world. During the next four years Mertens visited P^ngland, Teneriife, Rio de .laneiro. Cape Horn, Valparaiso, the coast of Alaska, Kamtschatka, the Caroline Islands, Manila, the Cape of Gowl Hope, and St. Helena. Returning to St. Petersburg, he presented to the Academy of Sci- ences of that city a number of papers chieHy devoted to the inver- tebrates collected during his journey. Ho was still engaged in studying bis collections when he joined, in 1830, his old commander Lutkf on a cruise along the coast of France and Ireland, during which he contracted a nervous fever, from which be died shortly after his return to Russia.

On Karanotf Island Mertens discovered, in addition to the Hem- lock-tree which bears his name, a number of other interesting plants which were described by Bonganl in bis paper on La Vrgita- tion de Vile de SiUca, based on Mertens's collection on that island and published in the second volume of the Mhnoirea de VAcadi' mie des Sciences de St, Ptterthowg. A communication from Mer-

tens on the llora of Karagin Island oil the coast of Kamtschatka and the shores of Bi^hring Strait, published in the thinl volume of Linniea, appears to have been bis only botanical paper. (For a sketch of Merten*a career see Voyage autottr du Monde execute par ordre de »a Majesle t'Empereur NichoUu I. aur la Corvette Le Semi- avine dana lea Anniea 1820, 1827, 1828 et 1820, /lar Frederic Lutkt, iii. 337.)

' " Abiea aj). No. 430. Found on the Mt. Baker range of moun- tains. This species makes its appearance at the point where A. Canndetuia disappears, that is at an elevation of about five thousand feet above the sea ; from that point to the margin of perpetual snow it is found. Along the lower part of its range it is n noble looking tree, rising to the height of one hundred and fifty feet, and thirteen and one half feet in diameter. As it ascends the moun- tains it gets gradually smaller, until at last it dwindles into a shrub of not more than four feet high. I..eaves solitary, dark green above, silvery beneath, flat and rounded at their (wints, thickly phwed round the branches. Cones about an inch long, produced at the points of the branches. Brnnchos pendulous. Bark rough, of a grayish color. Timber hard and very flue in the grain, of a red- dish color. Soil on which this tree was growing most luxuriantly was red loam, very stony and moist. If this tree proves undo- scribed, 1 hope it will be known under the name of Abiea Pattonii" (From Report of John Jeffrey read at a meeting of the Oregon Committee, August 24, 1852, and printed in September following in a circular to its subscribers.)

See xi. 41.

* Like other alpine trees, Tauga Merteruiana grows slowly. The log in the Jesnp Collection of North American Woods in the American Museum of Natural History, New York, from the Cas- cade Mountains of Oregon, is eighteen inches in diameter inside the bark and one hundred and eigbty-flve years old, the sapwood being three inches and three quarters in thickness, with ninety-one layers of annual growth. I.«iberg found that the trunk of a tree six inches in diameter, which had grown in Idaho in a very exposed position, was seventy-five years old, and trees in the same region which had grown under the most favorable cor'litions as to soil and situation were nineteen inches in diameter, and from two hun- dred to two hundred and fifty years old. (See Contrib. U. S, Nat. Herb. v. 53.)

> Masters, Oard. Chron. ser. 3, xii. 10, f. 1 ; xiii. 669, f. 06.

CONIFERX.

material, town of Sitka liver' in 1851 1 those of the rt grows very iniise of ever irican forest.

t of Kamtsobatk* the thinl volume al pnpor. (For a Monde execute par Corvette Le Semi- ar Frederic Lutht,

ir range of moiin- le point where A. ibout Hve thousand irgin of perpetual ango it n noble and flf ty feet, and nscenda the moun- indles into a ahrub iitary, dark green eir |ioints, thickly I long, produced at B. Uark rough, of lie grain, of a red- ; most luxuriantly tree proves uude- ot Abiet Patlonii." ing of the Oregon ptember following

[TOWS slowly. The ;an Woods in the ork, from the Cas- in diameter inside rs old, the sapwood IBS, with ninety-one he trunk of a tree o in a very exposed in the same region )rflitions as to soil and from two hun- See Conlrib. V. S.

uii. 659, f . 06.

5 i

!

It 1,1

V.

m

SLS

.•\

KXl'LANATION OK THK I'LATK.

I'l.ATR DCVI. Tmi'<ia Mkktknhiana.

I. A lintni'li with nUkiiiiniiti' IIowitk, nuturiil situ. 'i, A iilllililiiiil« lliiwcr, i'iilnrKe<l.

II, All millior, friiiil vixw, i'nlikr);i>il. 4. All Miillii'r, kiiIk vIiiw, I'liliirKcil.

A. A liritiii'li with |iliitilliitu llowBr*, natural «ize.

(I, A |il>llllitli> lliiwtir, viilitr^'i'il.

7. A w'lihi of n iiinlillHtn llower, upper aide, with it* bract and uvulea, enlarged.

N. A (riiiliiiK lirnni'h, nntiiral Hi/.u.

I). I'lirlliin iif It (dp <if It tree from liuranutT lidand with erect oodm, natural lizo. 10. A riiiiii fiiitii the (<'iiMir d'Alonu Mountaiim, Idaho. tl- A I'oiiiuiiutle, upper Hide, with ita iipedB, natural size. Vi, A eiinn-M'ale, limnr •ide, with its bract, natural iiize.

1!1. A »i'iilt> of n Kiiinll CiiMir d'Aleim cone, upper Hide, with it« seeda, natural »iie. U. A aeaJK of a uninll ('luur d'Alenu cone, lower Hide, with its bract, natural itize. in, A Deed, etilitrKed. Ill, Vi'rtlenl neetioii of n need, enlarged. 17, An iimliryu, cnlarKed. IH, (!ruiia Keetlon of n leaf, inagniile<l fifteen dianieten.

\W-

3L;GA MfclRTENSlAN'A

■i I

KXf'J.ANATION OF ! (JK Pi^TE.

8, «.

10.

11.

VJ.

1.1.

14.

ir>.

16. 17, 18

A •iuniruu' ttuWKi' rnUu-fnl.

An «iilh«r. fruBl Tfnw, «alargf,t

A.a mtllifT, aiilft virw, eiiiai^^r*

A bi»H'l) with pimillatr fi.iv oin, ii*tiir»l Hi«<.

A |nHl,ilLiU' Howor. piili4r^Kt.

A hcaU'- of A jiinillfttii li'owpr, ufip«r iiiilii, wilJi iiic brarl atul «vv!« .tnUiijcil.

A (ruiling tmincli. iiatiiral iv.:j.

Portion uf a top of h trf« from Bikranoff Ulai.il with erwt «.De«, oxlaisl iif».

A cone from (li. CoMir iI'AIoih! Mouniaiiin, l.luho.

A foiie-soale, upper siilc. w:th its seeils, natural «i?i).

A iMiiif-scale, lower side, wii^h it« biv.Pt, naluriil »i/.«.

A scale, of a Kmall Co.'up d'Aleiit -onn, ippi-r aide, with itji seeds, iiatiiral «iM.

A .i«»le of a ainall Cn^ur d'A' ne nine. l..i»er ni<li\ with ita Iract, natural aiio.

A wwl, enlari^i.

Vcrt'-nl apction of a sectl, finliri;»-<!

An eiplffyti. «^idarpe<l.

CroM Hectiod of a leaf, niagoii..~i .i.j.-.i. ii,.iu«i<-,».

Silva of Nonh America.

Tab. DCVI,

C £'./'(Ai4}': <if^.

^ffjff^p/if Jti.

i'l

i I

I

TSUGA MERTENSIANA.Sare

/I Hi,:.

r^'lM tit/ ,M

Imp. y. TUftiittf J**Hh>

L

CONIFEI

F

anthe: bracts matui

Pseudo

Bent

Soc.

Abies (

PinuB I

part]

P

spirallj

the wi(

with si

foliage

ovate, I

the tei

Tounde

of the

wither

markii

the bu

of the

incurv

with a

side o:

side, a

and in

of th(

at the

white,

short,

openii

withd

comp(

two-l(

tips;

acute

lineal

cone,

the

CONIFEIUE.

8ILVA OF NORTH AMERICA.

83

PSEUDOTSUGA.

Flowers solitary, naked, monoecious ; the staminate axillary, stamens indefinite, anther-cells 2, surmounted by a short spur ; the pistillate terminal or axillary, their bracts elongated, 2-lobed, aristate, ovules 2 under each scale. Fruit a woody strobile maturing in one season. Leaves flat, petiolate, persistent.

PseudotBUKa, Cairike, Traiti Conif. ed. 2, 256 (1867). Bentliam & Hooker, Oen. iii. 441. Masters, Jour. Linn. Soc. XIX. 35.

Abiea (sect Pencoides), Spach, Hint. VSi/. xi. 423 (1842).

Pinua (sect Tsuga), Endlioher, Oen. Suppl. iv. pt iL 6 (in part) (1847).

Tsuga (sect. Peucoides), Engelmann, Trans. St. Louis Acad.

ii. 211 (1863). Eichler, Engler & Prantl Pflanzenfam,

ii. pt i. 80 (in part). Pinus, Baillon, Hist. PI. ziL 44 (in part) (1892).

Pyramidal trees, with thick deeply furrowed scaly bark, hard strong yellow or red wood with spirally marked wood cells and broad dark resinous bands of small summer cells often occupying half the width of the layers of annual growth, slender usually horizontal irregularly whorled branches clothed with slender spreading pendent or rarely erect lateral branchlets forming broad flat-topped masses of foliage, stout wide-spreading roots, and thin tough rootlets. Branch-buds formed in early summer, ovate, acute, from three to five n number, the lateral in the axils of upper leaves and much smaller than the terminal bud, covered with numerous clos; Iv imbricated dark chestnut-brown spirally disposed scales rounded, entire, or somewhat erose on the thin often scarious margins, increasing in size from the bottom of the bud upward, the two outer minute, lateral, and opposite, the inner thin, accrescent, silvery white, withering and sometimes persistent on the base of the branch for three or four years and in falling marking it with ring-like scars. Leaves densely crowded in short clusters when they first emerge from the bud, spirally disposed but often appearing two-ranked on vigorous sterile branches by the twisting of their slender petioles, spreading nearly at right angles with the branch, straight or more or less incurved, flat, rounded and obtuse or acuminate at the callous apex, marked on the upper surface with a conspicuous groove and on the lower surface with a band of numerous rows of stomata on each side of the prominent midrib, containing two lateral resin ducts close to the epidermis on the lower side, articulate on low transversely oval concave ultimately woody pulvini, persistent for many years and in drying. Flowers appearing in early spring from buds formed the previous summer on branches of the year, erect, surrounded by conspicuous involucres of the lustrous oblong bud-scales rounded at the apex, increasing in size from below upward, the inner becoming much enlarged and silvery white. Staminate flowers axillary and scattered along the branchlets, oblong-cylindrical, raised on short, ultimately elongated stalks, composed of numerous spirally arranged short-stalked globose anthers opening obliquely, their connectives terminating in short spurs; pollen-grains ovoid, subglobose, witliout aii^sacs.' Pistillate flowers terminal or in the axils of upper leaves, short-stalked, oblong, composed of numerous ovate rounded spirally imbricated scales much shorter than their narrow acutoly two-lobed bracts variously laciniately cut on the margins, with midribs produced into elongated slender tips ; ovules two under each scale, inverted, collateral. Cones maturing in one season, ovate-oblong, acute at the apex, rounded at the slightly narrowed base, pendulous on stout peduncles clothed with linear-acute bracts, their scales rounded, concave, rigid, decreasing in size and sterile at both ends of the cone, spreading at maturity almost at right angles with its axis, persistent ; bracts exserted, two-lobed, the lobes spreading, acuminate, their prominent midribs produced into long stifE linear lanceolate

1 Eugelmann, Bremer ^ Wauon Bot. Cal. ii. 119,

j ;

I;

. hi'

■';t

81

8ILVA OF NORTH AMERICA.

CONIFERA.

flattened awns, rigid and woody at maturity, those at the base of the cone destitute of scales, becoming linear-lanceoLite by the gradual suppression of their lobes.' Seeds geminate, reversed, attached at the base in shallow depressions on the inner face of the cone-scales, nearly triangular, rather longer than broad, fuU, rounded, and dark-colored on the upper face, more or less flattened and pale on the lower face, destitute of resin vesicles, in falling bearing away portions of the membranaceous lining the scale forming oblong wbg-like ultimately deciduous attachments, and enveloping the upper side of the seeds in a dark covering adnate to the testa ; testa of two coats, the outer thick and crustaceous, the inner thin and membranaceous. Embryo axile in conspicuous fleshy albumen ; cotyledons from six to twelve, usually seven or eight, stomatiferous on the upper surface.

Pseudotsuga is intermediate in character between Tsuga and Abies, resembling the former in ts petioled leaves but differing from it in the exserted bracts of the cone-scales and in the absence of ie^ n vesicles on the seeds, and from the latter in the spurred connectives of the anthers, and in the pendulous cones with persistent cone-scales. The genus is represented by three species ; one is widely distributed over western North America from about latitude 53° north in British Columbia to northern Mexico ; the second is confined to the dry sides of canons on the mountains of southwestern California, and the third, which is still little known, grows in Japan.'

Psendotsuga produces hard durable valuable wood which is distinguished from that of other coniferous trees by its numerous spirally marked wood cells, and one of its species is one of the largest and most important timber-trees of the world.

V'seuiLiisuga lA not kn<)wn to be t>eriuiuly injured by insects^ or fungal diseases.*

Like the other Abietinete, trees of this genus can easily be raised from seeds, and Pseudotsuga mucronata, the type of the genus, is one of the most splendid ornaments of the parks of temperate countries.

The generic name, a barbarous combination of a Qreek with a Japanese word, signifies the relationship of these trees with the true Hemlocks.

iiy

W

> See Lloyd, Bull. Tvrrey Bot. Club, m. 90, t. 327 (On an Ab- iionual Cone in the Douglas Spruce).

^ Pseudotsuga Japonica. Tsuga (Pseudotsuga) Japonica, Sbirasawa, Tokyo Bot. Mag. a.

86, t. 3 (1895).

The Japanese ]*scudot8nga, vhich waa discovered only a few years ago by Mr. Iloini Sbirasawa near Yoshino, in the province of Kii, at an elevation of about two thousand feet above the sea, is distinguished by shorter and broader leaves and smaller cones than those of the American species, while the bracts of the cone-scales appear strongly relleied in Mr. Shirasawa's plate. It is described ris a tree from forty-five to sixty feet in height, with an erect straight trunk, horizantally spreading branches, and spire-like top, growing in forests of Birches, Hemlocks, Oaks, Magnolias, and Acanthopanax. (See Garden and Forest, viii. 129. Gard. Chrort. ser. 3, xvii. 462.)

" Very little is yet known of the insects which attack Pseudo- tsuga in its na*<ve forests, and there is no record of their mate- rially injuring cultivated trees. The species of Sco'.ytitaz, among them being Scotytua unispinosus, Lo Conte, are known to burrow under the bark of Pseudotsuga mucronata in California, and it is probable that several of the insects which obtain their food from different species nf Picea and Abies will be found to live also on

Pseudotsuga. The larva of the imall moth Orcpholiiha bradea- tana, Femald, has been reported as injurious to its cones in Oregon, nearly half the cop of the seeds of 1807 having been destroyed in one locality by this insect, and by the larve of a cecidomyiid 6y which accompanies it. (See BuU. No. 10, n. ser. i>ii>. Entomolog. U. S. Ihpl. Agric. 1898, 98.)

* Pseudotsuga appears to suffer little in the United States from the attacks of fungi, where hardly a dozen species have been noted on it, and none of these are known to cause any serious disease or to be confined especially to this host. Possibly a species of Perider- njium which occurs on i'seudotsuga mucronata in Colorado may prove injurious to this tree, but its fungal characters are not yet well understood. Two species of fungi, however, are said to do considerable damage to Pseudotsuga mucronata when cultivated in Europe. In l''S8 Von Tubeuf described a Bolrytis Douglasii which appeared in Germany in widely separated localities, and caused the young leaves to wither and shrivel up. This disease has been occa- sionally noticed since, although mycologists are inclined to doubt whether Bolrytis Douglasii is really distinguished from Botrylis cine- rea, Peraoon. Oudemans has recently described a mould, Oospora Abietum, which in Holhind injures the leaves of Pseudotsuga mucro- nata and of different species of Picea.

CONIFERS.

es, becoming , attached at ■ather longer pale on the )us lining le uppei side I crustaceouB, yledons from

former in ts Bence of !■«' .i , and in the one is widely ia to northern irn California,

that of other )f the largest

Pseudotauga I of temperate

, signifies the

hvpholiiha hractea- ts cones io Oregon, ; been destroyed in ' a cecidomyiid fly cr. Div. Enlomohg.

United States from [es have been noted y serious disease or k species of Perider- in Colorado may rasters are not yet ver, are said to do when cultivated in •ytis Douglasii which ities, and. caused the sease has been occa- e inclined to doubt i from Bolrylis eine- ed a mould, Oo$}iora Pteudolmga mucro-

C0NI7BIUB.

SILVA OF NORTH AMERICA.

85

CONSPECTUS OF THE NORTH AMERICAN SPECIES.

Leaves usually rounded and obtuse at the apex, dark yeUow-green or rarely blu(>green; cones small,

1. P. MTTCBONtTA.

Leaves acuminate at the apex, bluish gray s cones large, their bracts sUghtly exserted 2. P. macbocabpa.

their bracts much exserted

i I

i

i

^ -:

i

t

i

i

i

i- r

m

\\¥

i

,i

CONIFE

.

L

green

Pseudo

11

Heri PinuB

bury

;

i*Z..

tero,

Abies

taxi)

293.

1

cific

li

Abies I

1832

Carr

Abies I

120

Com

Abies

Law

,

iv. 2

45.-

xi.4

Coni

V. 2(

Mei

berr

Gor

pti

330,

Her

Sen

Wh

Lai

Wa

Ko(

458

Afii

36.

bel

Pinus

Ho

84,

39'

Nc

Bi|

gri

toi

CONU'E&S.

SILVA OF NORTH AMERICA.

87

FSEUDOTSnaA MUOBONATA. Douglas Spruce. Red Fir.

Leaves usually rounded and obtuse at the apex, dork yellow-green or rarely blue- green. Cones small, their bracts much exserted.

Pseudotsuga muoronata, Sudworth, Cottlrib. V. 8. Nat. Herb. iiL 266 (1895).

Pinus taxifoUa, Lambert, Pinui, i. 61, t. 33 (not Salis- bury) (1803). WiUdenow, Speo. iv. pt i. 605. Pursh, Ft. Am. Sept. ii. 640. Sprengel, Syit. iii. 885. Bro- tero, HUt. Nat. Pinheiros, Larieea e A betas, 31.

Abiea taxifoUo, Poiret, Lamarck Diet. vi. 623 (not Pinus taxifolia, Salisbury) (1804). Nauveau Duhamel, v. 293. Pre.l, Epimel. Bot. 231 . —Tomy & Gray, Pa- eiflo R. R. Rep. ii. 130.

Abies muoronata, Rafinesque, Atlant. Jour. 120 (Autumn, 1832); New Fl. i. 38. Endlicher, Syn. Conif. 126.— CarriJire, Traiti Conif. 267.

Abies muoronata, var. palustris, Rafinesque, Atlant. Jour. 120 (Autumn, 1832) ; New Fl. i. 38. Endlicher, Syn. Conif. 126. Carri^re, Traiti Conif. 268.

Abiea Douglaaii, Lindley, Penny Cycl. i. 32 (1833). Lawson & Son, Agric. Man. 375. Loudon, Arb. Brit. iv. 2319, f. 2230. Forbes, Pinetum Wobum. 127, t. 45. Bentham, PI. HaHweg. 57. Spach, Hist. Vig. xi. 423. NuttaU, Syloa, iii. 129, t. 115. Knight, Syn. Conif. 37. Lindley & Gordon, Jour. Hort. Soe. Lond. V. 209. Torrey, Pacific R. R. Rep. iv. pt v. 141 ; Bot. Mex. Bound. Surv. 210 ; Ives' Rep. pt. iv. 28. New- berry, Paeific R. R. Rep. vi. pt iii. 54, 90, t 8, f. 20. Gordon, Pinetum, 15 Cooper, Pacific R. R. Hep. xii. pt ii. 24, 69. Engelmann, Am. Jour. Sci. ser. 2, zxziv. 330. Lyall, Jour. Linn. Soe. vii. 131, 133, 143. Henkel & Hochstetter, Syn. Nadelh. 155. (Nekon) Senilis, Pinucea:, 32. Rothrock, PI. Wheeler, 28, 50 j Wheeler's Rep. vi. 9. Hoopes, Evergreens, 189. Lawson, Pinetum Brit. ii. 115, t 17, 1«, f. 1-23.

WaUon, King's Rep. v. 334 ; PI. Wheeler, 17 &.

Konh, Dendr. ii. pt ii. 265. Nordlinger, Forstbot. 468. Porter & Coulter, Fl. Colorado ; Hayden's Surv.

Misc. Pub. No. 4, 131 Veitch, Man. Conif. 119, f.

36. Lauche, Deutsche Dendr. ed. 2, 95, f. 19. Schu- beler, Virid. Norveg. i. 429, i. 81. Pinus Douglaaii, D. Don, Lambert Pinus, iii. t (1837). Hooier, Fl. Bor.-Am. ii. 162, t 183. Antoine, Conif. 84, t 03, (. 3. Hooker & Arnott, Bot. Voy. Beeehey, 394. Endlicher, Syn. Conif. 87. Lawson & Sou, List No. 10, Abietinece, 9. Dietrich, Syn. v. 393. J. M. Bigelow, Pucifie R. R. Rep. iv. pt v. 17. Torrey, Sit- greaves' Rep. 173. Courtin, Fam. Conif. 55. Pnrla- tore, De CandoUe Prodr. xvi. pt ii. 430. W. R. M'Nab,

Proe. R. Irish Acad. ser. 2, ii. 703, t. 49, (. 32, 32 a,

32 b. Abiea Douglaaii, var. taxifolia, London, Arb. Brit. iv.

2319, {. 2231 (not Abies taxifolia, Rafinesque) (1838).

Gordon, Pinetum, 16. Henkel & Hochstetter, Syn.

Nadelh. 156. Finua Canadenais /37 Hooker, Fl. Bor.-Am. ii. 164

(1839). Pinua Douglaaii, var. taxifolia, Antoine, Contf. 86 (1840-

47). Courtin, Fam. Conif. 55 (1858). Finua Douglaaii, var. brevibraoteata, Antoine, Conif.

84, t. 33, f. 4 (1840-1847). Pioea Douglaaii, Link, Linncea, xv. 624 (1841). Tauga Douglaaii, Carri^re, Traiti Conif. 192 (1856).—

S^n^lauze, Con\f. 20. Rejel, Rusa. Dendr. ed. 2, pt. i.

40. Tauga Douglaaii, var. taxifolia, Carri^re, Traiti Conif.

192 (1855).

Tauga Douglaaii brevibraoteata, Carri^re, Traiti Con\f.

193 (1855).

Tauga Douglaaii faatigiata, Carri^re, Traiti Conif. 193

(1855). Tsuga Lindleyana, Roezl, Cat. Conif. Mex. 8 (1867).—

Carri^re, Traiti Conif. ed. 2, 264. Paeudotaugs Douglaaii, Carri^re, Traiti Conif. ed. 2,

266 (1867). Engelmann, Rothrock Wheeler's Rep. vi.

267 ; Brewer & Watson Bot. Cat. ii. 120 (excl. var. macro- carpa). Kellogg, Trees of California, 38. Hemsley, Bot. Biol. Am. Cent. iii. 190; iv. 89. Sargent, Forest Trees N. Am. 10th Census U. S. ix. 209 (excl. var. macro- carpa). Coulter, Man. Rocky Mt. Bot. 431. Beissner, Handb. Nadelh. 411, f. 114, 115 (excl. var. niacrocarpa). Masters, Jour. R. Hort. Soc. xiv. 245 (excl. var. macro- carpa). Hansen, Jour. R. Hort. Soc. xiv. 449. Koehne, Deutsche Dendr. 11 (excl. var. macrocarpa), i. 6. Hem- pol & Wilhelm, Baume und StrUucher, i. 105, f. 51.

Pseudotsuga Douglaaii taxifoUa, Carri^re, Traiti Con\^ ed. 2, 258 (1867).

Abies muoronata, Carri^re, Traiti Conif. ed. 2, 312 (1867).

Pseudotsuga Douglaaii denudata, Carrikre, Traiti Co- nif ed. 2, 792 (l'J67).

Pinus Douglasii, p pendula, Parlatore, De CandoUe Prodr. xvi. pt. ii. 430 (1868).

Pseudotsuga Lindleyana, Carri^re. Reo. Hort. 1868, 152, t

Ii 'Ui

'Ii

1

'

i

r

SILVA OF NORTH AMERICA

CONIFERA.

\.

mm

I; J

1

V !f

1

■I ..

i- it

Pioea (Paeudotsuga) DouglaoU, Bflrtrand.ilnn. Sci. Nat. tir. 5, XX. 87 (1874).

Paeudotsuga tazifoUa, Britton, Tran*. JV. T. Aead. Sei. viii. 74 (1889). Lemmon, Rep. California State Board Forestry, iii. 130, t. 10, 11 (Cone-Beareri of California) ; Wett American Cone-Beareri, 66, t. 9; Bull. Sierra Club, ii. 161 (Conifert of the Paeific Slope). Leiberg, Contrib. V. S. Nat. Herb. v. 60.

Paeudotsuga DouglasU, var. glauoa, Hijrr, Wold. Nord-

am. 307, t. 6, {. (1890). Tsuga taxifoUa, Olto Kuntze, Km. Oen. PI. ii. 802 (1891). Paeudotsuga taxifolic . var. suberoaa, Lemmon, Erythea,

i. 48 (1893) i Wett^Amtriean Cone-Bearert, 67 i Bull.

Sierra Club, ii. 161 (Con^feri of the Pacific Slope). Paeudotsuga taxifoUa, var. elongata, Lemmon, Erythea,

i. 49 (1893).

A tree, when grown under favorable conditions often two hundred feet in height, with a trunk three or four feet in diameter, and frequently much taller,' with a trunk ten or twelve feet in diameter; or in the dry interior of the continent rarely more than eighty or one hundred feet high, with a trunk two or three feet thick, and at high elevations occasionally reduced to a low shrub.' The slender crowded limbs, which are densely clothed with long pendulous lateral branches, are horizontal or more or less pendulous below, and erect above ; when the tree is young and has grown in an open situation they form a narrow open handsome pyramid with its base resting on the ground, but when the Douglas Spruce is crowded in the forest its trunk, decreasing but slightly in diameter often for a hundred feet above the ground, is generally deprived of its branches for two thirds of its length and is surmounted by a comparatively small narrow Iiead which on very old trees sometimes becomes flat-topped by the lengthening of the upper branches. On young trees the bark is smooth, thin, rather lustrous, and dark gray-brown ; beginning to thicken early near the ground and to divide into oblong plates, it ultimately separates into great broad rounded and irregularly connected ridges which are broken on the surface into small thick closely appressed dark red-brown scales, and, usually from ten to twelve inches in thickness on old trees, it is occasionally two feet thick near their base;^ or sometimes in arid regions the bark is paler colored and soft and spongy.* The winter-buds are ovate and acute, with thin scales rounded, entire, or occasionally slightly erosc or denticulate on the margins, the terminal bud being often a quarter of an inch in length and nearly twice as large as the lateral buds. The branchlets are covered for three or four years with fine pubescence, and during their first season are pale orange- color and lustrous; turning rather bright reddish brown in the autumn, they gradually grow dark gray-brown after their second summer. The leaves are straight or rarely slightly incurved, rounded and obtuse at the apex, or on leading shoots and rarely on lower sterile branches acute, with short slender callous tips, from three quarters of an inch to an inch and a quarter long, from one sixteenth to one twelfth of an inch wide, light yellow when they first emerge from the bud, and dark yellow-green or

' I have not been able to obtain any reliable information con- cerning the maximum height of the Douglas Spruce. Lum^iermen on Pugct Sound lukbitually speak of trees from three hundred to three hundred and fifty feet tall, but their statements, unsupported by actual measurements, must be accepted cautiously. It is not impossible, however, that this tree may grow to even a greater height than three hundred and fifty feet, as largo specimens in some nf the sheltered valleys at the base of the Olympic Moun- tains of northwestern Washington tower far alwve the surrounding forest, which undoubtedly has an average height of nearly three hundred feet.

In this region and on the western slopes of Mt. Rainier in Wash- ington, trunks from ten to eleven feet in diameter five feet above the Nurface of the ground and free of branches for two hundred or two hundred and fifty feet are not rare, two or three such trt>es sometimes standing on an acre of ground. Individuals twelve feet in diameter may occasionally be seen, although they are very rare, and lumbermen and prospectors tell of trees with trunks sixteen feet in diameter. The trunks of Pirea Sitchemis, Thuya pUcala, and of Tajodium mttrronatum of Mexico are larger at the ground than

those of Paewlotguga muiroiiata, but they taper rapidly and soon lose their great girth, while the trunk of the Douglas Spruce car- ries its size to an immense height with a hardly perceptible reduetion of diameter, and no other tree of the continent, excepting the two Sequoias, equals it in niussiveness of trunk or in productiveness of timber. (.See Garitrn and Firat, x. 202, f. 38.)

'' In 1883 I found at an elevation of six thousand feet above the level of the sea, at the head of the Cutbbnk River, on the eastern side of one of the northern passes over the continental divide in Montana, a Douglas Spruce only eighteen inches in height but covered with cones of full average size.

' The thickest specimen of the bark of Pitewiotmga mucronata which I have seen was in Seattle, Washington, and was twenty- six inches in thickness.

* Upon the soft spongy character of the bark of the Douglas Spruce on the San Francisco I'eaks in northern Arizona and un some of the mountain ranges of northern New Mexico, I..emmou baaed his variety suherosa {Krythea, i. 48). On the San Knmcisco Peaks Abie$ conctAor and Ahiea lasiocarpa have also soft spongy bark, which is probably the result of peculiar climatic conditions.

CONIFERVE. , Wold. Nord-

ii. 802 (1891). imon, Erythta, art, 57; Bull. U Slope). inion, Erythm,

with a tniuk

in diameter;

with a trunk

The slender

ntal or more

ipen situation

the Douglas

bundred feet

s surmounted

opped by the

lustrous, and

Dng plates, it

re broken on

ten to twelve

itimes in arid

!ute, with thin

terminal bud

The branchlets

i pale orange-

Uy grow dark

1, rounded and

1 short slender

xteenth to one

ellow-green or

r rapidly and soon ouglas Spruce car- ;rceptible redu'^tion , excepting the two I productivenen of

sand feet above the ver, on the eastern intincntal divide in ches in height hut

eudotsuga mucrontUa a, and was twenty- ark of the Uouglaa !rn Arizona and un w Mexico, Leninion ri the Snn Franciseo re also soft spongy limatiu conditioni.

COHU/KUM.

8ILVA OF NORTH AMERICA.

rarely light or dark bluish green at maturity,' and are usually persistent until (heir eighth year, when they begin to fall gradually aud irregularly. The staminate flowers are from three quarters of an inch to an inch long, with orange-red anthers ; and the pistillate flowers are about three quarters of an inch in length and nearly half an inch in thickness, their slender elongated brevets being deeply tinged with red, which is darkest on the midribs. The cones, which hang on stout stenid often half a'l inch in length, and mostly fall as soon as their seeds have escaped in the autumn, are from two to four inches and a half in length and from an inch to an inch and a quarter in thickness, with scales which are thin, slightly concave, rounded and occasionally somewhat elongated at the apex, thin and more or less orose on the margins, and usually rather longer than they are broad ; at midsummer, when the cones are fully grown, they are slightly puberulous, dark apple-green below, purplish toward the apex, and bright red on the closely appressed margins ; and the pale green bracts, which are now slightly reflexed above the middle and from one fifth to one quarter of an inch wide, often protrude half an inch beyond their scales and begin gradually to turn brown. The seeds are a quarter of an inch long, nearly an eighth of an inch wide, light reddish brown and lustrous above, pale and marked below with large irregular white spots, and almost as long as their dark brown wings, which are broadest just below the middle, oblique above, and rounded at the apex.

From the shores of Lake Tacla in the Rocky Mountains, a little to the north of the fifty-fifth degree of latitude and from the head of the Skeena River in the coast range in latitude 54° north,'* I'lteudotitnija mucronata spreads southward through all the Rocky Mountain system to the mountains of western Texas and to those of southern New Mexico and Arizona, along the Sierra Madre of Chi- huahua' and the mountains of Nuevo Leon, where it forms dark groves in ravines and on northern slopes of the highest mountains,* to San Luis Potosi ; '^ in the coast region it extends southward at some distance from the sea to latitude 51° north, and then spreads over Vancouver Island, over the coast valleys and plains of southern British Columbia, Washington, and Oregon, and over their moun- tains, ranging in British America eastward to the eastern foothills of the* Rocky Mountains." In California the Douglas Spruce extends southward in the coast mountains ..t least as far as Punta Gorda in Monterey County, near the lower end of the Santa Lucia Mountains,^ over the cross ranges in the

' In Colorado and New Mexico the leaves of individual trees of I'teudultui/a mucranala, liko those of many other conifers un the southern Kocky Mountains, are light or dark blue in color, espe- cially early in their first season.

" In liritish Columbia, where in the dry interior southern por- tion I'luwluliuya mucrmtala is conflned to the high ridges which nnparnto the river-valleys, and at tho north descends to the pla- teaus, it occurs with a few individuals on the Skeena Kiver, but is absent from the Queen Charlotte Islands and the coast archi- pelago north of Vancouver Island, occurring hero only on tho shores of inlets at some distance from tho 8ca. Southward from latitude 51° north, however, it is abundant in the coast region of tho mainland and in all parts of Vancouver Island with the excep- tion of the exposed western coast ; and near the forty-ninth paral- lel it extends from the ocean to the eastern slopes of the Rocky Mountains, sumctimcs ascending to elevations of six thousand feet uIhivii lliu sea. It does nut grow in the elevated and comparatively humid CarilHM» region or on tho higher portions of the Gold and Krlkirk Kanges. The line which marks the northern limits of its diHtrii)nlion us now known is curiously irregular. It grows in the neighlMirho<Hl of Fort (icorge and northeastward as far as McLewl's I/ako, but it has not been found on the Parsnip Kivcr ; it extends lulf way up Lake Tocla, occurs on the shores of Habinc Lake, and is common alujut Kraser and Frant^ois Lakes. It ranges from the valley of the Froser Kiver to tho const mountains on the I'n" of the Chilcotin and its tributaries, and occurs on tho Na7'.o and uu

the Blackwater to the month of the Iscultaesli, but is absent from the region northward from these streams to Francois Lake. The extension of its range to the northeast on the Rocky Mountains is still to be determined. (See G. M. Dawson, Can. Ifat. n. ser. ix. 323. Mncoun, Cat. Can. PI. 472.)

^ " I saw heavy forests of Pscudotsuga on the cooler and more fertile slopes of the Sierra Madre of Chihuahua some two hundred miles south of our boundary." (C. G. Fringle in lilt. See, also, C. G. Pringle, Garden arid Forest, i. 441.)

« Watson, Proe. Am. Acad, xviii. 158. C. G. Fringle, /. c. iii. 338.

' Tmga mucronata was collected by Parry and Palmer near the city of San Luis Potosi in 1878.

< In June, 1897, Mr. John Maconn fonnd Pseudotntga mucronata on Jumping Pond Creek, near Calgary, Alberta, which is tho most eastern station in British America from which I have seen speci- mens of this tree.

' Pseudotnuga mucronata is common on the Santa Lucia Moun- tains at elevations of from twenty-five hundred to about three thousand feet above the sea, but I have not been able to hear of it at any point farther south on the coast mountains. It is not improbable, nevertheless, that it may extend along them into San Luis Obispo County or even to the northern part of Santa Barbara County. On the Santa Inez Mountains in the southern part of the last named county the Pseudotauga is of the southern species.

,;

til:

,

Ill

' '!

I' I

' I . t ,■ ,

90

8ILVA OF NORTH AMERICA.

CONIFKIIA.

northnrn part of the otate, and Houthward alon(; tho western slopcH of the Sierra Nevada to the main fork of the Sun Joaquin Kiver in latitude 37° !K)' north, where it asconda to olovatiunH of seven thousand feet above tho sea ; but it is absent from all tho arid mounttiinH which rise in the |rrcat basin between the Sierra Nevada and tho Wuhsutch Ranges. In the dry interior ro);ion of thn continent, where tho Douirliis Spruce grows only on rocky mountain siope-i and benches, usually singly among other trees, and rarely forms an important part of continuous forests except in nnrlhern New Mexico and Arizona, it selduin attains a greater height than eighty feet; northward it is generally found at elevations of from four to six thousand feet above the sea-level ; in Colorado it is scattered from the upper slopes of tho foothills at elevations of about six thousand feet up to eleven thousand feet ; ' it is common on the high mountjiins of northern and central New Mexico,'^ and on the San Francisco Peaks of northern Arizona it forms a large part of tho forest between elevations of eight thousand two hundred and nine thousand feet;' it is abundant on the Guadaloupe Mountains of western Texas, where in size and numbers it is surpassed only by Pbum jmnderoHn ;* and on tho mountain ranges of soulhern New Mexico and Arizona, where it is comparatively rare and usually of small size, it seldom ascends higher than six or seven thousand feet. It ia most abundant and of its largest size not far above the level of the sea in southern British Columbia and in the region between the coast of Washington and Oregon and the western foothills of the Cascade Mountains, where enormous trunks crowded close together rise to a great height, forming, either alone or mixed with the Hemlock, vast almost impenetrable forests ; these are surpassed in productiveness only by the Sequoia forests of California, and appear to reach their maxi- mum development south of the Straits of Fuca on the lower northern slopes of the Olympic Mountains, where rains falls more constantly and copiously than on any other part of the United States with the exception of the Alaska coast. On the Cascade Mountains and the California eoast rangca the Douglas Spruce is less abundant and rarely more than one hundred and fifty feet in height, but it frequently grows to a large size on the California Sierras, where it seldom ascends higher than five thousiind five hundred feet above the sea and is most often scattered among other trees, but sometimes forms small groves, especially on the rough boulder-covered slopes of earthquake taluses which occasionally it almost exclusively covers."

The wood of Pseudotsuga mticronata varies greatly in density and quality and in the thickness of the sapwood. It is light red or yellow, with nearly white snpwood, and is marked by conspicuous dark- colored very resinous bands of small summer cells which generally occupy at least half the layers of annual growth, and after the tree has been cut become hard and flinty, making the wood difficult to work. Two varieties of wood, red and yellow, the former coaraer grained, darker colored, and less valuable than the latter, are distinguished by lumbermen, and appear to be largely due to the age of tho tree, the wood of young trees being coarser grained and darker colored than that of old trees. The average specific gravity of the absolutely dry wood of twenty-one specimens cut in different parts of tho country was 0.51.'j7, a cubic foot weighing 32.14 pounds. The wood of f eudotmiga mucronata, which furnishes most of the coarse lumber manufactuied in southern liritish Columbia and in western Washington and Oregon," is largely used for all kinds of construction, for fuel, and for railway-ties; it snpplie3 most of the piles used on the Pacific coast of North America, and spars and masts of unequalcd strength.' The bark is sometimes used in tanning leather."

> Brandigee, Pol. GaxtUe, iii. 33.

* Kusby, llnll. Torrey lint. Ciuh, ii. 79.

* MtTrijiui, A^or(A Amrriran Fwma, No. 3, 121.

» Havanl, I'roc U. S. Nal. Mut. viii. 603. Coulter, Ctmtrib. U. S. Nal. Herb. ii. ,'iW. (Man. PI. W. Tezai).

* Miiir, The Afountaitu of California, KW.

* In commerce the wuud of PgeudoUuga mutronata ia often called Orcj^ll pine.

' Laalett, Timber and Timber Tren, cd. 2, 374.

* The following unpublished analysis of a specimen of tho bark of Pieudoisufja mucronata from Forest Grove, Oregon, Ims been made by Professor lleury Trimble of the Philadelphia College of Pharmacy ;

Moisture 6.05 per cent.

Ash in absolutely dry material . 1.22 "

Tannin in air dry material . . . 16.25 "

Tuinin iu absolutely dry material . 16.23 "

|i

I

IM!

comtKaM.

to the main

von thousand

luin between

nt, whoro the

her treoH, and

d Arizona, it

ions of from

slopes of the

n on the iiigh

liurn Arizona

ine thousand

numbers it is

and Arizona,

six or seven

ea in southern

d the western

se to a grreat

sts ; these are

sh their maxi-

nv Mountains,

States with the

es the Douglas

it frequently

thousand five

les forms small

nally it almost

he thickness of nspicuous dark- E the layers of lood difficult to lored, and less le to the age of old trees. The ferent parts of tga mucronata, and in western or railway-ties; and masts of

leclmen of the bark S Oregon, Ims been adclphia College of

6.05 per cent.

1.22 " ir..25 " 16.1!3 "

CUNIFKRA

SILVA OF NORTH AMERICA.

91

Pseudotmga mucronata was discovered in 1791 on the shores of Nootka Sound by Archibald Menzies, the surgeon of Vancouver in his voyage of discovery ; it was first described in the journal of Lewis and Clark.' Rediscovered by David Douglas in 1827, it was introduced by him into the gardens of Europe, where it has become one of the best known and most valuable coniferous trees for park plantations.' European sylviculturists have made numerous experiments with the Douglas Spruce in forest planting, but they are still divided in their opinions as to its value for this purpose.' Early attempts to introduce it into the eastern United States by means of plants obtained in England and raised from seeds gathered in Oregon or from trees which had grown in Europe were generally unsuc- cessful, the young plants soon succumbing to the heat and dryness of the eastern summers or to the cold of eastern winters. But in 1862 Dr. C. C. Parry found the Douglas Spruce on the outer ranges of the Rocky Mountains of Colorado, and the following year sent seeds to the Botanic Garden of Harvard College. The plants raised from these seeds have proved perfectly hardy and have grown rapidly and vigorously in the neighborhood of Boston, and now give promise oi surpassing all other exotic conifers in permanent beauty and usefulness ; and in recent years the Douglas Spruce, raised from seeds gathered at high altitudes in Colorado, has been planted in considerable numbers in the northern states.* Of the numerous abnormal forms of pHCudutHwja mucronata which may be occa- sionally seen in European gardens and which are peculiar in the marking of their leaves or in their habit, none has any great permanent value.' More beautiful are the plants from Colorado and from the mountains of Mexico with blue and glaucous foliage.'

One of the most widely distributed trees of North America, the Douglas Spruce possesses a constitution which enables it to flourish through thirty-two degrees of latitude, to support the fierce gales and the long winters of the north and the nearly perpetual sunshine of the Mexican Cordilleras, to thrive in the rain and fog which sweep almost continuously from the Pacific over its lofty heads, and on arid mountain slopes in the interior, where for months of every year rain never falb. It is one of the most important elements of the American forest. No other American tree of the firrt magnitude is so widely distributed or can now afford so much timber, and the rapidity of its growtti

COMDDBTION OF TRK TaNNIN.

Carbon 61.72 per cent.

Hydrogen 5.73 "

Oxygen 32.55 "

lOU.OO

The amount of tannin, 16.26 per cent., in air dry material is higher thun is usually found in other tan-barks.

' The History of Ihr Expedition under Command of Lewit and Clark, ed. Coues, ill. 831.

' A Doujias Spruce, raised from one of the seeds sent to England by David Douglas iu 1827 and planted in 1830 where it now stands in the Pinctum at Dropniore, near Windsor, in 1803, was one him- drcd and twenty feet high, with a trunk four feet in diameter and long lower branches sweeping the ground. For sixty years, there- fore, this tree has made an annual average upward growth of two feet and has added annually four fifths of an inch to the diameter of its trunk. Its upward growth has, indeed, really been greater, as part nf the head was blown off several yoacs ago in a winter storm. (See J. G. Jack, Garden and Forest, vi. 14. See, also, Kowler, Gard. Chron. 1872, 75 ; Gard. Chron. 1872, 1323, f. 299.) A Douglas Spruce in the Garden of Penrhyn Castle in Wales, supposed to have been planted fifty-seven years before, had in 1887 a trunk which girted thirteen feet eight and one half inches

three feet above the surface of the ground, and another specimen on the same estate hod a trunk eleven feet nine inches in circum- ference. (Seo Webster, Gard. Chron. ser. 3, i. 672, f. 130. See, also, Webster, (. c. n. ser. ui. 69 ; Trans. Scottish ArboricullvnU Soc. xi. 66, 105.)

' See John Booth, Die Douglas Fichle; Die Naturalisation Aus- ISndischer iValdbSume in Deutschland, 131; Zeilsch. Fnrsl-Jagd xiii. 32 (Die Naturalisation der Douglasjichle) ; Gartenflora, xl. 696. J. Brown, The Forester, ed. 5, 353, f . 123. Willkomm, Forst. Ft. ed. 2, 104, t. 19, f. 13, 18. Mayr, Wald. Nordam. 290, t. 4, 0, 8, 9. R. Hartig, Forsl.-nal. Zeii. i. 415. Schlicli, Gard. Chron, ser. 3, ir. 531, 568, 698 ; Man. Forestry, ii. 316. Kttkler, Garten- flora, xli. 114. Dunn, Jour. It. Hort. Soc. xiv. 80.

' See Garden and Forest, iv. 190.

' For an account of the garden varieties of Psendotsugn culti- vated in Europe, see Carriire, Traite Conif. ed. 2, 257. Bcissner, Handb. Nadelh. 418. Sudworth, Bull. No. 14, Div. Forestry U. S. Dept. .\gric. 47.

' The form of Pseudotsuga mucronata with glaucous leaves, which was introduced from Mexico into European gardens by Roezl alwut forty years ago, is said to be a distinct and handsome plant. This is the Pseudotsuga glaucescens, Bailly, Rev. Hort. 180D, 88, t., and probably the Picea glaucescens, Gordon, Pinctum, Suppl. 47 (1862), and the Picea religiosa glaucescens, Gordon, Pinetum, ed. 2, 213 (1870). It is also the Abies religiosa glatucescens, Carri6re, /. c. 274.

m

i^llvl' ii'f'l !l

i llfcr'l

02

SILVA OF NORTH AMERICA.

CONirRIUt,

and iU |H)wor of rtipriHluotioii iiiidcr fuvoriiltio coiiditionN ' make it the most viiluablo inhabitnnt of the great vuiiiferouM foruvt of thn northwiwt, which it ennohloH with it« nmjeittic port and iiplendid vigor.

' III tha OMut r*Kiiiii rrom amillixrii llrlllali Ciiliiiiiliiii iipurljr tn llir nortlKTii burtlnra of ('Hitfiinilit >k«>IIImk (ilniita ii( I'lrwliilinign mitrrnnulii nimiii iMivt'r Ilia gruiiHil friiiii wlilrli |Im< fitrPHt hoM \mon I'li'unMl liy lln>, mill, nlHiiilliiK hIiiiimI iia i<Iihh> liiKi'llirr lu IiImIvii uf gtoM, gTtm Mil giKnl mil Willi MtiiiilaliliiK rii|ililil)', (iiriiiiiiK tall uleiidiT piilea ili'ililiittt III liri«iii>lii<« hiiiI fiilliiKf* iiii)i>|it hI thn vory top. All AviirHgi' ii|iwiiril gntwtli uf IIvk nr ail fffit la iiiit iiiiiiaiifti itii auuh tnvt, kimI Ifuiliiig aliiNita iif lU^uitntauffit mtwrimnlii ti*ii ft>f>t loii^ iiiiiy Ii6af>itiiiii'iir tlinaliiiriiaiif l'iigii| MiiimiiI. 'riifapyiMiiigtrpfii hImi iiicn'iiau llmir triiiili ilUiiii'iKr rii|ilill)f A ■li'iii PimiiiiiiMl liy (ioiirrol lliuiry I.. AlilHit iiii tlii< Kulilim Hlviir III iiiirtliwralorii Wnali- liigtuii ill IHINI hiul itttkliiiiil II illmiiiitiir iif all liii'lii'a in ti'ii yrara aail uf tw«l«« inobM iii twmily-lkriiii jtnra, itnil hwl liiorviuMMl tn

•ightrcn inohn liy iti fnrtjr-fiiiirtli j*u. In thn wme rrginn * trail only una humlri'il anil fiirty-twu yaara nlil hiul a triiiik thrcii feat fuur lnoh«i in iliamati'r at tbrao faet almva Ilia aiirfai'it of thn gmiiiid. Thli, huwnTer, ia an ricaptiunally favoralila n'giiiii fur tlia rupiti gniwtli of traea on account of tha rich auil iinil thn aii-pt- aive rainfall. Tha log aiHU'iiiiun in the Jcaiip (*olli*ctiuii uf Nurth Ainarioan Wotida iu tha Aniuriraii Muiaiiin of Niitural lliatory, Naw York, prucuratl iu the neighburhiNMl uf INirtlanil, Orrgun, ia twenty-nine inohea in ilianiatar inaiile tha hark anil three liiiiiilrail ami thirty-ai< yrara olil, tha aiipwooil, whioh ia only an inch anil three rightha in thicknraa, ahnwingaiity-aii layarauf iinniinl gniwth. In the ilry interior part of the runtinent the Doiigliu .Spruce in- creaava much nioru alowly awl ia liy no ineaiu a faat-growing tree.

KXIM-ANATION OF THE PLATE.

I

t '

n !■

I'l.ATie DCVII. I'mkudothiiga. muchonata.

I. A lliiwcrliiK lirniii'li. natural aize.

9. A ataniintte llower, enlur);i'il.

•I. All Htillii'r, friiiit view, enlarged.

4. All iinllii'r, aiila view, I'ninrgeil.

n, A |ilalillnli< llower, enlarged.

(I. A aenli' uf n plallllate flower, upper aide, with its bract and OTulea. I'liliirgeil.

7, A fruiting branch, natural the.

N. A riiliii from Murviii I.iiki'i, Colorado, natural aize.

n. A I'utiK-arale, iip|H'r aide, with its aeeils and bract, natural aixe. 111. Ilrni'ta from the bnao of a cone, natural aize. Ill A aeeil, enlarginl. 12. Vnrticiit section of a aecd, enlarged. I.'l. An I'inl'iyu, onlnrgnd.

It. Criiaa ai'cliun of n li'iif magnified liftcen diametera. in. Winler-liuila. natural kuc. II). A aucdling plant, natural aize.

-. i

llfliii ^

CONIKKItA,

itnnt of the id vif^or.

mr ivKinn m tr«o (riiiik tlimt frnt Hiirfiu'i* 4>f tha iikin n-Kiiin fur <il 1111(1 the rti'ci- I'ctiiin uf North Muturiil Itliitory, llaiiil, <>rPK<>n, ia I thrrii huiidrpfl nly nil iluih and r iinniml grtiwth, uf(liui Spruce iu- iit-)('<>wii>K trac.

Uv

^*fe.

i ;'

*. ^

NN *^

"(^ y // y

^>-

f^

*»'

\

k'

^ILVA OF NORTH AMERICA.

<rON1F*KUA,

r n^r>Ju-?tiun under {jivomble coiuHtioiiA ' ;oAke it tbr moii valuable* inhabiUiit of the <^rf«iouik ffirc^ of the iiorthwosti which it Hnnoblof^ vntb its majestic port luid ftploiidid vi^»r.

\ \

\

i.nin /:<oin Aouihera BritUh Coliimliia itf*arljr U^ ;i^.-»if<»« of t ftliforniA HWwJIiujf plnitt^ oi P>eutl'>t$h'jit

Hi cwtcr Uii* fjroiuwl t'iMin wliich ihc forest lias ln'fii

rlMrf-'-tl I*- drt-t unU, lUn^iOj;; ulunoNt u^ close to^othrr ii- Matluii of jp«iM. gn<w on f;*H*ii nuii with lutunuhiii}^ rAi>i>liiy, fortniut; ("11 dkrirlT poIfH ileititule iiC br»fi'-WB itnd foliajjf fxoopt at llw vitv top Ail avrrag'f itpworil jkrriwili uf llvo r>r xix feet U uot tmuHUtil un nich trees, aad U'litling BtHMiU 4>f PtetMioUi*itj^$ mucronata t»n fe«i lung in»y }te Ken iwht tlf ^ilwnw of Pufif t S^^ntl. IVw 3 1 uii|^ ir*n» (ilto iiK'TviUf th<»tr trunk iliairteter rapiK'. . 'rtf *-tft»*/irt4"ri by

ffeiienil Uenry 1. Abb*»t Oil thr Soldtio Rt*. ^'

iti^'^n in iSUtt luul AttA> .v<t h diatuct<fi •' and I'f Iwtlvo VufW* ;t iirt^ftT-iiim' 1**^,

eigliUrn inchcn by iU forty- fourth y«ar. \n tb» same- rof[ion h lri>*

i>Dly one btindrcd mid furty-two yt-Ars old bad a trunk tlire** ft,vi

four iridliPH in dianrtctc^r iit thruo fec:t ulwivo ibi surfuro oi' i\u

gnunid. This, however, an exceptinnidly favorable rt-jfion fur

th*" rttt>td grv nib of ln>ea on HC("iHit t»f the rich «oiI and tlif '*x<t>-

»!**• riunfail The l<>g Apcoiniou in Iho Jptiup CoUictioii of N<<rtb

An^'>rK■au Vr'ootli* tu the Anierieau MuAuum of Niitural Hintory

Kitm Vorkt pruuurvil in fiio neigbborboud of I'oitbind, C>rrgoD, ii*

iiVi:'rY-ntnn iH«b^<t lu diaiii(>tt*r tnnidi; tbf) bark and tlucu bundrrM)

M<i th\Tty-*ix r^»m old, tlie aapwood, wliirh m nidv an inch and

•■ .-»(fhthn in thirkues«, HhowinpHikty-aix layiri of tutnual jjniwtb

' drj- interior part of tbo continmu ibo Dou^dan Spruce im-

V much Jiiuru njowly aud 13 by no in^uiis n faitl-gniwin^; Ult .

PiArm DC VI I. PsKUDi^rnt *«a %> > v I. A flMwrring hmnrh. natural nhe. 'i. A Bt.\iuinato dow«r, auJar^tiil. 'I An jfcnti*»t. fr'jnt vi«i^ sidiu^<Ki. ■I. Am antii*rr, Hide vii»w. «'nUr^l 3- A pirttiliato b'ow0r« (>nlar|^o<|.

(>. A MCiklo of a pUtiUate 6ovri'r, tip{>er side. vr\0\ its bract and oTulf^fl. enbiij^fd.

7. A fruiting' l-r^neh, natural s<i?,e.

8. A conf^ from Mani't inktH. Colorado, natural RJzc

0. A con»^-»cAlis upiKT siih: with iu uptiU aiHl braof, nattnal •»»£€. 1((. Kraota from the base of u cone, nulural ultt.', 11. A it«eiL, enlutgnl. (2. V*»rlio»ii *iei*lion of a 'Wp-'

" " '>t: I'Uiil, natun>i -u**.

ri

muI *'f the

!.;• it ^unt H tU- '

Iriiiik lhre«» fM-i Mirfiu'o «!' tK« ;il'ln njfion for il lint! the *■«• t > I rlioti of N<'itli Nirmul Ili'skorT iliiiul, Orcgou, i-

:1 ttlKiB )llllliln:tl

[>)ilv an inch Ainf of uiiniis.1 (ifruwih ou^'IrM Spruue in- a.-*t-j;powinj; true.

Silva oi North America.

Tab DrVII

CK^it.ivn 1^/.

Tfitpr/if sr.

PSEUDOTSUGA MUCRONATA .;.p1v

A.UuHTi'tu- t/t/;\f '

Illl/i , / TllKflll I'ilH^,

! ) i I

lit ' ^

ii'l i'

{ ^

u.

!f

ll'J

/li '

CONU'UKiG.

SILVA OF NORTH AMERICA.

93

FSEUDOTSUGA MAGROGABPA.

Hemlock.

Leaves acuminate at the apex, bluish gray. Cones large, their bracts slightly exserted.

Pseudotsuga maorooarpa, Mayr, Wald. Nordam, 278 (1890). Lemmon, Rep. California State Board For- ettry, iii. 134 (Cone-Bearers of California) ; West-Ameri- can Cone-Bearers, 57 ; Bull. Sierra Club, ii. 162 (Coni- fers of the Pacific Slope). Sudworth, Rep. U. S. Dept, Agric. 1892, 330. Merriam, North American Fauna, No. 7, 340 (Death Valley Exped. ii.). Coville, Contrib. V. S. Nat. Herb. W. 223 (Bot. Death Valley Exped.). Sargent, Garden and Forest, z. 24, {. 5.

Abies Douglasii, var. maorooarpa, Xorrey, Ivm' Bep, ft iv. 28 (1861).

Abies maorooarpa, Vasey, Gardener's Monthly, xviii. 21 (1876).

Tsuga maorooarpa, Lemmon, Pacific Rural Press, xvii. No. 5, 75 (February 1, 1879).

Pseudotsuga Douglasii, var. maorooarpa, Engelmann, Brewer & Watson Bot. Col. ii. 120 (1880). Sargent, Forest Trees N. Am. lOth Census U. S. ix. 210.— Beissner, Handb. Nadelh. 417. Koelme, Deutsche Dendr. 13.

A tree, usually from forty to fifty and rarely eighty feet in height, with a trunk three or four feet in diameter, which is generally naked at the base for about one quarter of its length, but sometimes is clothed to the ground with branches. These are remarkably remote, elongated and pendulous below, with short stout pendent or often eioct lateral branchlets, and, short and ascending above, forming an open broad-based symmetrical pyramidal head. The bark is from three to six inches in thickness, dark reddish brown, and deeply divided into great broad rounded ridges which are covered with thick closely appressed scales. The winter-buds are ovate, acute, usually not more than an eighth of an inch in length, often nearly as broad as they are long, with dark chestnut-brown lustrous scales which are thin and scarious on the margins. The branchlets are slender, dark reddish brown during their first season, and covered with short scanty pubescence, which mostly disappears during their second year, when they are dark or light orange-brown and begin to grow lighter colored, becoming pale grayish brown at the end of four or five years. The leaves are acute or acuminate, terminating in slender rigid callous tips, apparently two-ranked by the conspicuous twisting at their base, incurved above the middle, from three quarters of an inch to an inch and one quarter in length, about one sixteenth of an inch wide, and dark bluish gray. The pistillate flowers are from three quarters of an inch to an inch in length, with pale yellow anthers, and are inclosed for half their length in the conspicuous involucres of the lustrous bud-scales. The staminate flowers are about an inch long and half an inch thick, with pale green bracts tinged with red. The cones, which are produced often in great numbers on the upper branches and occasionally also on those down to the middle of the tree, are short-stalked and from four to six and a half inches in length and about two inches in thickness; their scales, which near the middle of the cone are from an inch and a half to two inches across, are stiff, thick, concave, rather broader than they are long, rounded above, abruptly wedge-shaped at the base, puberulous and striate on the outer surface, and frequently nearly as long as their bracts, which are comparatively short and narrow, with broad midribs produced into short flattened flexible tips ; opening and loosing their seeds early in the autumn, the cones mostly remain on the branches for at least a year longer. The seeds are full and rounded on both sides, rugose, dark chestnut-brown or nearly black and lustrous above, pale reddish brown below, with a thick hard brittle outer coat from which the thin membranaceous nearly white lining is easily separable ; they are half an inch long and three eighths of an inch wide, with wings which are broadest near the middle, about half an inch long.

:.¥«^

M

SILVA OF NORTH AMERICA.

CONIFERiS.

nearly a quarter of an inch wide, and obliquely rounded at the apex ; the cotyledons being from nine to twelve in number.*

Pseud otsuya macrorarpa ia a characteristic feature of the scanty forests which cover the lower western and southern slopes of the arid mountains of southern California, where it grows above the banks of streams and on the steep slopes of narrow ravines usually between elevations of from three thousand to five thousand feet above the sea, and occasionally on high ridges, frequently forming open groves of considerable extent or mingling with Quercua chrysolepis, Quercua Wializeni, Pimts Coiil'eri, Pinua aftenuuta, and Pinun pomhrosa, var. Jeffreyi. The westerly station where Paeudo- iatiga tnacrocarpa has been observed is on the Santa Inez Mountains in Santa Barbara County.'' Farther to the eastward it is common on the San Emigdio Mountains and on the Sierra Pelona, the Snn Gabriel, the Sierra Madre, the San Bernardino, the San Jacinto, and the Juyamaca Mountains, which form a nearly continuous range extending in the arc of a circle from tie neighborhood of Santa Barbara on the coast to the southern borders of the state.

The wood of Pseudotsuga macrocarpa is heavy, hard, strong, close-grained, and durable. It is dark red, with broad bands of small summer cells, numerous obscure medullary rays, and pale nearly white sapwood. The specific gravity of the absolutely dry wood ><> 0.4563, a cubic foot weighing 28.44 pounds. It is occasionally manufactured into lumber, and it is k.gely used for fuel.

Pseudotsuga macrocarpa was discovered in 1858 by the expedition under command of Lieutenant J. C. Ives, sent by the government of the United States to explore the Colorado River of the West. Although its seeds have been sent Europe by collectors, Paeudotattga macrocarpa does not appear to have been successfully cultivated, although it might be expected to thrive in regions where the summers are hot and dry and the winters mild with scanty rainfall.^

: I

I

> PaeudoUuga macrocarpa can be dUtinguMhi .> from the other American species by its comparatively longer and more remotely placed branches, by its sharply pointed peculiarly colored blue- gray leaves, by its shorter and stouter winter-buds, and larger cones, with thicker more concave cone-stiales, comparatively shorter bracts with abort broad tips, and by its larger and fuller seeds, which have a thicker and harder coat and are ranch darker on the upper face. Intermediate forms are not known to exist between the two species, which occupy different regions, Pseudotsuga mu- crfmalOf having failed to reach the mountains of southwestern Cal- ifornia, which are the only home of Pseudotsuga macrocarpa either along the California coast ranges, the Sierra Nevada, or from the Booky Mountaini octou the Colorado Deaert

' A single tree of Pseudotsuga macrocaiT>a was found in June, 1808, by Dr. F. Franceschi in Mission CaKon, above the Seven Falls, at an elevation of about fifteen hundred feet above the sea on the Santa Inez Mountains, about six miles from Santa Barbara.

' Like other trees of extremely arid regions, Pseudotsuga macro- carpa probably always grows slowly. The log specimen in the Jesup Collection of North American Woods in the American Mu- seum of Natural History, New York, is twenty-eight and three quarters inches in diameter inside the bark and three hundred and thirty-six years old, with oLe and three eighths inches of bapwood which shows cixty-six layers of annual growth.

ij

EXPLANATION OF THE PLATE.

PlATK IXJVIII. PsEUDOTSUOA IrlACBOCAKPA.

1. A flowering branch, natural size.

2. A Btaininate flower, enlarged.

3. An anther, side view, enlarged.

4. A pistillate flower, enlarged.

6. A scale of a pistillate flower, upper side, with its bract and ovules, enlarged.

6. A fruiting branch, natural size.

7. A cone-scale, upper side, with its seeds, natural size.

8. A seed with its wing, natural size.

9. Cross section of a leaf, magnified fifteen diameters. 10. Winter-buds, natural size.

CONIFERS.

g from nine

er the lower <is above the if from three intly forming ilizeni, Pinua lere Paeudo- )ara County.' ra Pelona, the la Mountains, hood of Santa

urable. It is id pale nearly foot weighing el.

of Lieutenant of the West, oes not appear ons where the

iras found in June, n, above the Seven . feet above the sea rem Santa Barbara. I, Pieudotfuga macro- log specimen in the n the American Mu- iuty-eight and three d three hundred and ha inches of bapwood

f

'\tA

■vf

*ir^'(<

■; !

: '. ':

i '

^ .

' :

' *

1 ' .

1 t

i;

mu i,i

SILVA OF NOirril AMEIiK'A. - >UERiE.

' ,tii ini-li vkiiic, and ()hli<{uely r(>iiiul«d at tli«> a^tox; the rotyiedoiiM beiug from nine

'tT.

I..,; .CM.,'/ uiitci ovnrjirt is ji >'lirtr;icttri.Htic I'eatiird of tlio scanty forests wim-1* < uver the lower .i| MXitheni slojieH of tlio arid inoiuilaius of soutlioru California, wlipre it j^row^ iibove thu ■ifPrtiiDS and o.> tlie i>t«««'p Hlopt-H of narrow ravines UHUully ht'twe«n tdevations of from ihreo i;.».usiiiid to livH tliousjiiul fo-t almvn tin' si'ji, and occasionally f^n higli ri<ly;es, frtujiU'iilly f 'inning '>jH)n jjrovca of oonsidurnlilt' extent or minglaiy '.ntL Qufvu-^ i /iri/.-iolrjnK, Qucrnta M'tsdzcHi, J'itiiix Cuulteri, Pinvs aUenuata, and Pinus jionditiiaa, ^mt. •/> The wchterly station where i'«('i((/o-

limga mncrmarini hm been obscrvod is oii the S.,(.!(i ln*v Monnlitinx in Santa Barbara County.' Fartbor to tho eaMwiird it in ooroiomi oo *Uo San l'.»'i!,:'i(o MountainR and on the Sierra Ptlona, the S.1II Gabriel, the Smrra M.i.lip thr '^■ui r('-rtt»r<lini fV San Jjvcinto, aud tbi> Cuy.'iuiaca Mountain*, which form » nearly ot«;: i lircle from tho neighborhood of Santa

liarbani oi, '■

whir.-

. . ..iiliivated, although it nti^ht be eipticted to ll!. t dry dud the wiitturii mild with Muuty rainfall.'

■.r- close-i^rainml, and (iurablt'. It i-i iiiiHJiulary rays, and pale nearly '•4">63, a nd)io foot woigbii.f; ■- 't iiK(>d for fuel.

rs.iiiuiand of Lieutt-nant '■' Hier of the West ; i'.-. y . dcHiS not appear

■•^loD:! whcire tlie

I Wil

..V *>^ffi nmrr-jra^xi oaa dijitujgiiiAhvtl from tlio olluT •» fi.mn ^pi'oioi bv It'* i.'ou>par«tivulj K-mgcr an*l mom remotely .'U-wil l>r%jM?hrs. by it* nharply polrilej jwculUrlv colored Miic- ijrAv leATrs, by its sUvrtcr and itdi.iter ftiiiter-liud«. uiid laiyor conf'if, wjtL lh)okk>r tuorv eoncAvo 3<»nt--«caJL'a, inira)>arativffly shorter Uri'-'lft wuS nhorl hnittd tips, wwi by its Urjicr atpl fulkr sred», wliit'h hdvti A lltii^kfir 4rtd liArdrr t*o»t Uid B.re miii'ti darker on tlw ujiiKT facT. Inl*rmt^<»t'' f tth* mo not known to cxi«ft holwrfen tbr two sptH:H», «^ . 'forani rrgiuns, PtewifMtvfjn "vf

•fftnuttit *»»i«g l+atv. . -. . » ■' » ••f •-'mthtrestftrii '"'i'-

tfnni'u, whinh %r*> th« coily kati** irrocarpa «ilUvr

nl-mK !le ''fiI»fornit Mk4#< ran^s, itic f . i ^.tti*. nr from thft Hook} Muuut^ttii «' /9t< --im « \iioxado I>6R«rt.

^ A Aiuglo trtn; uf P-^^miotSM^i maertKitrpo wa> fouud in June, 1808, by i)r. K. KraneoiM-hi in MiMioii ('Bi\on, iibovu the .Seven FalN, ht an flrvfttimi nf about llftccu hundred h'vt uliove the nen oil tlir SiinU l.te/ Mountains, about aix riiili*i* from Santa Itarbni*a. I.ike I'tbup trccft u{ extreaifly arid regions, PteudaUufja macro- tw-y-^i i;rt:t..-»bl7 alwav" grous fclrt^Iy The loj; siK'ciiiiea in tbe Jwiijij' t '"'-.•L.^rf) of Noflii At?:crii'an \Vm«is iu the American Mu- a«itni M \i*iur»j Ifid^iTT. "Sr^-t, YnrV. i* twenty -eipht and tbrfte --jirff/s juchi'^ in Uiamcl«r imniiw the bark and thro« hundrrd and iUvtV'ftix yt'An (>ld( wiUi cao aud threi> ei<;bths inches of jiapnoud ubiob *h«H6 »ifty-tit ky«?« «t5 4*><yuu* gmwlt

■i

\ m

V;

^

S.

i;

I!

i

EXPLANATION OF THE PI.ATK.

I'l.ArK IK \ni INkI Ili/Tst'OA MACBlWAKI'A.

1 A tlnwi liiig bruf'h. iir.iuriil nire.

2 .\ >taininHt( tluvrvr vnlargixL

.'( An antlier, diilo viw*. enlaTj'-^d.

1. A plitiilale flower, ei>!/ir£;<!it.

5, A ata.\« (•( n piKUi!at« (It wti, u}>|H!I aide, nitli lU linicl aoil

ovuIbs. Eiil'irijix!.

(>■ A fruiting hranrli, nstural »i/,«.

7. A eonc-«<'alc, upper *\Aii, with itn iccJa, natural jiio.

S. A »«('il ffitli it# w!ri(f. Iiotiiriil aUe.

'• C'riMS *>ction of a li>af. iiispt'.itiii-l tifteen diametcrt.

' ^MM>>r buda, niitural nijin.

t'.'iiii nine

tho lowHr .ibove thii frum thri>e \ ii'iiiiiig /I', J'inun

:, (,.,;, .. I'l'liJIlH, tho

.MdiintiiiiiJi, i of SaliU

l;li'. It i-i

lulo noarlv

liieittciiant

f tlu; West.

not ajJiiojir

/tiuuil ill June, bovo tbe .Seven 1. alwvf the neii

Santa llarlMm. eudotsuga macriy* R{>oc'iiiiea in tin* R Aniorictin Mu- v\^\\i and thrftc r(>n hundrrd and ichea of Mij>n(*uii

Silva of North America.

Tab. DCVIIl

{' E Fii^tm (id

Jitipiyw sc

PSEUDOTSUGA MACROCARPA, Mayr

A HwcriHt.f litre^v^

Imp. c-T TantHir, I

(

, I I

i

lii-

COMII

8urn undi Bhor

VC8C

▲biei

Fi.

("

nu 21 Ei M

deepi

brum

twice

the I

right

Bran

and

acut(

accri

lutoi

inne

spin

obla

8nrf

eigF

inUi

of I

Huri

froi

liiiii

Biir

ran

8to

or

obt

am

axi

mi

oil

CUMirERiR.

8ILVA OF NORTE AMERICA.

ABIES.

Flowers solitary, naked, moncDcious, axillary ; stamens indefinite, anther-cells 2, surmounted by short knobs ; scales of the pistillate flowers spirally disposed, ovules 2 under each scale. Fruit an erect strobile maturing in one season, its scales longer or shorter than their bracts, deciduous from the central axis ; seeds furnished with resin vcscicles. Leaves subdistichous, persistent.

Ablea, Linn«ai, Qen. 294 (in part) (1737). Adanson, Fam. PI. ii. 480 (in part). A. L. de Jusaieu, Qen. 414 (hi part). Link, Ablumd. Akad. Berl. 1827, 181 ; Ztn- noea, xv. 62S. Engelmonn, Tram. St. Louis Acad. ii. 211; iii. 693. Bentham & Hooker, Oen. iii. 441.— Eiohtar, Engler & Praritl P/lanzenfam. ii. pt. i. 81. Maften, Jour. Linn. Soe. xxx. 34.

Plnua, Linnieni, Gen. ed. 6,434 (in part) (1764). End-

lijlier. Gen. 260 (in part) D. Don, Lambert Pinue, iii.

(sect. Peuee) Meiasner, Gen. 352 (in part). Baillon,

Hint. PI. zii. 44 (in part).

Piooa, Loudon, Arb. Brit. iv. 2329 (not Link) (1838).

Tall pyramidal trees, with bark containing numerous prominent resin vesicles, and oftor Miick au "^ deeply furrowed in old age, pale usually brittle nut durable wood, slender horizontal wide-iip.eading brunches in regular remote generally four or five-branched whorls or rarely scattered, furnished with twice or thrice forked lateral branclitis forming flat-topped masses of foliage gradually narrov d from the base to the apex of the branch, the ultimate divisions comparatively stout, glabrous f pubescent, at right angles to the branch or pointing forward, wide-spreading roots, and slender elo, ted rootlets. Branch-buds usually three, or on the leading shoot four or five, the lateral in the axils of upper leaves, and much smaller than the terminal, generally thickly coated with resin, small, subglobose or oblong, acute or obtuse, or rarely large and acute, covered with numerous ovate acute closely imbricated accrescent rarely stomatiferous ' scales increasing in size from below, the two lowest minute, opposite and lateral, the outer persistent on the base of the branch and in fulling marking it with ring-like scars, the inner occasionally united and deciduous in one piece from the tip of the lengthening branchlet.^ Leaves spirally disposed, incurved in the bud, at first densely crowded on the young branchlets, lanceolate or oblanceolate, entire and often thickened and revolute on the margins, sessile, marked on the lower 8!irface on each side of the midrib with bands of several rows of stomata, persistent usually for from eight to ten years, leaving in falling nearly circular scars ; hypoderm cells large, in continuous or interrupted bands under the epidermis on the upper surface, ucually present also on the edges and keel of the leaf and in some species in its interior ; resin ducts two, close to the epidermis of the lower surface, generally near the edge of the leaf, or in some species in the parenchyma and almost equidistant from the two surfaces ; fibro-vascular bundles usually two or rarely one, occupying the interior of the leaf ; on young plants and on lower sterile branches leaves flattened and mostly grooved on the upper surface, or in one species nearly tetragonal, rounded and usually emarginate at the apex, appearing two- ranked from a twist near their base or occasionally spreading from all sides of the branch, only rarely stomatiferous on the upper surface ; usually on uppor fertile branches and leading shoots crowded, more or less erect, often incurved or falcate, thick, convex on the upper side, or quadrangular in some species, obtuse ur acute at the apex, and frequently stomatiferous on the upper surface ; often crowded, arcuate, and forming a thick cover over the winter-buds on the ends of leading shoots and branches.^ Flowers axillary, surrounded at the base by conspicuous involucres of their accrescent bud-scales, the inner often much enlarged and white and lustrous, appearing in early spring from buds formed the previous summer on branchlets of the year ; the staminate on their lower side, very abundant on branches above the

!i!

11

i I

h

f

90

SILVA OF NORTH AMERICA.

CONIPKR^.

r .

middle of the tree, the upper scales of their iiiviilucres fallin(r early with the flowers, the lower often persistent for a year or two on the branches ; the pistillate usually on the upjier side only of the topmost branches, generally from one to four flowers appearing on a bruuch, or in some species scattered also over the upper half of the tree, their involucres more or less persistent under the cone. Stjiminato flowers pendulous, pedicellate, their slender pedicels often becoming much elongated before falling, oval or oblong-cylindrical ; anthers short-stalked, subglobose, opening transversely, surmounted by the short knob-like projections of their connectives, yellow or scarlet ; pollen-grains large, bilobed, furnished with two air -sacs. Pistillate flowers short-stalked, erect, globose, ovoid, or oblong, their scales spirally imbricated in many series, obovate, rounded above, ouucate below, much shorter than tlioir acute or dilated and mucronate bracts; ovules two under each scale, collateral, inverted. Fruit an erect ovoid or oblong cylindrical strobile, maturing in one season, its scales thin, incurved at the broad rounded or rarely bluntly pointed apex, wedge-shaped, and gradually narrowed at the base into short or long stipes, closely imbricated, decreasing in size and sterile toward both ends of the cone, pale green, gray-brown, canary-yellow, or dark purple, puberulous or rarely glabrous on the exposed portions, longer or shorter than their membranaceous bracts, falling at maturity with their bracts and seeds from the stout tapering axis of the cone long persistent on the branch.* Seeds two under each scale, reversed, att^iched at the base, ovoid or oblong, acute at the base, compressed, furnished with large conspicuous resin vesicles, covered on the upper side and infolded below on the lower side by the base of their parchment-like oblong-obtuse wings formed from the inner coat of the scale, and abruptly enlarged at the somewhat obliquely rounded apex ; testa thin, of two coats, the inner membranaceous, the outer thicker, coriaceous. Embryo axile in copious fleshy albumen ; cotyledons from four to ten, stomatiferous on the upper surface."

Abies is distributed in the New World from Labrador and the valley of the Athabasca River to the mountains of North Carolina, and from the mountains of Alaska to the highlands of Guatemala, and in the Old World from Siberia and the mountains of central Europe to southern Japan, the Himalayas, Asia Minor, and the mountains of northern Africa. Twenty-three species can now be distinguished ; ° in America two species inhabit the eastern part of the continent ; seven occur on the mountains of the west, and one is found only in Mexico and Guatemala.' Four species are scattered through the mountain forests of the island of Hondo, and another forms large forests on the islands of Yezo and Soghalin.' Abies Sibirica' is widely distributed through northern continental Asia, ond on the Himalayas Abies Webbinna '" grows in great subalpine forests. Abies Nordmanniana^^ and Abies Cilicica '- are important elements in the forest-covering of the Caucasus and the Cilician Taurus ; Abies Ci'phalonica " is spread over the mountains of Cephalonia and Greece, and is replaced on the mountains of central and southern Europe by Abies Picea." Abies Pinsapo " grows only on the mountain ranges of southern Spoin, and Abies Baborensis^^ is confined to the mountain forests of northern Africa. Traces of Abies in the tertiary rocks of Grinnell Land show that it once inhabited the Arctic Circle, from which it was driven southward by the refrigeration of the northern hemisphere to the mountains of the south, which are now its principal home " and on which in Europe there were probably more species than at the present time."

Abies produces soft perishable wood, sometimes manufactured into cheap lumber, and balsamic exudations employed in medicine and the arts.

Abies in North America docs not suffer seriously from the attacks of insects " or fungal diseases.'"

All the species are beautiful garden plants in youth, although when removed from their native mountain forests they usually become thin and ragged in old age, and several of the Fir-trees are common inhabitants of the parks of temperate ci untries, especially those native to western North America, the .Tapanese Abies Momi^^ Abies Veitchi,~ Abies homolepisi'^ and the species of Europe and Asia Minor.

Abies, the classical name probably of the Fir-tree, was used by Tournefort ^ as the name of the

t

CONIFEILX.

lower ofton the topnioHt muttered uIho

Stiimiimte fiilliiifr, oval )y tho nhort 1, fiirniHiit'd their scales

than their Fruit an

the broad 10 into short c L'ono, pale

d portions, 1 seeds from

each scale,

with large

by the base

ind abruptly

nbranaceous,

four to ten,

isca River to Guatemala, i Japan, the can now be occur on the are scattered the islands of Asia, and on ! " and Abies lurus; Abies he mountains untain ranges thern Africa. Arctic Circle, be mountains irobably more

and balsamic

fal diseases.'" [ their native Fir-trees are estern North es of Europe

I name of the

CONirRRA

aiLVA OF NORTU AMERICA.

97

genus in which ho united the Spruces, Firs, and Hemlocks, and was afterwards adopted by Linntuus, who, in his genus Abies, also united the Spruces and Hemlocks with the Silver Firs.

> A. P. Andenon, Bol. GatelU, air, 804, f.

' lUnrj, Nm. Act. Acad. Com. Ltop. lii. 100, t. 14.

* Bailly, Rec. Horl. 1804, 878, f. lOU (0u H6U PnticUw du FtuiUagt Ha In Con{firt$).

* The oalor of th« conea of Abin cannot be depended on u a mean* of determining the ipeoiee. The oonei of the European Abia Picta in the Black Foreit, according to Engelmann, are of all variationi of color between light green and dark purple (•«• Trant. Si. Louit Acad. iii. 003), and on different treei of Abie$ em- color of weitem America the cones are light or dark green, purple, or bright canary-yellow. Nor can good ipeciBo characters b* found in the shape of the oone-scalcs, as these vary in the same species, some cones having scales which are longer and others which are shorter than they are broad. More constant iu shape are the bracts of the cone-scales, which, although they are very nearly alike on certain species, usually vary only slightly on differ- ent individuals of the same siircies.

* The species of Abies may be grouped in three sections:—' EuABiEB {lialmmece and Grandet, Engelmann, 7'rani. Si. Louis

Acad. iii. 606 [1873]). Loaves flat, grooved above, stomatiferoua on the upper surface only on upper fertile branches.

Bractkatks (Engelmann, /. c. in part). Leaves flat, slightly rounded and without stomata on the upper surface, alike on sterile and fertile branches.

NoBiLiR (Engelmann, I. c). Leaves stomatiferous on both surfaces, crowded, incurved, tetragonal on fertile and in one spe- cies on sterile lower branches.

* In France a hybrid Abies has been raised by Monsieur II. L. de Vilmorin, who fertilized in 1807 a female flower of Ahia Pin- lapo with pollen of Abies Cephaloniea. By this operation a single seed was obtained which produced a plant distinguished by it* extreme vigor, resembling its pollen parent in habit, in the length, coloring, and subdistichous arrangement of the leaves, and in the shape of its cones, while in the shape and arrangement of it* branches and in the thickness of its leaves it resembles Abies Pin- sapo. (See Bailly, I. c. 1880, 116. Beissner, Handb. Nadelh. 443.)

i46ie> insignis of French gardens is believed to be a hybrid obtained from seeds produced on a plant of Abies Pinsapo in Mon- sieur Renault's numery at Bulgn^ville and accidentally fertilized with the pollen of an Abies Nordmanniana growing near it. An- other supposed hybrid, Abies Nordmanniafia speciom, was created by the French nurseryman Creux by fertilizing the pistillate flowers of Abies Nordmanniana with the pollen of Abies Pinsapo. (See Bailly, I. c. 1800, 230. Beissner, I. c. 437, 438.)

' Abies religiosa, Lindley, Penny Cycl. i. 31 (1833). Carri^re, TraUe Conif. 201. RoezI, Cat. Conif. Mex. 0. Engelmann, ;. c. iii. GOO.— Hemsley, Bol. Biol. Am. Cent. iii. 100. Masters, Card. Chron. n. ser. xxiii. 60, f. 13 ; ser. 3, ix. 304, f. 60, 70 ; Jour. Linn. Soc. xxii. 104, t. 6. Beissner, {. c. 400.

Pinus religiosa, Humboldt, Bonpland & Kunth, A'ov. Gen. el

Spec. ii. 4 (1817). Kunth, Syn. PI. jEquin. i. 352. Schlech-

tendal & Chamisso, Linnaa, t. 77. Lambert, Pinus, cd. 2, ii. t.

Schlechtendal, Linn<ea, xii. 486. Antoine, Conif. 76, t. 28, f.

2. Endlicher, Syn. Conif. 02. Parlatore, Dc Candolle Prodr.

xvi. pt. u. 420. W. R. M'Nab, Proc. R. Irish Acad. ser. 2, u.

676, t. 46, f 2. Pinus hirlella, Humboldt, Bonpland Sc Kunth, /. c. (1817).

Kunth, {. e. Hchleohtendal, /. c. 487. Antoine, {. e. 80.

Endlicher, I. c. 03. Abiu kirlsUa, Lindley, i c. (1833). Carri6re, /. c. 203.—

RoezI, (. c. Picea religiosa, Loudon, Arb. Brit. iv. 2340, f. 2267 (1838).

A, Murray, Oard. Chron. n. ser. v. 660, f, 100. Picea hirlella, Loudon, I. e. (1838).

Abits religiosa, which grows in forests on the highlands of central Mexico up to elevations of nine thousand feet above the sea and extends to the mounl«iiis of Ouateraala, is a large tree sometimes one hundred and Hfty feet in height, with acute or rarely obtuse leaves, dark green and lustrous above and silvery white below, and oblong-oval purple cones, their bracts being acute or cuspidate and lunger than the scales. Discovered by Humboldt and introduced into the gardens of Europe by Hartweg in 1838, Abies religiosa flourishes in sheltered positions in the extreme southern part of Great Britain, where it has produced its cones, and on the shores of the Italian lakes where no other Fir-tree excels it in lustre o( foliage or in the beauty of its brightly colored cones. The speclflo name of the Mexican Fir was given to it in allusion to the use of its branches in Mexico for the decoration of churches.

' Abies Sachalinmsis, Masters, Gard. Chron. n. ser. xii. 688, (,

07 (1870); Jour. Linn. Soc. xviii. 617 (Coni/er< of Japan).—

Veitch, Man. Cony. 106. Mayr, Mmog. Abiel. Jap. 42, t. 3, f. 6.

Abies Veilchi, var. Sachalinmsis, F. Schmidt, Mem. Acad. Sci.

SI. Pitersbourg, sdr. 7, xii. 176, t. 4, f. 13-17 (Fl. Sachalinensis)

(1868). Beissner, I. c. 461, f. 127.

Abies Sachalinensis is scattered among the decidnoas-Icavcd trees which clothe the low bills of central Yezo, and forms extensive for- ests in the extreme northern part of the island and in Saghalin. It is a tall slender pyramidal tree, with pale bark and long narrow dark green leaves, oblong-cylindrical pale brown cones three or four inches long, with exsorted bracts, and white winter-buds, by which it can always be distinguished from the other Japanese Fir- trees. The wood is used for building and for packing-cases. A curious form of this tree has been noticed by Professor Miyabe in central Yezo with red bark, dark red wood, and red cone-bract*. (See Sargent, Forest Fl. Jap. 83.) Abies Sachalinensis is hardy in eastern Massachusetts, where it grows more rapidly than any other species of Fir-tree, but as it begins to open its buds early in the spring it is usually destroyed in western Europe by lata frosts.

Abies Sibirica, Ledebour, Fl. All. iv. 202 (1833); Icon. Fl. Ross. T. 28, t. 600. Link, Linnaa, xv. 627. Trautvetter, Middendorff Reise, i. pt. ii. 170 {PI. y«i.). CarriAre, I.e. 226. Trautvetter & Meyer, Middendorff Reise, ii. pt. i. 86 (Fl. Ochol.). Maxi- mowicz, Mem. Sav. 6tr. Acad. Sci. St. Petersbourg, ix. 260 (Fl, Amur.). Kegel, Mem. Aead. Sci. St. Petersbourg, tit. 7, iv. No. 4, 136(7>nr. Fl. fjsiir.). Beketow, Btdl. Soc. Nat. Mosc.xxxyiii. pt. i. 162, t. 6. Bertrand, Ann. Sci. Nat. air. 6, xx. 06. Masters, Jour. Linn. Soc. xviii. 610 (Conifers of Japan). Herder, Bol. Jahrb. xiv. IGO (Fl. Europ. Russlands).

Pinus Picea, Pallas, Fl. Ross. i. 7 (in part) (not Du Roi)

(1784). Pinus Sibirica, Turczaninow, BuU. Soc. Nat. Mosc. xi. 101

(Cat. PI. Baical.) (1838). Antoine, Corn/. 64, t. 26, f. 1.—

Ledebour, Fl. Ross. iii. 660. Christ, Verhand. Nat. Gesell. Ba- sel, iii. 646 (UebersichI der EuropiOschen Abielineen). Parlatore,

;

II

!

S/t.VA <iF NtfJiTJJ AM EH I U A.

CONirBRJt.

I.

.: (t ' I

D* CamtiilU frolr. a«l. pt. II, 4lM, W. It. M'N»k, /'r.ir. R.

IrUh Ai-atl Mr. % li tMA, I IT, I lU. Pifta I'uhla, l.uui|im, .\rh llril iv. WX» (IHIIM). Maiiinii-

wloi, lUM. /•*»». MiilH. .innl. Kit Hi. /••Irr.hmry, ti. liW

(/li>uni« imi/ •V/riliK'Atr i/m Amurliinilt), (Ivriiuii, I'mttum,

l.'MI. .W/ir> /'iVAhi, Kiirlwa, I'liulum Wiiliurn. I 111, t. :ill (IM.'HI). />i»w I'uklii, l',ii<llli>li>ir, .Sun. (',m{l. KM (llil?). Turuuui-

now, ''V. Iluwilriut-Diihiiriiii, II, |il, \, 1,'M, /1*IM Sil,iru-ii, «»r. iittii, Currltro, 7'nii/,' f 'mW/'. Vl'Jfl (IWUl).

/(Atn .S'lAiru'ii, wlilnh la llin iiiiljr Klr-lrw iil MMrllii>rii Kiirii|H> ami uortliwi'iti'rii Ailu, ritii|{i<a tiniii iiiirllmrii miil I'Hitrrii KiKii* t<i Kitiiilai'lmlk* miil Miiiignllii, mill nii tlin AlUI MiMiiilRliia ia auiil tu form KruHt |>iiru furi*ata ut iilMvalluiia iif iitiiiiit fmir (IhiiimuiiiI feui iiUivtf thti aeii-liivul. It la A ali,iii|iir |i¥ritiiililitl triT, with \m\tt bnrk, tint lUik gnmt IcitVKa, mill aiimll i<)f||iii|rli>iil iimra. In llir iiiirtli- nutvrii liiiili'il Htutiia ,'l/<i>< .Vifiirliii la very hiiriljr uiiil Kriiwa nip- iilly, but iiaiiiilly liiaiia ita ilmiati Imlill lH<riiri< it la twontji feet liixli, iM'i'iiiiiiiiK rniigi'il uiiil iiiiitltrikKtIvii In i(|i|iti*riiiii'i>, In wratxrii Kuriipu it I'mi aiaruiily ^m ki<|il itll«« fur iimny yora, na tlin young ■hiiuta, which ii|i|H<itr vory tiitrly In tli* atirlng, iin kliauat kiwiya illjiircil hy froat.

" .IftiM H'Wi/,i.i(i,i, l.inilloy, /Viiiij, fyW. I. 30 (IHa.1). Forbe«, /. e. JIT, t, U. Link, l.nmin, i*. ftil'J, Linillry & < lonliin, your. Hnrl. Sm\ l.tml. v. Ull (oaxl. ayii, Ahtn ft(Mi), C'iirri*r«, I. c. !iV!3. lloiaaiur, h'l. Ihiriil t. TIKI, Milati'ra, fliinl. Vknn. ii. Mr. uil. KIT, r. HO; a«r. J, a. ,'Hin, t. t7. lliHikor t lliirtl. C'Ariifi. n, aer. nv. 7HH, f. 171, W/il /■'/, llril. Iiul. ». tW-l. ll«iaanor, llandb. NaiMk. I7U, f. IIM.

/■iniu IfrA/iiiiiiii, LiinilKirt, IHmu, ml. U, I. 77, 1. U (18'JH).

Antuiue, 6'im(/. ill, t, Ul, f, I, tlliilllnlwr, (. r. 100, I'arlii-

tore,;. c. - W, U. M'Nitli, / .'. (till, t. W, I. IH. Piniu iiKclnMu, It, Dun, /'ri«/r, H, Arc/«i/, Ofl ( I81i6). Um-

b«rl, /. I', ii. :i, t. \l. I'irea Wehliiiinn, Uuiluii, /, ,: 'JMi,!. Ituni-^Wa (1838).—

Gordon, /. r. KM). /l/.i« ,p„uil„lu, HtMvb, IIUI, V(ii. il. 493 oust). K. Koch,

Dtntlr li. |it. ii. 'iM.

Aliiti tyeltliianii ia » tmn amuiitlMiiia uiin hiinilml iinil fifty feet in height, with a trunk from thnw 'n llvn niiil iii'maluiiaily t«m fei't in diaiuetar, leavea vury ilark Kronii anil liiatriiiia uii thu u|i|M-r turfaco and ailvery whltu on thu liiwnr, anil i<yllnilrltial or ovoid dark pur- ple oonea from fuiir tu all iiiii|i«a Iiiiik, It la widely aproad at high elovatiuiia over tlis lliinalayita friiiti Afghanlatan to llhotan, aonie- tiraca, ill uuld diinip uMi'i faniiiK tlin north, furniliig, either alone or with thu lliriih, tliu hlghi'al furi-al Iwlli It la often amoeiatcd, ulau, with thB Sprui'u, llin Whito I'lns and Ihn llemluck, and with Uirekea, Maplea, and Hliiidudpndrona In great aiibalpine forests. The wood uf the lliinalayaii Klr-lri* la aofi, pale, and not durable whun eipoaed to thu w««thi>i'| Il la iiaed In iniiuntain regions in the cunatructiuu uf liuiiana and for alilii||lea, and from Hikkiin it is sent into Thilivt. Thu bark la t<iiiployiiil for thn roofs of shepherds' huts and thu twiga and leavea fur fmlderj a violet dye has been obtained friiiii the uiinea ((laiiible, Mini. Imlinn Timhrrii, 408).

Hrandis ilistiiigiiiahea two varlellea uf Ahin Webbiana which

other botaniata have aiiiniitlnie nalderiHl a|iecios. The first uf

them ia a WMniiwi (/',)■«#( /■'/, llril. tml. nv8 [1874]), which he desoriboa aa a auiall traa with ahurter and less bifid leaves and usu- ally shorter and Ihiukur i<uni<a| this furni grows on exposed rocky ridges at higher alevatiiiiia than hia

e Vttulrnw, 1. 1: (IK74), - llolaaner, /, r. 481, I'imu I'imtruui, 0. liun, Lamhrl I'inut, Hi. t, (1837). An-

toliie, /. .' (U, t. -Jl, f -i, Kndlichar, /. .', KM, - Tarlatof*, I.e.

W. R. M'Nab. /. .-. (KKI, t 47, f. 17.

I'ura I'iiulrim', (.oiiilun, /. i: '2.140, f. 'rOi, 'i'iM (IH3H).

(lurdun, /. 1 . 1S7.

.Uiti I'inilrim; HpK'h, I. r. I'23 (t84!i). Koyle, ///. .'VM), t.

HO. - Carrion', I. i: !»1. K. K.H'h, I e. Tin. ll.'rtrand, Ann.

S,-i. Sill. a<tr. r>, II. on. -. Maatera, (. r. 111)1, f. IM.

This ia II larger treu fuund in aheltenid plaeea in gocal aoil with lunger leavea and uaiially cylindrical oonea.

First eultiviited in Kiiro|M' iu U'JSi, jihii» Wrbbiima, although in II few favorable pusitioiia iu (Ireat liritaiii It has grown tu a aiie aiifHeiently large to prtHluee eonea, has nut on the whole proved particularly valuable iia an uruainental tree in Kuru|HS in the United .Stutea it in nut luinly at the north, and southward ii de- atroyed by heat and drought.

" .ihiet A'.irifnuiiinuinii, Hpiich, /. e. 418 (18ti!). ('arritre, I.e. 'jai. Tchihatcheff, .4»i« ,Uirieurr, 401.— K. Kiwh, /. c. iil8,- lloisaier, f. r. Maaton, /. i: 14'.', f. :HI. Hooker, f. Hoi. Mag. ciiv. t. tllKK!. ileiaaner, /. i: 431, f. I'.tl.

Piniui Nimlmnnniivm, Steven, HiUl. .Sih: IVal. Mme. xi. 4fi, t. 2

(1838): Ann. Sfi. i\iU. a<<r. '2, li. tM; llanl. Mail. aer. U, T. VIR,

I. 4;>. Antolne, /. c. 74, t. 28. f. 1. Kudlicher, /. e. 07.—

Ledebour, Fl. liim. iii. 070. K. Kuoh, Linntra, xiii. 206.

W. K. M'Nab, ( r. 01>4, t. 48, f. 'J2. y'lcni Surilmimniana, Loudon, Encyrl. Trte; 1(M2, f. 1000

(1842). Oordun, /. c. 150. /'iV«i IVifAnurinuinii, Carri^re, I. c. 200 (18M). Tnutvetter,

All. Hart. I'etrop. ii. 213 ^Inatmenla Fl. Ron.). Pimu Ahirt, Tarlatore, Fl. Ilal. iv. 00 (in part) (not Du Roi)

(1807); Dt CamlMe Pralr. xvi. pt. ii. 420 (in part).

Abiei yonlmanniana, which is the moat eastern n'presentative uf a group of species uf which .ibia Piceii of central Kurupe is the type, is a tree suinetimes one hundred anil fifty feet in height, with a trunk six feet in diameter, long crowded leaves dark green and lustrous on the upper surface and silvery white on the lower, and oblong-cylindrical or ellipsoidal dark orange-brown cones with con- spicuously exserted bracts. It ia an inhabitant of the mountains on the southern and southeastern shores of the Ulack Sea, including the western spurn of the Caucasus, and ia common at elevations of two thousand feet above the sea-level. Intruduced in IH-IH into the gar- dens of western Kurope, Abies Nordmanniana bus proved the most vigorous of all the eastern Fir-trees, thriving iu soils and situations where the others do nut fiourish, and une of the most useful exutio conifers fur the decoration of the parks and ganlens of temperate Europe. (See Uutchinaun, Trans. Agric. and Highland Sac. ser, 4, X. 141. Masters, 1. 1: 147, f. 30. Webster, 7'riini. Sinlliik At- horii-ullural Soc. xi. 01. Uunn, Jour. R. Hart. Soc. xiv. 80.) The Nurdmann Fir is very bartly in the eastern United States as far north, at least, as eastern Mas.sochusetts, but although dense iu habit and very handsome while young, it is apt to become thin and shabby here at a comparatively early age.

Abies Cilicica, Carriiro, I.e. 220 (ISfifi); Fl. des Serra, xi. 07, t. Tohihatchoff, I. c. 4»t. K. Kuch, Dendr. ii. pt. ii. 221.— Bertrand, /. c. Boissier, /. c. Heiasner, /. r. 448, f. 122.

Pinus Cilieica, Kotsohy, Oeslr. Bol. WocherAl. iii. 400 (1863).—

Parlatore, De CandolU Prodr. I. c. 422. W. R. M'Nab, /. c.

604, t. 48, f. 23.

Abies selinmia, Carriire, Fl. des Serres, xi. 00 (1860). Picea Cilicica, Gordon, I. c. Suppl. 60 (1802).

Abies Cilicica, which is described as a tree from forty-five to sixty feet in height, forms with the Cedar of Lebanon great forests on the Cilioian Taurus at elevations of from four thousand five

CONirBIUC.

I'lf Utort, 1. 1.

•i'On (IHIIH)

,y\e. III. :VM), t. - Ili'rtnkiiil, Ann, M. ill Kuod will with

liiimt, iilthiiilKll ill

^rowli til a iiizi<

IIki wIiuIk |inivi'il

Kiin>|H>; ill thn

•uiitliwuil li d»-

('Hrritrc, /. c. ■loh, /. c. 218.- kiT, r. Itol. Mag.

I. yfiur. xi. 4S, t. 2 ilii;/. nor. 2, T. 22fi, iiliiT, /. c. 07.— iimm, xxii. 20S.

rr<, 1012, f. lOOO

SO). TreotTettor, ..).

lart) (not l)u Roi) part).

rii n<|imentatiTe of ntntl Kurupe i> the feet in height, with iret (lark f;i'°^'> "■"l tu on the lower, and own cones with con- of the mountains on ck Sea, including the at elevations of two in IRIH into the gar- haa proved the most 1 soils and situations le most useful exotio aniens of temperate IligUand Soc. ser. 4, Trans, SfottUh At- . Soc. xiv. 80.) The LInitcd States as fur t although dense in t to become thin and

I; Ft, det Sara, xi. ■ndr. ii.pt. ii, 221.— 448, f. 122. «. iii.409(18C3).— -W. R. M'Nab, I.e.

09 (1860). 02).

le from forty-fiTe to >banoD great foresti a four thousand fire

CONiriR^R.

SILVA OF NORTH AMERICA.

hundred up to six thousand feet shore the se^-level, and griiwa also on the Aiiti'TauriiM ami the Lehanon. It iMiars slender Mat leaves which are often an ineh and a half lung on sterile hraiiehss, and are dark green above and nilvery white uii the lower surface, and cones wliirh are soiiictiiiies ti<ii iiiiiheii in ii-iigtli.

Abia CUiriia lias pi'oved mie iif the hardirst ami handsomest of the exotic Kir<trees which have lH<en intruiliiced into the northern United Slates, where it grows rapidly and forms u hroiul-liased compact mass nf liraiii'hcn gradually narriiwcd uliovn into a slender pyrainiilal head (Sargent, ttitntfn atut Fitretl, ii. A3H. l>avis, (Jarilrti aiul Forrat, vi. -108). Iti'ginning to cipand its buds very early in the spring, the Cilician Fir sulTers in western IOuro|M from spring frosts, which disligiire and often destniy it.

■■ Aliif Crykalimua, Loudon, /I rA. /Iri(. iv. 2:i2n, f. 2230, 2£M (18.18). Forbes, I'inrlum Wnlmm. 1 III, t. 42. Link, Liniuia, xv. 030. Carridre, Trailf Cm\f. 211. lloissier. Ft. (kimt. v. 7«2. Masters, Oarcf. Chron. n. ser. xxil. 002, f . lUO. Ueissuer, llandh. Nailrlh. 4.18.

I'icra Cfphttlimica, Loudon, Oanl. Mag. ser. 2, T. 238, f. 40-00

(1830); Encjicl. Trert, IU10, f. IIHO-IIMO. (iordon, Pitulum,

140. riniM Ciphalmiea, Endlicher, Cal. Hart. Vindoh. I. 318 (1842))

.<!y.i. ('o"tf- »«• Antoine, CmiJ. 71, t. 27, f, 1. W. H. M'Nab,

/'roc. H. Iriih Ar,id. ser. 2, ii. 000, t. 48, f. 24. Pinxu Abia, e Crphalmica, Christ, Vrrltaml. Sal. CJr$eU. Basil,

iii. 044 (UebeniiM der Kurnpiiuchrn Abietituten) ( 1802). Parl»-

tore, CundoUe I'ralr. xvi. pt. ii. 422. i46ie> CephaUmica rvhuia, Carriire, Traili! Conif. ed. 2, 286

(1807). Dailly, Rev. Ilml. 1880, 300.

Abiei Crphalonica grows only on Mt. Knoa in the Island of Cephalonia where, at elevations of from four to five thousand feet above the sea-level, it cover* a ridge twelve or Hfteen miles in length. (See Napier, The Colonien, 338.) It is a tree sixty or seventy feet tall, with wide-spreading branches, broad sharp-pointed rigid dark green leaves standing out from the branches nearly at right angles, and gray-brown cylindrical painted cones six or seven inches in length, with exserted or rarely included braots (Bailly, I. c. 1888, 078).

Abitt Cephaloniea was first cultivated in 1824, when a few seeds were sent to England by General Sir Charles J. Napier, Governor of the Island of Cephalonia. In western Europe it is considered one of the moat ornamental of the Old World Abies, and in the United States it bos proved hardy as far north as eastern Masso- chuaetts, healthy specimens thirty or forty feet in height existing in several American gardens.

The Fir-tree which is common and generally distributed over the mountains of Greece and Roumelia, often forming extensive forests at elevations of from fifteen hundred to four thousand feet above the sea-level, differs only from the Cephalonian Fir in the usually narrower and blunter leaves of some individuals, and is now gen- erally considered a variety of that species. It is :

.ibies Cephalonica, var. Apollinit, Beissner, / 440 (1801). Abif) Apollinis, Link, I. c. 028 (1841). ( nitre, I. c. 209.

Boissier, I. c. Pinu.i Apotlinu, Antoine, /. c. 73 (1840-1847). Pinua Abia, $ Apollinis, Endlicher, Sgn. Conif. 00 (1847). Abies Picea (B) Apollinis, Lindley & Gordon, Jui.r. Ilorl. Soc.

Land. v. 210 (1800). Lawson, Pinelum Brii. ii. 107, t. 24. Abia Regina Amalire, Heldreich, Gartenjiora, ix. 313 (1800);

X. 208. Picea Apollinis, Gordon, I. c. Suppl. 44 (1802). Pinus Abies, b Regina Amalia, Christ, /. c. (1802).

Piwi, .I'hV», a .ipiJlinis, Christ, /. r. (IWM) Piniu Ahift, I I'linnrbaint, Christ, '. •'. M4 (IWU), Ahir» Crpkalimtia, a /'iirrKMiim, llsuksl Jk lloeksUlter, M|<l, Nad,lh. 181 ( IMIO).

Ahtti Vrpkalmtira, $ Artadiea, llenkal k lloidistelter, f. «, 182 (1801). Abiri Ai>ollinii,0 Panachaira, lliiissler, f . i: (IWH), Ahiti .l/mtlinis, y Unjimr Anuilur, lloissier, /. r. (INM). Alnri) i'riihtdmiia, Var. Rtgiiur .iiiuiltir, llelasnar, (. e, 441 (INIM).

This Greek Fir is interesting in Its power of prndiinliig vlgiiriHM shoots from adventitious buds. This peculiarity was llrst liiilliwil in 18011 in the Fir forests of the district of 'l'rl|Nilil<» In in'iilral Aronilia, where from time iinniemorial the iiihulillsMla of llm M«l||h. iMiriiig villages had Imeu in the liuliit of ohtiiliiliig llinlr aniiill timbtir by cutting out the tops of the trans at dllTsreiil Imlglita according to the site rci|uiriid. It was found that froiii llie ililii branches of these mutilated trees a niiiiilHir of verll"al slmiia iifteii from eighteen to twenty feet in height iiiid from twaUo to Mflaaii inches in diameter had been produced, iiiid that yming Irnas mil at the ground had thrown up, like Pinui rii/utu in Nkw .larwy, a imp. pice growth of vigorous shoot*. (See Kegel, l/nrttnllnni. It, UIIU, f.— Heldreich, f.c. x. 280, f.)

The Greek Fir has proved hardy in eastern Massaubiisett*, wlwiw it has already borne cones.

Abies Picea, Lindley, Penny Cycl. i. SO (not Miller) (IH.'KI), K. Koch, Dendr. ii. pt. U. 217. Kanlan, Pharm.-m»d. Ilol. .'MA, MOO.

Pinus Picea, Uauttat, Spec. 1001 (1703). Laii.Srt, /'(»i«, i. 40, t. 30. Antoine, Z. c. 08, t. 27, f. 2. l,«aak lur, Ft, Rosn. iii. 00. Abia alba. Miller, THcl. ed. 8, No. I (1708). Pinus Abies alba, Muencbhauaen, Ilauso. v, 222 (1770), PinuA Abies, l)u Roi, Obs. Bo/. 30 (1771); lluM. Hmmi. II. 00.— Ilrotero, Hist. ffal. Pinheiros, Ijiriies e Abtliu, UH, - VIsl. ani, Ft. Dalm. i. 200. Endlicher, /. r. 00 (niiil, syri, Vlim Apdllinis). Reichenbach, Icon. Fl. Oemum. si, 4, t, fliljl (Aliln peclinala on plate). Parlatore, Fl. llal. iv, W (eael, ayn, Abies Cephalonica, Abies Nordmanniana, Abitt Apiilliiilt, Ahlns Panachaica, and Abies Regina-Amaliie)\ Oe Candolle f'niilf, I, «, 420 (in part).

Pinus peclinala, Lamarck, Fl. Franf. ii. 202 (1778), W. It. M'Nab, /, c. 003, t. 48, f. 20, 21. Abies minor, Gilibert, Ezercil. Phyl. ii. 419 (170'J), Abies vulgaris, Poiret, Lamarck Diet. vi. 014 (IHOi), ipMb, Hisl. Veg. xi. 410.

Abies peclinala, De Candolle, Lamarck Fl. Frnuf, ed. tl, III, 270 (not Gilibert nor Poiret) (I9m).— Nrnveau fhihamsl, V, 201, t. 82. Richard, Comm. Bol. Conif. t' 8. Link, /, n, IWn. Schouw, Ann. Sci. Nat. ait. 3, iii. 239 (Con^htt d'ltnim),— Hartig, Forsl. Cutlurpfl. Deutschl. 20, t, 9,— Carrldw, /, c, 200. Fiscal!, CeudcA. Foraleult.-Pjl. 17, t. I, f, 1-7, = WIIU komm & Lange, Prodr. Fl. Hispan. i. 10, Ilertrand, Aim, Ht'l, Nat. ait. 0, ix, 94 Laguna, Con\feras y A menuioia* li»imMiu, 31; Fl. Foralal Espanda, pt. i. 24, t. 1. Boissier, (, i', 701, - . Colmeiro, Enum, PI. Hispano-Lusilana, iv. 707. ileissiiiiri /, >', 428, f. 118, 119. Herder, Bol. Jahrb. xiv. 1(10 (/■'/, /fi/ni;(, flufu lands). Ilempel & Wilhelm, Bdume und Slrlluehir, i, W), t, 44> 49, t. 2.

Abies taxifolia, Desfontaine*, Hist. Arb. ii, 070 (not Iwtmborl) (1800), /litM ezceba, Link, Abhand. Akad. Bert. 1897, INK (IHOO),

100

SILVA OF NORTH AMERICA.

CONUERA.

i

Picea kukunaria, Wenderotb, Pfiam. Bol. Garl. Morh. 11

(1831). Piaa pectinata, Loudon, Arb. Brit. U. WS.9, t. 2237-2239

(1838). Ahiaargmlea, De Chambray, Traite Arb. Re$. Conif. 17, 1. 1,

f. 1, .', t. 5, f. 1 (1845). Pi'nui Abits, a pectinata, Chriat, Verhand. Nat, Gaeil. Basel,

iii. 542 {Uebenicht der EuropOischen Abietineen) (1862).

Abiea Picea, which ii the largest of the conifers of Europe, under exceptionally favorable conditions attains thu height of two hundred feet, and forms a trunk eight feet in diameter. It is a tree with elongated horizontal lower branches, which, on the Jura and the Swiss Alps, occasionally develop lateral shoots that grow upward, and have the appearance of young perfectly developed trees (seo Christ, Garden and Foreit, ix. 273), and a pyramidal crown which in old Hge sometimes becomes round*headed. The leaves are flat, spreading iu two ranks, dark green and lustrous on the upper sur- face and silvery white on the lower, and the slender cylindrical bluntly pointed cones are light green to deep purple and five or six inches long, with slightly exserted bracts.

Abies Picea is an inhabitant of the mountains of southern and central Europe, forming forests on the mountains of Catalonia and Atagnn, and on the northern slopes of the eastern Pyrenees. In Corsica it is the principal tree in the belt above that of Pinus Laricio and below the forests of Beech. It grows also at high alti- tudes in Sicily, on the Apennines, the Jura and the Vosges, and in the Schwarzwald, in .Saxony, Thnriiigia, the Tyrol, and Dalmatia.

The wood of .ihies Picea ir white, sometimes tinged with reddish brown, with sapwood which is hardly distinguishable from the faeartwood ; it is moderately elastic, soft, and easily worked, but not durable; it is used in the construction of buildings and boats, for masts, in cabinf^^-making and wood-carving, and for fuel and charcoal. The barK js employed fur ta..ning leather. By punctur- ing the resin vesicles on the trunk Strasburg turpentine is ob- tained. Once highly esteemed in medicine, this substance was long ago dropped from the pharmacopoeias of Europe, and is now almost forgotten. (i>ee Beion, De Arhoribus Coni/eris, 28.— Dale, Pbar- macolojia, 395. Stephenson & Churchill, Med. Bol. ii. t. 74. Loudon, /. c. Klilckigcr & Uanbury, Pharmacographia, 655. B/-ntley & Trimen, Med. Bot. iv. 262, t. 262.) Strasburg turpen- tine is still occasionally used iu tho preparation of paints and varnish.

Young plants of Abies Picea are able to survive for a long time in the shade of other trees, and therefore this species has been found especially valuable by French and German sylvirulturists for the natural reprtniuction of forests. In artificial planting, how- ever, it usually proves more uncertain than the .Spruce, although the great forest of this tree at Vallambrosa, overhanging the Arno and lielow the s.jmmits of the Apennines, has been perpetuated for centuries entirely by planting.

Abies Picm was introduced into England at the beginning of the seventeenth century, and has since been a favorite with Eng- lish (.lantern, who have produced many noble specimens. (See Strutt, Syh-a Brilannica, 31, t. 6. Loudon, /. c. 2.'t3J.) Abi^-s Picra was brought to the eastern I'nited States early in the present century, but it io not very nardy oven in tho midillu states, and is not usually kept alive here for more than a few years without difHculty.

A number of abnormal forms of Abies Picea are cultivated by European lovers of curious trees. The most distinct of these are tho forms with erect and witli pendulous branches, and one with short branches covered by shoit crowded leaves. (For a descrip-

tion of the garden forms of AUei Pieea, see Carriiie, Traite Conif. ed. 2, 280. Veitch, Mnn. Conif. KM. Beiisner, Handb. Nadelh. 432.)

" Abies Pinsapo, Boissier, Bibl. Unto. Geneve, ziii. 167 (1838); i4nn. Set. Ifat. scr. 2, ii. 167; Blench. PI. Nov. Hisp. 84 ; Voy. Espagne, ii. 584, 1. 167-169. Carri6re, Traile Conif. 227. Will- komm & Lange, Prodr. Fl. Hispan. i. 17. K. Koch, Dtndr. ii. pt. ii. 226. Bertrand, Ann. Sci. Nat. nit. 5, xx. 95. Laguna, Coni- feras y Ammtdceas Espaliolas, 31; Fi. Forestal EtpaHola, pt. i. 35, t. 2, 3. Masters, Gard. Chron. n. ser. xxiv. 468, f. 99. Colmciro, £nuin. Pt, Hispano-Lmitana, iv. 708. Beissner, I. c. 444, f. 121. Pinus Pinsapo, Antoine, Cc-f, 65, t. 26, f. 2 (1842-47).

Endlicher, Syn, Conif, 109. Christ, I. e. 546. Parlatore, De

Candotle Prodr. xvi. pt. ii. 422 (excl. syn.) W. R. M'Nab,

Proc, R, Irish Acad. ser. 2, ii. 697, t. 48, f. 26. Fieri Pinsapo, hoaioB, Encycl. Trees, 1041 (1842). Gordon,

Pinetum, 159. Abies Hispanica, De Chambray, I. c, 339 (1846).

Abies Pinsapo is a tree seventy or eighty feet in height, with a stout trunk usually clothed with branches to the ground, and dis- tinguished by its stiff branchleta thickly set with short broad rigid sharply pointed erect bright green leaves spreading from all sides, and cylindrical gray-brown cones from four to six inches in length. It grows on the mountains of central a>~d southern Spain, and forms great forests on tho Sierra Nevada, at elevations of be- tween four thousand and six thousand feet above the sea. It woa introduced into gardens in 1839 by Boissier, who first distinguished the Pinsapo as a distinct species. In central and western Europe, where it is one of the most generally cultivated and handsomest of the Fir-trees, it has already grown to a large size, but in the eastern United States it never really flourishes, although it is pos- sible to keep it alive for many years in favorable situations even OS far north as eastern Massachusetts, (Sargent, Garden and For- est, vi. 458.)

" Abies Baborensis, Letoumeux, Cat, Arb, et Arbust. d'Algerie (1888).

AInes Pinsapo, var. Baborensis, Cosson, Bull, Soc, Bot. France,

viii. tJO? (1801); Annuaire Soc. Imp, d'Acclimatation, 1863,299 ;

Bev, Ilorl 1800, 144. K. Koch, I, c. 227.

Abies Numidica, Carri^re, Rev, Hort. 1860, 106, 203 j Traite

Conif. ed. 2, 305. Veitch, I. e. 103. Masters, I. c. ser. 3,

iii. 140, f. 23. Trabut, Rev. Gen. Bot. i. 405, t. 17, 18.

Beissner, /. c, 447. Koehno, Deutsche Dendr, 16. Pinus Pinsapo, Parlatore, /. c, (in part) (not Boissier)

(1868). Picea Numidica, Gordon, Pinetum, ed. 2, 220 (1875). Pinus Babor,^is, W. R. M'Nab, ;. c. t. 48, f. 27 (1877). The Algerian Fir, mingling with thu Mt. Atlas Cedar, in- habits the slopes of Mt. Babor and Mt. Tababor, in the Province of Constantine, at elevations of from four to six thousand feet above the level of the sea. It is a tree sixty or seventy feet in height, with a slender trunk, spreading branches forming a compact pyr- amidal head, crowded dark grccu flat pointed or emarginate leaves, and cylindrical dull grayish brown cones from Ave to eight inches in length, their bracts being shorter or longer than their scales. Introduced into the gardens of central Kurupo in 1804, Abies Ba- borensis has proved hartly in France and Kngland, and one of the most attractive members of the genus as a garden plant.

" TheCas(;ade Mountains in Oregon must, perhnps, l)e regarded as the headquarters of the genus Abies, for on that part of tho range which is south of the Columbia Kiver, and which is njt over one hundred and seventy miles long, are congregated six species,

CONlFERiB.

i6re, Traili Cmi/. , Handb. Nadelh.

ziii. 167 (1838); Hup. 84; Voy.

mi/. 227 Will-

Koch, Dtndr. ii.

Laguna, Coni- ^upaiiola, pt. i. 36,

. 99. Colmciro, I. c. 444, f. 121. 2 (1842-47).—

Parlatore, De - W. R. M'Nab,

(1842). Gordon,

)45). in height, with a ground, and dla- ih short broad rigid ling from all aides, lix inches in length, mtbem Spain, and ; elevations of be- >ve the sea. It was > first distinguished nd western Europe, and handsomest of ;e size, but in the although it is pos- iible situations even nt. Garden and For-

el Arbiut. d'Algerie

dl. Soc. Bot. France, imalalim, 18C3, 209 ;

M, 106, 203; Traite Masters, {. r. aer. 3, i. 405, t 17, 18. r. 10. ut) (not Boisaier)

i20 (1875). , f. 27 (1877). t. Atlas Cedar, in- bor, in the Province

thousand feet above venty feet in height, )ing a compact pyr- 3r eniarginate leaves, 11 five tu eight inches er than their scales. 0 in 18C4, Ahiet /la- land, and one of the den plant, perlinps, be reganled

on that part of the And nhich is not over grcgated six species,

CONIFER^E.

8ILVA OF NORTH AMERICA.

101

Ahiei nobUis at the north, replaced lonthward by Abiet magnifica, Abiet grandit at the north replaced by Abiet concolor at the nouth, and Abiet amabiiit and Abiet latioearpa, extending down from the Columbia nearly to the southern end of the range.

" Saporta, Origine Paleoniolngiijue det Arbret, 77.

" Practically nothing is known of the insects which probably dwell upon the different species of Aoies in the western part of America, and those which infest the eastei.i, Abiet baltamea and Abiet Frateri, have been little studied. Many of the borers which attack Pinus md Picea also infest Abies, but no species peculiar to these trees has been reported. Nearly all the spec'/is of saw-flies, moths, and other insects which attack the foliage of Picea are also to be found on Abies, although a few species may be peculiar to Fir-trees. Various species of scale-insects are sometimes found on Abieii, and a mite of the group Aorina commonly occurs on the young twigs, arresting the growth of the leaves and twisting and distorting them.

In England a woolly Aphis causes gouty swellings upon the leading and other shoots of Abiet nobilis, Abiet amabiiit, and other Fir-trees, preventing the formation of leaders and eventually killing the trees. (See Masters, Gard, Chron, n. ser. xviii. 1091, f. 19, 20.) On the island of Mt. Desert, off the coast of Maine, Abiet baliamea was attacked about a dozen years ago in a similar manner, and hundreds of trees were killed. '

'" The most striking fungus which infests Abiet bahamea, the northeastern representative of the genus, is jEcidium etatinum, Al- bertini & Schweinit^, a rust which is common in cold and wet regions, especially in the mountainous districts from Newfoundland to Michigan, and southward to the mountains «i North Carolina. Of all the so-called hexen-besen, or witcbes-br> jins, sometimes called birds-nest distortions, those caused by this fungus are the largest that occur in the United States, being at times three feet high and three feet or more in circumference. On the affected branches is formed a node from which arise vertical dense tufts of fasciculated branches, so that the distortions which can be seen from a considerable distance look like small trees attached to the branches. In May and early June the branches are paler and more succulent, and the leaves are shorter and stouter than normal leaves, and show the yellow spots due to the spores of the fungus. Later in the sea:^on the spots disappear, the leaves shrivel, and the stems darken, although they last several years and produce suc- cessive crops of spores. This fungus has a very wide distribution, being common in Europe on Abiet Picea and son.e other species, and extendi' to Siberia and Japan.

Another rust, Peridermium balsameum, Peck, is common ou the under side of the leaves of Abiet haUamea, especially in the moun- tainous regions of New England and New York. The clustcr-eups of this species are small and short, the spores are nearly white, and no noticeable distortion is produced. The fungus, therefore, is not easily seen except by a practiced eye, although ultimately the affected leaves become pale-volored. Beside the rust fungi, several peculiar small species attack the leaves and stems of Abies baUamea, esiieciaWy Nectria baUamea, Cooke & Veck, A tterina nuda. Peck, and Meliola balsamicola, Peck. Fusi^porium Berenice, Berkeley & Curtis, the pycnidial condition of some L^iscomycete, forms slate- colored cups with a thin raised margin on tho smaller branches, while the trunks arc often CLVored by tho orange-colored cups of Du.iystrypha Agatitizii, Sacoardo, which seems to prefer this tree to any other, although it is found on other conifers.

The European A bies Picea is attacked by many species of fungi, including a number of small species recently described by Vuille- min (Bull. Soc, lUycol. xii. 33). Tho parasites of Abiet Frateri

have not been well studied, but this tree i* *ttMlf«d by Ptttta croeea, Schweinitz, and Trichotpharia paroiitioil, It. Ilwrtlff.

Little is known of the fungal enemies at tb« Abisi ttt W8tl«rM America.

" Abies Momi, Siebold, Verhand. Bat. Omorl, Hohtl, Wll. ill, fld (1830). K. Koch, Dendr. ii. pt. ii. 227.

Abiet firma, Siebold & Zucearini, Fl, Jap, ili 10, (, 107 (1842). Carriire, TraUi Cmif. 218, A, MhH»/, Tht Ptmt and Firt of Japan, 63 (exol. Abiet honuilepii), f, 60^110, <=• Miquel, Ann. Mus. Bot. Lugd. Bat. ili, 166 (/'to/, Pi Jap,), ^ Bertrand, i4nn. Set. Nat. sir. 6, ix. 08, VtumM A tMMkt, Enum. PI. Jap. i. 467. Masters, Gard, Chrim, Hi M», nil, 198; Jour. Linn. Soc. xviii. 614 (Coni/eri qf J(limn), = Mnyf, Monog. Abiet. Jap. 31, t. 1, t. 1. BeisAH^r, llamllh Nadeth, 460, f- 123.

AbUt bifidr., Siebold & Zucearini, (, it, 18, (, 100 (IMfl), Carriire, 2. e, 214. Bertrand, {. c.

Pinus firma, Antoine, Conif. 70, t. 87 Wo, (J(M0=1«4T), Endlicher, Syn. Conif. 99. Parlatore, De Cawlillh Prmlf. i*l. pt ii. 424 (excl. syn.). W. R. M'Nab, Prof, H, IHth Aeait. ser. ii. 666, t. 47, f. 14 (excl. syn.Pinua brachjiphnlin),

Pinus bifida, Antoine, I. c. 79, t. 31, f. y (W4047), = 15Bd' licher, I. c. 101.

Picea firma, Gordon, Pineium, 147 (1868), = A, Mtirrfty, Ptot, R. Hort. Soc. ii. 361, f. 63-81. Picea firma, var. B, A. Murray, I. c. 400 (tf)()S), Abies firma, var. bifida, Masters, Gard, Chfim, II, Mr, xtl, 100 (1879); Jour. Linn, Soc. xviii. 614 (Coniferi i^ JnpnH), Pinut bifida, W. R. M'Nab, /. c. 088, t, 47, f, Ifi (1H77), AInes umbeltala, Mayr, /. c. 34, t. 1, f. g (IWH)), Abies Momi, tho largest of the Japanese Pirrtrtiiiil Hint Itti itlliab< itant of the mountains of southern Hondo, wliKrx il in said to be abundant in the forests of deciduous-leaved tr^ij^, in tile mmclet best known to the Japanese, furnishing them Willi tlw l<'li'=Wuud «f commerce and one of the chief ornaments uf thtilF \mt\u. The Momi has usually proved disappointing in the l'ilit«i|l Ntitt^H and Europe, where, although it is hardy euau|;li, it enrly limiitliies llilH and ragged, but the Momis in tho temple garilens (if 'I'nltj'n, oftetl one hundred and twenty feet in height, with lull t<|,ii4ii (riiiikn triilH four to six feet in diameter and dense dark pyrAlliiditl uriiwiis u( rigid lustrous acute or bifid leaves, are certainly iiitt mifftntficcl In beauty by any other Fir-trees which men bftvtf (lllillt«d> (See Baf' gent. Fores'. Fl. Jap. 82.)

» Abies Veilcki, Lindley, Oorrf. Chron, IHd), «!), = A, Murray, The Pines and Firt of Japan, 39, f . 09-70, ^ Oitfddli, /, e, Hiippt CC. Carriftro, Traile Conif. ed. 2, 'MO. K, Kwll, I, e, 'MH.^ Bertrand, I. c, Francbet & Savatier, /. (•. 4(IH, == Mwl*"!"!!, Otird. Chron. n. ser. xiii 275, f. 60,51; Jour. Linn, Hm', Kvlll, fitfl, I. 20 (Conifers of Japan). Mayr, /. c. 38, t, 8, t, 4, => IK ;. .inef, /. c. 457, f. 125, 126.

Picca Veilchi, A. Murray, Proc. 11. Iforl Sue, 11, Oil, t, tXl-m (1862). Pinus selenolepis, Parlatore, /. c. 427 (186S), Pinus Veilchi, W. R. M'Nab, I. c. 686, t, 47, t Ifl (1M77), Abies Eichleri, Lauche, Berlin Oarlenieil, i, ((,'), t, (lS(t2),— Hemsley, Gard. Chron. n. ser. xvii. 14fi, = IWIIf, (Jiirdm and Forest, ili. 434.

Abies Veitchi, which is the prevailing tree ill it fiir«st belt be- tween elevations of seven thousand anil tijght tliiiiiiiiiliil feel nlmve tho sea on Mt. Fusi-saii, appears to be iif very hiiiitl illBtrlliutlnii in Japan, and is probably a northern tree (Imliiig its liiimt siiiilhorly home only on the highest mountains u( tbv »lll|iirii, it little known

1 i

1

1

i

i

1

i

1

i <ni

!

i

i

if

U4>f

\w

\

■itV?

102

SILVA OF NORTH AMBItWA.

CONIFBILA.

Fir-tree of the cout of M»nohari» appearing to be identioal with it. This is the

Abia SUnrica, vap. xiephroUpit, Trantyetter, Maximowia Mim.

San. Str. Acad. Set. Si. Pilmbour^ ix. 260 {Pnm. Fl. Amur.)

(1860). Ahief nephroUpit, Maximowici, Bull. Aead. Set. St. Pelertbourg,

X. 486 (Mel. BM. vl 21) (1866). Beisaner, Handb, Nadelh.

467.

Abia Veitehi was aent from Japan in 1870 by Mr. Tboma* Hogg to the Parsons Nurseries at Flushing, New York, and for many years was cultivated in the United States under the unpub- lished name of Abia Japonica (Oardm and Forat, vi. 625). In our gardens it is a handsome hardy fast-growing tree, distinguished from Abifs homolepis, to which it bears a superflcial resemblance, by its shorter and more crowded leaves, its slenderer brauchlata clothed with soft &ne pubescence, and its smaller cones.

" Abia homolepit, Siebold & Zuccarini, Fl. Jap. ii. 17, t. 108 (1842). Carri*re, Traili Conif. 215. Miquel, Ann. Afut. Bui. Lugd. Bat. iii. 106 {Prol. Fl. Zap.). Bertrand, Ann. Sci. Nul. tiT. 5, XX. 95. Masters, Gard. Chron. n. ser. lii. 823, f. 136 j Jnur. Linn. Soc. xviii. 518 {Coni/en of Japan). Majt, Monog. Abiel. Jnp. 35, t. 2, f. 3.

Pinm homolepit; Antoine, Cmif. 78, t. 31, f. 1 (1840-47).

Endlicber, Syn. Cmif. 101. Picta firma, var. *, A. Murray, Proc. R. Horl. Soc. ii. 400

(1862). Abia firma, A. Murray, Pina and Fin of Japan, 63 (in part)

(not Siebold £ Zuecarini) (1863).

Ah,a brachyphylla, Maximowicz, /. c. 488 (1866) (I. e. 23).

Franchet & Savatier, F.mm. PI. Jap. i. 467. Masters, Gard.

Chron. o. ser. xii. 666, f. i.;, 02; /our. Zinn. Soc. zriii. 616, f. 14,

IB U'lmffft iifjilfm). V«li«h, Afan. Conff. 88. Hooker f.

Hill. Miip, mi: t: im.

Pum lim^lfiiliiiUil, I'artatont, Dt Candollt Prodr. xvi. pt. ii.

i!14 aim),

Pinm Tti-hiiimltMm, I'arlntore, {. c. 431 (1868).

Piumi ImwkuiihllUil, iUmhm, Pinclum, ed. 2, 201 (1876).

/'.Wl IlllffHimi, Wi M. M'Nab, Proc. H. trith Acad. ser. 2, ii. fl«0,t. <7,f, Irt(lW).

Ahiet hmiili')iii I* I Iff t<iitnmnti fir-tree of the Nikko and other inuuMl«i» imgi"* lit KCNffal ilapan, on which, at elevations of be- tween fuMF thmmui »uA lite thousand feet above the sea, it is aisntWred vMlff nillMlj' "l' I'l small grows through the Oak and Uirub fiircM IJMt l<*(i<flit up to the great Hemluck belt which ttlutliii* (bti ii|)^»if' ii|ii|iii« lit Dwm mountains. It is a tree rarely murii (IwH figlitj/ lit nltHity f«et In height, with a massive trunk coverud with f)l>\» imfUi InHK dintichoualy spreading leaves dark grauii III) tJMi mififf miftnii» and silvery white on the lower, and oyliiulrJi'itl |lHF|l|i< I'lllifn llniMlly about four inches in length. From other tli«|)»liii«ii ('jr;|ri<|i|i it maj lie distinguished in old age by the bro»4 fiHMM4-li«|l)ii<it licmt fiirtned by the upper branches, which griiw llHir« itf'miljljf (il<iir (lie lop of the tree than those below lliDMi. 'riiN wiiilil In licmiilotially used in the construction of huts in ulpiiM) vWkiffH:

Ahitt hmuhliii, wlil<i|| (ilM been nn inhabitant of the gardens of Kiiropu mxl 111 lliii |iNiiti<rH tlniled States for thirty years, grows vlgiirimnly in l'Hlll«i«llim, atiil U very hardy in eastern Massachu- ■ells, wIlffM it lilt* >{\¥>>m\ii proiiiiccd its cones, and in its young »\Ma in 1111)1 III llw ImwtMilneiit and most satisfactory of the exotic nuuifurii, hIMhiiihIi iih IIim oldest plants tbe middle branches have almiuiy iiynF^fiiwH imd iitfrshadowed those below them.

« hti mf>, i itfjrt, m^.

h

CONIFBILS.

88 Hooker f.

'rodr. zri. pt. ii.

8).

1 (1876). Acad, sor. 2, ii.

likko and other

levatioiu of be-

To the aes, it is

:b tbe Oak and

lock belt which

is a tree rarely

maasiTe trunk

linj; leaves dark

the lower, and

in length. From

old age by the

branches, which

;hnn those below

struotion of huts

>f the gardens of irty years, grows astern Massachu- cind in its young tory of the exotic lo branches have r them.

coNiFEiLE. SILVA OF NORTH AMERICA. 103

CONSPECTUS OF THE NOBTH AMERICAN SPECIES.

EvABiES. Leaves flat, grooved above, stomatiferoos on the lower and sometimes on the upper sur- face, rounded and often notched, or on fertile branches frequently acute at tbe apex. Resin ducts of the leaves within the parenchyma remote from the epidermis. Bracts longer or shorter than the cone-scales.

Bracts of tbe cone-scales oblong, rounded and short-pointed at the broad denticulate apex, much longer tban their scales, reflexed; leaves dark green and lustrous above, pale

below, obtusely short-pointed and occssioually emarginate 1. A. Fbasbbi.

Bracts of the cone-scales oblong, emarginate and short-pointed at the broad serrulate apex, shorter or rarely slightly longer than their scales ; leaves dark green and lustrous above, pale below, rounded or obtusely short-pointed and occasionally emarginate, and on fertile

branches acute or acuminate 2. A. baisamba.

Bracts much shorter than the cone-scales. Bracts of the cone-scales oblong-obovate, Inciniate, rounded, emarginate, and long-pointed at the apex ; leaves blue-green and glaucous, st^matiferous above the middle on the upper surface, obtusely pointed and occasionally emarginate, and on fertile branches thickened

and acute 3. A. lasiocabfa.

Besin ducts of the leaves close to the epidermis of the lower side.

Bracts of the cone-scales short-oblong, obcordate, laciniate and short-pointed at the apex ; leaves dark green and very lustrous above, silvery white below, conspicuously emargi- nate, or on fertile branches sometimes bluntly pointed 4. A. ORAIISIB.

Bracts of the cone-scales oblong, emarginate or nearly truncate at the broad denticulate short-pointed apex ; leaves pale blue or glaucous, stomatiferous on the upper surface, rounded, acute, or acuminate; on fertile branches often falcate, and thickened and

keeled above 6. A. concolob.

Bracts of the cone-scales rhomboidal or oblong-obovate, gradually narrowed in*^o long slen- der t!p8, half as long as their scales ; leaves crowded, dark green and very lustrous above, silvery white below, rounded, notched, or acute, or on fertile branches acute or acuminate,

ind occasionally stomatiferous on the upper surface 6. A. A^iABlLlg.

UBACTEAT.G. Leaves flat, slightly rounded, obscurely grooved, and without stomata on the upper surface, similar on sterile and fertile branches ; tips of the bracts of tho cone-scales elongated ; winter-buds large, with thin loosely imbricated scales.

Bracts of the cone-scales obloug-obovate, obcordate, produced into elongated rigid flat tips, many times longer than their pointed glabrous scales ; leaves dark yellow-green above,

silvery white below, acuminate 7. A. venusta.

NoBiLES. Leaves blue-green, often glaucous, stomatiferous on both surfaces, bluntly pointed, flat- tened and grooved above or tetragonal on sterile branches, tetragonal, acute, incurved, and crowded on fertile branches.

Bracts of the cone-scales spatulate, full and rounded and fimbriate above, long-pointed, in- curved, much longer than and nearly covering their scales ; leaves distinctly grooved on the upper surface, rounded and often notched on sterile and acute or acuminate on fertile

blanches 8. A. NOBlliis.

Bracts of the ccne-scales oblong-spatulate, acute or acuminate, or rounded above with slender tips, shorter or longer than their scales ; leaves tetragonal, bluntly pointed on lower and acute on upper branches 9. A. hAGIofica.

" .*■■

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fi-ii

CONI'"i;By«.

8ILVA OF NORTH AMERICA.

105

ABIES FRASERI. Balsam Fir. She Balsam.

Bracts of the cone-scales oblong, rounded, short-pointed at the wide denticulate ppex, much longer than their scales, reflexed. Leaves dark green and lustrous above, p ;le below, obtusely short-pointed, or occasionally emarginate.

Abies Fraseri, Poiret, Lamarck Diet. SuppL t. 35 (1817). Lindley, Penny Cycl. i. 30. BafineBque, New Fl. i. 39. Lawsoii & Son, Affric. Man. 374. Forbes, Pinetum Wobum. 113, t. 38. Link, Linncea, xy. 631. Gray, Man. 441 (in part). Nuttall, Sylea, iii. 139, t. 119. Lindley & Gordon, Jour. Hort. Soo. Land. V. 209. Carii^re, TraM Conif. 200. Chapman, Fl. 434. Curtis, Rep. Geolog. Surv. N. Car. 1860, iii. 26.— Henkel & Hochotetter, Syn. Nadelh. 169. S^n^lauze, Conif. 8. Hoopes, Evergreens, 202. Bertrand, Bull. Soc. Bot. France, xviii. 379 ; Ann. Sci. Nat. s^r. 5, xx.

95. K. Koch, Dendr. ii. pt. ii. 216. Engelmann, Trans. St. Louis Acad. iii. 696 j Proc. Phil. Acad. 1876, 173 ; Gardener's Monthly, xix. 308. Veitch, Man. Conif.

96. Regel, Russ. Dendr. ed. 2, i. 43. Sargent, Forest Trees N. Am. lOiA Census U. S. ix. 210. Lauche, Deutsche Dendr. ed. 2, 84. Schubcler, Virid. Norveg. i. 431. Mayr, Wald. Nordam. 217. Masters, Oard. Chron. set. 3, viii. 684, f. 132 ; Jour. R. Hort. Soc. xiv.

191. Beissner, Handb. Nadelh. 462. Hansen, Jour.

R. Hort. Soc. xiy. 466 (Pinetum Danicum). Koehne,

Deutsche Dendr. 17, f. 7, J, K, L. Britton & Brown, III.

Fl. i. 57, f. 127. PinuB Praaeri, Pursh, Fl. Am. Sept. ii. 639 (1814).—

Sprengel, Syst. iii. 884. D. Don, Lambert Pinus, iii. t.

Antoine, Conif. 76, t. 29, f . 1. Endlicher, Syn. Conif.

91. LawBon & Son, List No. 10, Abietineee, 12. Cour-

tin, Fam. Conif. 57 Dietrich, Syn. v. 393. I'trlatore,

De CandoUe Prodr. xvi. pt. ii. 419. W. R. M'Nab, Proo.

R. Irish Acad. ser. 2, ii. 684, t. 47, f. 10. Abies balsamea, ^ Fraaeri, Nuttall, Gen. ii. 223 (1818).

Spach, Hist. Vig. xi. 422. Pinus balsamea, Elliott, Sk. ii. (i39 (not Linneeua) (1824). Pinus balsamea, /3 Fraseri, Torrey, Compend. Fl. N.

States, 3.59 (1826). Pioea Fraseri, Loudon, Arb. Brit. iv. 2340, f. 2243, 2244

(1838). Knight, Syn. Conif. 39. Gordon, Pinetum,

148.

A fast-growing, short-lived tree, usually from thirty to forty and rarely seventy feet in height, frith a trunk occasionally two and a half feet in diameter.* The bark of the trunk is from one quarter to one half of an inch in thickness, and covered with thin closely appressed bright cinnamon-red scales, which generally become gray as the tree reaches maturity. The branches are slender and rather rigid, and spread in regular whorls, forming at first an open symmetrical pyramid, but frequently disappear from the lower part of the trunk before the tree has attained half its size. The wintei--buds are obtuse, orange-brown, thickly coated with resin, and rarely more than an eighth of an inch in length. The branchlets, which are comparatively stout and covered for three or four years with fine pubescence, are pale yellow-brown during their first season, and then, becoming dark reddish brown during their first winter, gradually grow darker and often assume shades of purple. The leaves are crowded on the upper side of the branchlets, even on those of lower sterile branches, by the strong twist at their base, and are flat, obtusely short-pointed, or occasionally slightly emarginate at the apex even on fertile upper brauche!'. and leading shoots; they are very dark green and lustrous on the upper surface, marked on the lower with wide bauds of from eight to twelve rows of stomata, and are from half an inch to nearly an inch in length, about one sixteenth of an inch broad, and often widest above the middle, with an almost continuous layer of hypoderm cells on their upper side and edges. The stam.inate flowers are oblong-cylindrical and about a third of an inch long, with yellow anthers tinged with red ;

' The log specimen in the Jesiip Collection of North American Woods in the Americftn Museum of Natural History, New York, cut on Roan Mountain, near the boundary between North Caro- lina and Tennessee, is ilftccu inches in diameter inside the bark

and one hundred and four years old. The stem of this tree, how- ever, was only an inch and a half thick at the age of liilrty years, while the sapwootl, which is two inches in thickness, shows only eighteen layers of annual growth.

1 T7> n

f.'

106

SILVA OF NORTH AMERICA.

CONU'EILS,

aud the pistillate flowers are oblong-oval, with scales rounded above, much broader than they are long and shorter than their oblong pole yellow-green bracts rounded at the bioad apex which terminates in a slender elongated tip, and denticulate and strongly reflexed above the middle. The cones are oblong-ovate or nearly oval, rounded at the somewhat narrowed apex, usually about two and a half inches in length and an inch and un eighth in thickness, with scales which are five eighths of an inch broad and twice as wide as they are long, dark purple and puberulous on the exposed portions, and at maturity nearly half covered by their pale yellow-grreen reflexed bracts. The seeds are an eighth of an inch in length and nearly as long as their dark lustrous wings, which are much expanded and very obhque at the apex.

Abies Fraseri, which grows only on the highest of the southern Appalachian mountains, where it is distributed from southeastern Virginia ' through western North Carolina to Tennessee, often forms forests sometimes of considerable extent at elevations of between four and six thousand feet above the sea-level, giving to the upper slopes of those mountains their dark and sombre appearance, or mingles with the Red Spruce, the Yellow Birch, and the Hemlock.^

The wood of Ahica Fraseri hi very light, soft, not strong, and coarse-grained ; it is pale brown, with nearly white sapwood, and contains broad inconspicuous bands of small summer cells and numerous thin medullary rayi:. The 8} ecifio gravity of the absolutely dry wood is 0.3565, a cubic foot weighing 22.22 pounds. It has beer occasionally manufactured into lumber for the construction of hotels and other buildings at liigh elev: tions on the mountains of North Carolina and Tennessee.

Abits Fraseri^ was intioduced into European gardens in 1811 by John Fraser,* who first made this tree known to tcionce and whose labors as a botanical collector are kepb green by its specific name. Short-lived and hardly distinct enough in habit and general appearance from the Balsam Fir of the north to be interesting to planters, Ahies Fraseri has little to recommend it as an ornament of parks, from which, since the early years of its first introduction, it has probably almost completely disappeared, Abies halsamea raised from the seeds of cones with slightly exserted bracts gathered in Pennsylvania aud New England being usually cultivated in the United States and England as Abies Fraseri. It has proved entirely hardy in the Arnold Arboretum, where it produces cones in abunJ.iiiee.

Urn \u

iU

' Abitt fhuni vna found in May, 1892, on the slopes of Mt. Rogers, in Grayson County, southwestern Virginia, by N. L. and K. (f. Hrttton and Anna Murray Vail.

' See Sargent, Garden and Forat, il 473, f. 132.

' A bie.i Fraseri is almost nniversally called the She Balsam by the mouDi aiueers of North Carolina, iu distinction to He Balsam, the name given by them to the Red Spruce.

« See i. 8.

EXPLANATION OF THE PLATE.

Pl,<i- : tXJIX. AnfES Fbassri.

1. A branch with staminate flowers, natural size.

2. A f •riiin-.te flowei', niarged.

3. An '. it.h.r, front uuv niarged.

4. An arifior, tus.i (ioni 'uc: w, enlarged.

5. A branch with pistill 'tc H /-ers, iiatural size.

6. A bract of a pistlli. 'e flcn^i. lower side, enlarged.

7. A scale of a pi 'iliat; a.iw- upper side, with its bract and ovnlee, enlarged.

8. A fruiting bram-li, natural size.

0. A cone-scale, loner side, with its bract, natural size.

to. A cone-scale, upix/: side, with its seeds and bract, natural size.

11. Vertical section of a seed, enlarged.

12 An embryo, enlarged.

13. Cross section of a leaf magnified fifteen diameters.

14. Winter-buds, nulural size.

15. A Hee<lling plant, natural size.

Ji ,ii

CONU'EaS.

ey are long

terminates

e cones are

and a half

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tions, and at

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pale brown, uid numerous foot weighing of hotels and

ho first made speciRc name, im Fir of the ornament of D3t completely its gathered in jland as Abies luces cones in

the She Balsam by ition to He Balsam,

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106

anVA OF NORTH AMKItlCA.

«m4 til* ^Mtdla** %fmm bm- oMoBff-ov*], with MAi«<ii roun«i«4 uttovft, mwh tiroiuk<r than thf^ •.

.KofU'r ihiin i^ir oMong {mU yt-liuw-KTwn hrooU roumitHi iit tiwt bna<t npnt whii-h Ujrn. Ill i .>.)-l«v •'l.ni,'ii«*<* lJ(>. iMwl flMili'dUtf mid strurijflv nillox' il .ibtive tliu iniilill*' Th«« QOlu^ oMiDii; t>v tfi '" .:,ir)v uval, r(>uiiii«><l at th» itomewlial narrowttl apox, iiDually uboiil two auJ » i iiiohM iTi Kiit/')> iiut Ml in<')i and an «i|{hth in thickiieiut, with Acaloit which aro tivu eigbtli<« "f iin in- > < itu\ (»i< •- .M '•■<!<' a* ihoy iire loii^, ilark piir()l<' luui (xibtjriilouH on thu oxpoHfd purtii 1 1 ox! u.^.u/il> Mi'<»f)y half c«)vi«r«:J by their jiiiln yjillDW-ffiiifi. nrtoxnl hraotn. TLii sei'ils an- an C'>; ao i«('h in Wngth and nearly OH lonjir a* thuir dark lugtri>u<t wiuga, which an) much expanded and ' - (ibhi{U0 at tbi< »|Hn.

Ahii-r FiiunTi, which grows only <)n liie hi^hwt '.' clu aoutliorn Appalachiuii mountaiiih, wl. it ia d»»tnt>ut«»d from »>uutboa8t«rn Virginia' tlinm^jh w»*t«ni North (/aroliua to 'J'eniu-HKte, ofttu (uxn (oretiU noutotiffifM of <.'ijni»i<ii>nibti> etUnai u* »levat)ori(t •>,' Imtwtwm four and six thouaiuid feet abovo ttw

lea-)f rel, i^ivui); tt with tbf Ti«Hl iiyr ..

The w.>od with iif-arlT whur i

their ihuk and sombre iippiarancu, or raingl'

■lot Ktmiiit', M,i> iwMKj-grainrd ; it is pnle browi , '(>i<-uous 11)11 'iiinmer ccIIm and numi-ron-

']. ■-. '' ■■ , -p , <.,.,•. .,. LMiliiU'Iy .li ■. , <'.,M<)r», a ctihic foot wcigliin^

ivt>u tHfanionally manufuctureti into lunib<*r tor \kn- oonxtructiun of hotoU ami

i;;h I'tevaiioufi on the mountaiuH of North Cttrohna au<i Ti>iitit«t>a)e.

ti-i'i-i'i ' W.11I introduRml into Europ<>un ;;«td«Mn<'in IHll by JoKu Ki, •■••r,* who first 'nad>

kti'iwn to M'lencH airl whoMt iabor« an u I'litaniiitl (-»U^-t<ir »n' l.fpt y^nit ^t it-'- itpcoific name

Shor f^\ aud (Mmity •h<4(iu<.'t <-n<Jugh in habit and i;«nt>>rai apiMtuiwicti frmu th« llaWni Fir of tin

uorth to li* iut^rostitjjf to platit«;r«, Abtt* Frnntri lia« little tn r<^''im(i'«".(t .'f rw nn orniinint of

parka, front wttitb, »i«c« the early years of its first introduction, it ba» (iri.liibly ilf^un coiupletoly

diHap|M-nr«»^l, Abies balgwnea raised from the 8w>il» of cones with slightly exaerted bi-a«ft» i.; .'.b«>rod in

P«nu>iylvania and New England being usually eidtivat«Kl in the United States and England as AhieH

Friintri. It hiis proved entiroly hardy iu tlie Arnold Arboretum, where it produces eouos iu

Kijundanco.

' Ahiet fhueri m* tmuA in M»)', 1892, on \'.i «!i.>p«ti nf Mt. ' Aiify fVii!.ri '.< ulnuj.; tnh-'isftliy cUlnd itui Stu- llaLiiim lijr

K<>K».r», in Crujooit Cimnlj, ••■uliiweiMra Virgn'i*.. by N. 1^ )U»'l Hi^ " ' iwliou U> Il« BaUuD,

K. (J Hrilti-* »iiil Aniii Marrky V"«il ''•

' 6w tkrgvBl, Oariim and Farmt. ii t '"-' i 13a.

flliilN!

KXPLANATKIN OK THE PLATK.

Purr. IVIX. AiiiKii Kiusaai. 1 A branch with numiiiftUi tlownnt, luilJiral size,

2. A '■wuiiiiate Hciwlm, rnl<iri;«<I.

3. An ar.Uw^r. front vi«>w, ei i;ir^«l.

\. \\\ ui'.iior, (KM-n fruit: tieiiiW, enlarged.

S. A branch with piMilluto (linger*, cutnrnl hIui.

fi. A linu-t ot s pintilUin flower, lower side, enlarjffxl.

7. .'V scale of a pwUUalv llu-»er. uppor Hide, wilb its brart anil ovnli«, on!ar^;ed-

8. A ftuitinf; btaiirh, nuturnt mm.

9. A contvBcalo, lower sidti, with its bract, natural nitc.

10. A cono-»calc, upper si(!e, with it-< »uedii aii<l bract, naturul »i/.o.

11. VnrH<:al section uf a seed, eiiUiged. !2. All I'mbrjro, cnlnrgrj.

It). Ct'tM sefUcn of .t luiif magniflcd fifteen diameteru. 14. Wintiir-biidM. nttaral aiui ■\ uioilinn piiwit. Q«tnr>J <ii«.

Ii.rii,

II' Clrlll .

I nn irt.

III: ' '. I ,11,-

ll.'lillH, wbtw- I if 1 1' U tvtl*'

'ct uliovo Uk 'o, or raingi'

|)ale browt! •ml numcrtm- Toot woigliifi;; i>f liotoli) an>i

111 I first mad''

il)t:cific niiim-

111 Fir of tlic

orn^m^■nt of

T coinpk'tf.'lN

l.Tud in

jluJid as AhtfH

iiccs Rouos iu

Liui StH liidiaiii by tiuu U> Hit B*l%&m,

LJilva of Norlli America

Tab DCIX.

H-

W^

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F.m.Hifneltf jo.

ABIES FRASERI, Foir.

ARuHtfiur dirtKi '

I flip. J Ta/iPur, Paris.

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8ILVA OF NORTH AMERICA.

107

ABIES BALSAMEA. Balaam Fir. Balm of Gilead Fir.

Bracts of the cone-scales oblong, cmarginatc and Hhort-pointcd at the wide serrulate apex, shorter or slightly longer than their scales. Leaves dark green and lustrous above, pale below, obtusely short-pointed and occasionally emarginate, and on fertile branches acute or acuminate.

Ablea balaamea, Milltr, Diet. ed. 8, No. 3 (1768). Poirrt, Lamarck DUt. ri. 621. Deafontaines, Hitt. Arh. ii. 679. Du Mont de Counet, Bot. Cult. ed. 2, vi. 474. Nouotau Duhamel, v. 29S, t. 83, {. 2. Link, Handb. ii. 479 i Linncea, iv. 530. Richard, Comm. Bot. Conif. 74, 1. 16. Ledebour, F' Alt. iv. 202. Lindley, Penny Cyel. i. 30. Lawion & tion, Agrie. Man. 373. Forbei, Pinetum Wobum. 109, t 37. Spach, Uiit. Vig. xi.

421. Lindley & Gordon, Jour. Uort. Soe. Land. t.

210. Carribre, TraiH Conif. 217 Darlington, Fl

Cettr. ed. 3, 291. Henliel & Hochitetter, Syn. Nadelh. 176. StJn^clauze, Conif. 6. Hoopei, Evergreens,

rl97. Regel, Rut: Dendr. pt. i. 20. Bertrand, Bull. Soe. Bot. France, zviii. 370 ; Ann. Set. Nat. a^r. 6, xz.

9S. K. Koch, Dendr. ii. pt. ii. 214 NOrdlinger,

Fontbot. 466. Engelniann, Trans. St. Louis Acad. iii. 597. Veitch, Man. Conif. 88. Lnuche, Deutsche Dendr. ed. 2, 84. Sargent, Forest Trees N. Am. 10th Census U. S. a. 210. Schtlbeler, Virid. Norveg. i. 428. Willkomm, Forst. K. ed. 2, 111. Wataon & Coulter, Gray's Man. ed. 6, 492. Mayr, Wald. Nordam. 220, {. 6. Beissner, Handb. Nadelh. 464. Hasten), Jour. R. Hort. Soe. liv. 189 ; Oard. Chron. aer. 3, xvii.

422, f. 57, 68. Hanaen, Jbi/r. R. Hort. Soe. xiv. 458 (Pinetum Danicum). Koehne, Deutsche Dendr. 18. Britten & Brown, HI. Fl. i. 67, f. 126.

PinuB balsamea, Linneua, Spec. 1002 (1763). Da Roi, Obs. Bot. 40 ; Harbk. Baumz. ii. 103, Moench, Biiume Weiss. 71 ; Meth. 364. Evelyn, Silva, ed. Hunter, i. 279. Wangenheim, Beschreib. Nordam. Holt. 37 j Nordam. Uolx. 40. Burgsdorf, Anleit. pt. ii. 167. Willdenow, Berl. Baumz. 218 ; Spee. iv. pt i. 604 ; Enum.

989 Alton, Hort. Kew. iii. 370. Castiglioni, Viag.

negli Stati Uniti, ii. 314. Borkhaugen, Handb. Forstbot.

1. 380. Umbert, Pinus, i. 48, t 31, Perwon, 5yn. ii. 679. Purih, Fl. Am. Sept. ii. 639. Nuttall, Oen. ii. 223. Hayne, Dendr. Fl. 176. Riohardion, Frank- lin Jour. Appx. No. 7, 752. Sprengel, Syst. ill, 884.— Brotero, Hist. Nat. Pinheiros, Larices a Abetos, 31. Lawaon & Son, List No. 10, Abietinece, 11. Torrey, Fl. N. r. ii. 229. Hooker, Fl. Bor.-Am. ii. 163. Bigelow, Fl. Boston, ed. 3, 385. Antoine, Conif. 66, t 26, f. 3. Endlioher, Syn. Conif. 103. —Gihoul, .4 ri. A^. 45. Dietrich, Syn. v. 394. Parlatore, De Candolle Prodr. xvi. pt. ii. 423. W. R M'Nab, Proc. R. Irish Aead. aer. 2, ii. 684, t. 47, f. 11.

Pinus Abies balsamea, Muenchhauaen, Hautv. v. 222 (1770). —Marshall, Arbust. Am. 102.

Pinus taxifolia, Saliabury, Prodr. 399 (1796).

Abies balsamifera, Michaux, Fl. Bor.-Am. ii. 207 (in part) (1803). Michaux f. HUt. Arb. Am. i. 145, t. 14 (in part). Rafineaque, New Fl. i. 39.

Pinus balsamea, var. longlfolia, Law«>n & Son, List No. 10, Abietinea;, 11 (1836).

Pioea balsamea, I.K>udon, Arb. Brit. iv. 2339, f. 2240, 2241 (1838). Knight, Syn. Conif. 39. —Gordon, Pine- tum, 143. (Nelaon) Senilis, Pinaeece, 37.

Picea balsamea, var. longlfolia, Loudon, Arb. Brit. iv. 2339 (1838).

Pioea balsamifera, Emerson, Trees Mass. 86 (1846) ; ed.

2, i. 101.

Pioea Fraseri, Emerson, Trees Mass. 88 (not London)

(1846) ; ed. 2, i. 104. Abies Fraseri, Gray, Man. 441 (in part) (not Poiret)

(1848). Abies Americana, Provancher, Fl. Canadienne, ii. 566

(excl. syn. Abies Fraseri) (not Miller nor Du Mont de

Courset) (1862).

A tree, fifty or sixty feet in lieight, with a trunk usually from twelve to eighteen inches in diameter, but occasionally eighty feet tall, with a trunk thirty inches in diameter. During its first twenty years the branches, which at this period are elongated, horizontal, and very slender, aro disposed in regular remote whorls of four or usually of five, the whole forming a handsome symmetrical open broad-based pyramid. Later the lower branches die when the tree is crowded in the forest, or, with su£Bcient space for their growth, become somewhat pendidous, while those toward the top of the tree, which in old age are short, crowded, and ascending, form a regular sharp-pointed slim spire-like head.

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23 WEST MAIN STREET

WEBSTER, N.Y. 14580

(71«)S72-4S03

106

8ILVA OF NORTH AMERICA.

comrEiLs.

Th« bark of the trunk of young trees is thin, smooth, pale gray, ;ind conspicuously marked by the IWollsH resin chambers ; on older trees it becomes, especially near the ground, sometimes nearly half an ineh in thickness, and is reddish brown and much broken into small irregular plates separating on the lurfoce into thin scales. The winter-buds are nearly globose and from an eighth to a quarter of an itl«h in diameter, with lustrous dark orange-green scales more or less tinged with red toward the apex. Tb« branohlets are slender, and when they first appear are pale yellow-green and coated with fine pubeteenofl which does not disappear for two or three years ; during their second season they are light gray tinged with red, and, gradually growing darker, are often when four or five years old tinged with purple and more or less lustrous. On young trees and on sterile branches of old trees the leaves are linear-lanceolate, straight, and, spreading at nearly right angles to the branch, are remote or crowded ( and on the upper branches of older trees they are often broadest above the middle, usually crowded, incurved and almost erect, and completely cover the upper side of the branchlets ; ' at the apex they are rounded or obtusely short-pointed and on vigorous young trees occasionally emarginate, or toward the top of the tree, especially on its leading shoot, they are acute or acuminate, with short or elongated rigid callous tips ; they are dark green and lustrous on the upper surface, marked on the lower Hurfaoe with bands of from four to eight but usually of six rows of stomata, which, silvery white and very conspicuous during the first season, lose much of their whiteness in their second year ; the leaves are from half an inch in length on cone-bearing branches to an inch and a quarter on the Iterile branches of young trees, end are nearly one sixteenth of an inch in width, their hypoderm oelU^ which are not numerous, being chiefly confined to the edges and the keel. The staminate flowers are oblong>cylindrical and about a quarter of an inch long, with yellow anthers more or less deeply tinged with reddish purple; and the pistillate flowers are oblong-cylindrical and about an inch in length, with nearly orbicular purple scales much shorter than their oblong-obovate serrulate pale yelloW'green bracts, which at the broad apex are somewhat emarginate and abruptly contracted into long slender recurved tips. The cones are obIong«ylindrical, gradually narrowed to the rounded apex, puberulous, dark rich purple in color, from two and a half to four inches long and from an inch to an inah and a quarter thick, with i^es which are usually rather longer than they are broad and generally almoit twice as long as their bracts, r.Ithough occasionally the ends of the bracts protrude from the Males of the mature cone. The seeds are about a quarter of an inch in length and rather shorter than (heir light brown lustrous wings.

From the interior of the Labrador peninsula, in about latitude 56° north, Abiea haUamea, ranging southeastward, reaches the Atlantic coast near Cape Harrison, a degree farther south, and OXtends southwestward to the shores of Hudson Bay, near the mouth of the Great Whale River;' west of Hudson Bay it ranges from latitude 54° north to northern Manitoba, and, crossing by the hills of western Manitoba, the basin of the Saskatchewan, near Cumberland House, to the valley of the

I Two tntva of Abia haltamta, diitingaiihed by Mr. Rcgiimld 6. ttnlikllii of Boaton in the region about Mooaebead Lake, Maine, ■n pHilmliljr genenilljr distributed in the nortbeaatera itates ; in th« flnt the lesTes are crowded along the opper aidea of the fentH«tt(>a \>y the atrong twiiting of their baaea, and in the other the)f %n less crowded, longer, more distichoualy spreading, obtuse tod uft«n emarginate eren on upper branchea, of tougher teiture •Hd of a darker and richer shade of green. The form with crowded Untlti is much more rapid-growing and usually a taller tree, geneMlly Inhabiting dense forests and soon deprired of its lower bfitilelies, while the form with remote spreading leaves grows more ttowl)', Is usually furnished to the ground with branches, and com- lltmily Inhabits the borders of pastures and other open places. TtHt two forms, faoweTcr, often grow side by side under what •PIMM' to be precisely similar conditions. The fast-growing tree

with crowded leaves ia the only one cut in the neighborhood of Mooaebead Lake for lumber.

An interesting form of the Balsam Fir, which rrproduees itself from seeds, derived originally from the Woolf River region of Wisconsin, has been cultivated for several yeara in the Uonglaa Nurseriea at Waukegan, Illinoia. It ia distinguished from the ordinary form of the Balsam Fir by its longer and more crowded leaves, sometimes an inch and a quarter long on sterile branches, and by its longer cones, which are often four and a half inches in length. This Fir, which is of unnsually compact habit, promises to retain its lower branchea mor« persistently than the ordinary Balsam Fir, and to be more valuable for the decoration of parka and gardena. (See Garden and Foral, v. 274.)

' See Bell, The Scoltish Geographual Magazine, ziii. 283 {The Qeographioal Dutribulion of Fore*'. Treei in Canada).

CONirBBiB.

dnspicaoady marked by the

id, sometimeg nearly half an

iilar plates separating on the

n eighth to a quarter of an

ed with red toward the apex.

green and coated with fine

second season they are light

>ur or five years old tinged

e branches of old trees the

to the branch, are remote or

est above the middle, usually

e of the branchlets ; * at the

trees occasionally emarginate,

!ute or acuminate, with short

upper surface, marked on the

' stomata, which, silvery white

tess in their second year ; the

I inch and a quarter on the

>ch in width, their hypoderm

i keel. The staminate flowers

r anthers more or less deeply

idrical and about an inch in

obIongK)bovate serrulate pale

) and abruptly contracted into

narrowed to the rounded apex,

3 long and from an inch to an

I they are broad and generally

the bracts protrude from the

length and rather shorter than

56° north, Abies balsamea, , a degree farther south, and

of the Great Whale River;' toba, and, crossing by the bilk d House, to the valley of the

ha only one out in the neighbothood of «r.

the Baliam Fir, which reprodaeea itself inally from the Woolf River region of ivated for UTeml years in the Uoiiglas

Illinois. It is distinguished from the lam Fir by its longer and more crowded

and a quarter long on sterile branches, >hioh are often four and a half inches in is of unusually compact habit, promises hes more persistently than the ordinary ire valuable for the decoration of parks m and Foral, v. 274.) \ Gtographiiol Magazine, xiii. 283 {T\t t/Forttl Trta in Canada).

CONIVBILS.

8ILVA OF NORTH AMSmOA.

109

Cbtirchill, extends down the Churchill to the divide wbiob fi«pftratog tb« w«t«n of that river from those of the Athabasca, down this stream to the shores of Liike AtbabaMai twd tip the Athabasca to the neighborhood of Fort Assmiboine and Lesser Slave Lake, the TUMt northflru point where it has been observed being in latitude 62° north.* Southward the Balsam Fir ia apread over Newfoundland, the Maritime Provbces of Canada, Quebec, and Ontario, over nortbarn Naw Englaud, and through northern New York, northern Michigan and Minnesota to northeastern Iowa ) * leaving the Atlantic coast near Foreland, in southern Maine,' it ranges along the Appalaobian MeHDtaifia (hfOttgh western Massachu- setts, over the Catskills of New York and western Pennsylvania* to tba bigb tnouutains of southwestern Virginia.* In Labrador Ahiea halaamea is scattered about tba ffiargins ol lakes and large streams usually m moist alluvial soil ; * on the lower Rupert and in tba eottfitry adjacent to Lake Mistassinie it grows in abundance with the' Aspen, the Canoe Birobf and tba Wbite Spfttee. It is common in Newfoundland, the Maritime Provinces, and in Ontario and QuebaSi growing usually in swamps or on higher ground near their borders.' In Manitoba and Saakatebawan it foma with the White Spruce dense forests on alluvial bottom-lands, and it occurs also but no( soniffioiiljr ofl plateaus and low hills up to elevations cf twelve hundred feet above the streams. In tba nortbaaateffi states and in the region of the Great Lakes the Balsam Fir is a common tree in all nortbafB and elevated parts of the country, growing on low swampy ground and on well-drained billaidadi aofflatiaes aingly in forests of Spruces, Hemlocks, Pines, Birches, and Beeches, and sometimes in amail almogt iitipeuetrable thickets; and, occasionally ascending to high elevations on the mountains of Naw Dnglaad and Now York, it is reduced near their timber-line to a low nearly stemless shrub with wida^preading prostrate branches.' South of Maine and New Hampshire the Balsam Fir is found only west of tba Conueoticut River, and is less abundant and of smaller size than farther north, growing in bigb eool situations, where its roots are rarely without the abundant supplies of moisture wbieb ara aaaantial tot its Welfare.

The wood of Abies balsamea is very light, soft, not strong, eoarge-painedi and perishable ; it is pale brcwn often streaked with yellow, with thick lighter colored aapwoo^ , and contains conspicuous narrow bands of small summer cells and numerous obsoura medullary rayit 'i'h« specific gravity of the absolutely dry wood is 0.3819, a cubic foot weighing 23,80 poundgi It ia occasionally made into cheap lumber, principally used for packing-cases. From tba baric of this tree Canadian Balsam, or Balm of Fir, used in the arts, and in medicine chiefly in tlia IraatflMfit cbtonio affections of the mucous membrane, is obtabed.*

> Richardson, Arctic Searching Ezped. ii. 310.

* In 188!^ Mr. E. W. D. Holway found a single tree of AUn halsamea near Decorah in Winneshiek County, Iowa. It hat also been found in the adjacent county of Alamakee, in the extreme northeastern oomur of the state. (Teite L. H. Fammel.)

* In Hay, 1881, Hr. John Robinson found Abiei tabamea on Goose Island, Portland Harbor.

* Rothrook, Rep. Dept. Agrie. Penn. 189S, pt ii. Div. Forettry, S84.

* In June, 1802, Hr. John K. Small found Ahia baltarua on the summit of Ut. Rogers, in Grayson County, Virginia, at an eleviv tion of fire thousand seven hundred and nineteen feet above tba level of the sea.

* Low, Rep. Oealog. Sun. Can. ler. 2, viii. pt. i. 36 L.

' Provanoher, Flore Canadienne, ii. 6S6. Bmnet, Cat. Vip. tig. Can. 67. Macoun, Cat. Can. PI. 473.

One of these dwarf forms of the Balsam Fir, a low anshion- like plant which does not appear to have produced cones, has long been an inhabitant of gardens. It is :

Abiei babamea Hudtonia, Engelmann, Tram. Si. Louit Acad. iii. 697 (1878). Veitoh, Afan. Conif. 83. Beistner, Handb. Ifadelh. 466.

PUito FrmH Hudmki, Ktiigtit, Sun. Conif. 89 (1860).

Abiet FraMfi (A) mna, LlikUey ft Gordon, Jour. Hort. Soe, Imd, V, mi (IMO),

Ahiei Prmtri, 1H, ttudtmt,Gnttiitt, Traiti Conif. 200 (1866).

Piom l^rm^ IMtmim, dotAoa, Pinetum, 148 (1868). * Tba glttb«riHg ef (lutmAn Bslsato, which is chieHy n Canadian industry, ftltbwgb it fl Wtt)«llw«S eolleoted in the northeastern Unitsd KtAtM, maiki m in the province of Quebeo only by the poorest wbito f§efU isd by luiiiaM, wbo eamp in the woods from tba m\M\9 ot Hum yiltil tfa« ulddla of August, the season when it is usually glltlwred, tbe WMUSH cooking and keeping the camps, while tits non imi MUUen ^ther the balsam. This is done with small iron mM| hnitM Nt the top with iron tubes sharpened at the end. Tl)8 tubs It pf«ii««d ggotlist the resin blister, punctures it, and ttm gum A«W« ituwn th« tube Into the can. The yield of a Urge traa it Kboy( §08 ptrandi although the average yield is not mora tb*n bltlf S fmiti, diM man can gather about half a gallon of tba gum in « dwy, bltt with the assistance of bis children, wbo climb into tim nfptt llmbu white the father works near the ground, tba yield pf s ifkf't wefk lot the family Is often a gallon. Canada Balsam wn be ratl««t«d miy mt pleasant days and when the leaves of tlM trei ire dr^i M tiu water shaken from the branches, mixing

110

8ILVA uF NORTH AMERICA.

OOMIVIBJB.

First described in 1704 * £rom trees which were then growing in England in the gardens of the Duchess of Beaufort * at Badmington and oi Biohop Compton * in London, the value of the Balsam Fir for several domestic uses had been known for at least a century earlier to the colonists of Canada* and New England.* Hardy and fast'growing, of a cheerful color and in early years of vigorous and rapid growth, it was at one time popular in the northern states for the decoration of country door-yards. But, too often prematurely old, the naked trunks of these planted trees, surmounted with crowns of scanty half-dead foliage, show that the beauty of the Balsam Fir cannot long survive its removal from the cold moist northern forests which are its home, and in which, even under the most favorable conditions, it rarely outlives a century. Before the introduction of the Fir-trees of eastern Europe, of Asia, and of western America, when Ahiea halsamea was one of the few exotic coniferous trees cultivated in western Europe, it was a favorite inmate of plantations in England, France, Belgium, and Germany, where it now seldom survives.* Several forms, difFering from the normal in their habit of growth or in the color or length of their leaves, are stiU occasionally propagated by nurseiymen.'

with th* gain in tht eua, maku it milky and nnwUhh. (Sm Saundan, Proe. Am. Ptuum. Auoe. zzt. S37.)

Cuada Balaam ii a tianiparant itraw-oolotad reaia faintljr tiagad witii giaeiit and of the ooniiitanoy ot honaj, with a pleasaat ato- matio odor and a ■lightly bitter flaror. A eolorlaaa oil ii ob- tained from it by diitillation in water. Formerly largely need for ita stimalating aetion on the mnooua membrane, it ia now rarely employed in medicine, and ia ehiefly oied for mounting objeeta to be examined nnder the microeoope, for whieh parpoae it is highly eiteemed, aa it remains oonstantly transparent and nneryttalliied. (See Sohoepf, Mat. Med. Amer. 143. Stokes, &K. Mat. Med. ir. 424. Orifflth, Med. Bet. 606, f. 268. Neea von Esenbeek, PI. Med. 88. Stephenson ft Churohill, Med. Bot. ii. t. 74. Desooor- tUt, Fl. Med. Anim. ir. 69, t. S46 (ezel. hak Noarelle OrMans). Lindlay, PI. Med. S64. Woodnlle, Med. Ax. ed. 3, t. t 1. FlOokiger ft Hanbnry, PhanrnKograpkia, 666. Beotley ft Tri- men, Med. PI. It. 263, t. 263. FlttoUger, PlMrmakognoeie dtr Pflamtmreiclue, 70; Am. Jour. Pharm. liii. 603 [Not* on ihe emiy hielorg of Canada Baleam']. Johnson, Man. Med. Bet. If. A. 268. U. S. Ditpeni. ed. 16, 1487. Bastin ft TrimUe. Am. Jam. Pharm. Ixriu. 664.)

> Arhor Balmmm GOeadenee /imdeni, Ray, Hut. P{. Ill, Dendr. S. Abiee; Taxifotiu; odora Baleami OUeademit, Miller, Diet. No. 7. AHee lasi/olio, adore BaUami OUeademit, Dnhamel, TraiU dee

Afwetf i. 3. ' Sea iz. 19.

> See i. 6.

* " Mais dee Sapins, et Pins, sa ponrra tire on hoc pnnilt, pares qn'ils rendentde la gomme fort abondamment, et menrent bien son- Teat de trop de graiase. Cstte gomma est belle oome la Tereben-

tina de Veneie, et tort soaTeraine h la Pharaiaria." (Laaaaibot, Hitlmre de la NomeUe France, ed. Trass, UL 820.)

" II y a des Sapins eomme en Franee; toote la diJIerence que j'y troare, o'est qn k la plnspart il y vient dea bnbona k I'AMse, qui sent rempUea d'nne eertaiaa gomme liqnida qui est oromatiqae, doat on se sert p>)iir les playes eomme des haflmes, et n'a paa gnerea mains de Yertn, selon le rapport de oenz qni ont fait I'ex- perienoe." (Pierre Boucher, Hittoire Veritable et Ifaturdle dee MoMrt et Produetiont du Poyi de la NoueeUe F\ranee, migairemint dite It Canada, ed. 3, 40.)

* " The FirMree is a large tree, too, bat seldom so big aa the Fine, the bark is smooth, with knobs or blisters, in which lyeth clear liqnid Turpentine Tcry good to be put into salTSS and oynt- ments, the leaves, or cones boiled in beer are good for the Searria, the young bads are excellent to put into Epithemea tor Waits and Corns, the raaan is altogether as good aa frankinoeasa. . . . The knots ot this tree and fat-pine are used by the Bngliik instead of candles, and it will bum a long time, but it makes the people pale." (Josselyn, An Account of TVo Foya^ to New England, 66.)

"The Fbr Tree, or Pitch Tree, the Tar that ia made of all sorts of Pildk Wood, is an azcellent thing to take away those desperate Stitches of the Sides, which perpetoally alflioteth those poor Peo- ple that are strieken with the Plague of Ihe Bad:." (Josselyn, Neu England't Rariliee, 62.)

* See Wesmacl, Oarden and Foreel, iiL 494.

' None of the garden forms of AUet baleamea, with the eioep- tioa ot the Tar. Hudtonia, are sulBciently interesting or distinct to repay -ultiTation. (For their enumeration see C^arriW, Traiti Contf. 217.--(3ordoa, Pinttum, 144. Beisaner, Handb. Nadelh. 464.)

CIONIVIILB.

England in the gardens of the on, the value of the Balaam Fir lier to the colonista of Canada* in early years of vigorous and ecoration of country door-yards, jes, surmounted with crowns of >t long survive its removal from even under the most favorable e Fir-trees of eastern Europe, of the few exotic coniferous trees

England, France, Belgium, and ■om the normal in their habit of opagated by nurserymen.*

soaTMnune k la PhanuMle." (Lenifhnt, FVon«, ed. Tro», iiL 880.) imme an FtMuw: tooto U diftacenca que j'j uput U 1 Tient daa baboni k l'*»ie, qui rUine gomma liqnida qui aat otomatique, lea pUyea oomme d«a bafimaa, at n'» pas

ialon la rapport da eanx qui out (ait I'ai- raeher, HitUnre YentalAt tt Nalurdle da du Pay <fa fa NoutuUe f^anee, rndgnnmuU

e.)

a large trae, too, but saMom ao big aa th* nth, with knoba or blUtars, in which lyath ( rery good to be put into ialTas and oynt- Hmes boiled in beer are good for the Sourvie, seUent to put into Epithomea for Warta and ogether aa good aa frankinoenaa. ... The I fat-pine are naed by the Engiuk inatead of n a long time, but it makea the people pale."

of Tvo Voyaga to Ntw Bnjfam*, 66.) Pilch Tree, the Tar that U made of aU aorU HoeUent thing to take away thoaa daaperata , which perpetuaUy afBicteth thowi poor Pe«>-

with the Plague of the Back." (Joaaelyn,

e.,ea.)

irden and Foreit, iii. 494. len forma of Abiee baUamea, with the axoap- ma, are anfBoiently intaraating or distinct to For their enumeration aee Carrikre, Traiti B, Pinetum, 144. Beiianer, Boiidh. NadM.

EXPLANATION OF THE PLATE.

Platb DCX. Asm BAijAint*.

1. A branch with sUr^inata flowen, natonl liie.

2. A sUminate flower, enlarged.

3. An anther, seen from below, enlarged.

4. An anther, tide view, enlarged.

6. A branch with pistillate flowers, natnral size.

6. A scale of a pistillate flower, upper side, with its braet

and ovules, enlarged.

7. A fruiting branch, natural size.

8. A eone-seale, lower side, with its bract, natural size.

9. A eon»4cale, upper side, with its seeds, natnral size.

10. A cone-scale of the long-coned Wiseonnn form, upper

side, with its bract, natural size.

11. A seed, enlarged.

12. Cross section of a leaf, magnified fifteen diameteif.

13. Winter-buds, natural size.

14. A seedling plant, natnral site.

Silva of Norlh Amentu

T»*> DCX

«Af.SAMEA

i.'f

I)

¥.\

i •■

«'Sl'i*s,'4r(.HB .^ 'StK PLATE.

'■'V ' t) MM.

i A fndticig bnncb, natural m/.*.

8. A aon*4«Kln, I'^wfir oiiir, with itji hrtict, luUiirw ^ '

n. A rnni'srali^, iipi^r siUr, witli iu MM<(la, natural "iie.

10. A coiio-»c»lc of ihft I .ngs'anDil Wiscomin form, upper

side, with it< bract, natural size.

11. A seed, erdar);iHl.

12. Crow sortinn of a leal', roai^ified fifteen diametei. .'X Wintflr-builn, imlnnil nhe.

14. A »ee<iiiiig plant, natural kize.

Silva of North America.

Tab. DCX.

■f!

CF.Fo.ton.tM..

Lovp^.daZ so.

ABIES BALSAMEA, Mi

A . Hiorrtt4A.r </i/t\r^

Uhft J ttlhpui Pnru.

A

comriKA.

aiLVA OF NORTH AMERICA.

113

ABIES LABIOOABPA. Balaam Fir.

Bracts of the cone-scales oblong-obovate, laciniate, rounded, emarginate, and long- pointed at the apex, much shorter than the scales. Leaves blue-green and glaucous, stomatiferous on the upper surface, rounded or bluntly pointed and occasionally emarginate, and on fertile branches thickened and acute.

AblM iMdooarps, Nattall, Sylva, Hi. 138 (1840) Lindlay A Gordon, Jour. Hort. Soe. Land. ▼. 210.— Cvrikr*, TraiU Cmif. 221. A. Murray, Pros. R. Hort. Soe. Hi. 313, f. 10-14 1 Garte^flora, xili. 118. Henkd & Hoehitottor, Syn. Nadilh. 161 (in part). Lauoho, Deuttehe Dtndr. ed. 2, 84. MMtor*, Oard. Chron. m>. 3, t. 172, f. 23- 27, 32 1 Jour. Bot. zxvii. 129, f. i Jour. R. Hort. Soe. XVI. 102. Lemmon, Rtp. CaHfomia Stat* Board For. utry, iii. 149 {Cone-Beartr* of Califomia) \ Wat-Amtr- iean CoM-Boaren, 60 ; Butt. Sierra Club, ii. 163 {Coni- fm of the Paeiflc Slope) Leibwg, CotUrifi. U. S. Nat. Herd. t. 49.

Plnua laiiioo«rp», Hookar, Ft. Bar.- Am. ii. 163 (1839) Endliuber, Syn. Conyf. lOS. Diatrioh, Syn. t. 394. Courtin, Farn. Conyf. 67. W. R. M'Nab, Proe. R. Irieh Aead. tn. 2, ii. 682, t 46, {. 7, 7 a i 47, f. 8, 9.

Finos ap., Torrajr, Frinumt'e Rep. 97 (1846).

Abiea balsomea, J. M. Bigelow, Paei/ie R. R. Rep, ir. pt T. 18 (in part) (not HiUer) (1856). Torray, Pae\/le R. R. Rep. ir. pt ▼. 141 (in part).

Able* grandia, Engelmann, Am. Jour. Set. Mr. 2, zszir. 330 (not Lindlejr) (1862). Carri^re, Traiti Contf. ad. 2, 296 (in part). Watwn, King'i Rep. t. 334 (in part). Porter & Cooltar, Ft Colorado ; Hayden'i Surv. Mise. Pub. No. 34, 131.

Pioea amabilis, Gordon, Pinetum, 164 (in part) (not Lon- don) (1858).

Abiea bifoUa, A. Horrajr, Proe. R. Hort. Soe. iii. 320, f.

S4-39 (1863) I Oartetyflora, siil. 119 1 Oard. Chrmt. n.

Mr. iii. 466, (. 96, 97. Hinkd A HoebiUttar, Syn.

NadtlK. 420. MuUrt, Oard. Chrcn. Mr. 3, t. 172,

f. 28-31. Finua Muabilli, Parlatora, De CandolU Prodr. stL pt U.

426 (in part) (not Antoine) (1868). Pioea blfolla, A. Miirrajr, Oard. Ckrtn. n. Mr. iiL 106

(1875). Pioe» laaiooarpa, A. Hurray, Oard. Chron. n. Mr. iv. 136,

f. 27, 194 1 f. 39 (1875). Abiea aubalpiiiA, Engalmann, Am. Nat. x. 666 (1876) i

Tram. St. Louie Aead. iii. 597 1 Rothroek Wheel'r'e Rep.

▼i. 265 Mu'^n, Gard. Chron. n. Mr. xv. 236, f . 43-46 ;

Jour. Linn. Soe. nil 183, f. 12-17. Sargant, Foreit

Tree* N. Am. \(Hh Ceneue V. S, is. 211. CoulUr, Mav.

Roeky lit Bot. 430.— Mayr, Wold. Nordam. 366.—

Baiuner, Handb. Nadelh. 466. HanMn, Jour. R. Hort.

Soe. xir. 477 (Pinetum Danieum). Koalina, Deuteehe

Dendr. 17, f. 7, D-F. F. Korta, Bot. Jahrb. ziz. 426

{Fl. Chileatgebietee). Abiea aubalpina, var. faUaz, Engelmann, 3VaiM. St. Louie

Aead. iu. 697 (1878). Abiea Ariaonioa, Herriam, Proe. Biol. Soe. Washington,

z. 115, {. 24, 26 (1896). Lemmon, BuU. Sierra Club,

ii. 167 {Conifers of the PaeyfU Slope). Abioa laaiooariM, var. Ariaonioa, Lemmon, BuU. Sierra

Club, VL 167 (Conifere of the Paeyfle Slope) (1897).

A tree, occasionally one hundred and seventy-fire feet in height, with a trunk five feet in diameter, but usually from eighty to one hundred feet tall, with a trunk two or three feet thick, and at high elevations often reduced to a low bush with spreading prostrate stems. The bark, which on young stems is thin, smooth, and pale gray or silvery white, on old trees is from three quarters of an inch to an inch and a half in thickness, divided by shallow fissures and roughened by thick closely appressed scales which are light redduh brown or nearly white on the surface, and occasionally soft and spongy.'

> Corky bark ii partioolarly noticeable on trees on tbe San Fmn- eiieo Peaka of Arisona, where a aimilar peouliarity charaoteriu* tbe bark of Abies eoncolor and PteudoUuga mucronala. Upon the strength of the spongy bark of the Arizona trees and of some pe- onliarity in tbe form of their oone-scales Dr. Herriam established his Abies Ariseitiea. I bare seen bark equally corky, bowoTer, on

Abies lasiocarpa in Colorado and eastern Oregon and in aonthem Alberta and British Colombia, ai ' *l80 the scales of cones pro- duced by trees on the Blue Mountains of Oregon, which in shape cannot be distinguished from thcM which grow on tbe San Fran- cisco Peaks.

I ) .

I 1 1

114

8ILVA OF NORTH AMERICA.

CONUriHJC.

I <

The abort orowJitd tough branohoi, which are uiualljr ilightly pendulous below, generally clothe the trunks of the oldeit treeit to nearly their baati and form denie ipire-like iharp-pointed heads which are remarkuhit), even among Fi^t^«ell, fur their extreme alendernosi ; ' or lometimea the lower branchee periih on the largeiit inilividualit, leaving the niauivo trunkit naked for flfty or iixty feet. The winter- bud* are lubglobose, from an eighth to a quarter of an inch in thioknoM, very reiiinouit, and covered by light orange-brown acaiea. The branchleta are comparatively stout and are coated during three or four yuam witii fine rufous pubescence, or rarely become glabrous before the end of their first season ; when they emerge from the buds they are |»ale orange-brown, and, growing lighter colored during their second season, become gray or silvery white. The leaves are flat, with hypoderm cells which form a broken band under tlie epidermis on the upper side and are crowded along the edges and keel ; they are bliie-green, very glaucous during their first season, marked on the upper surface but generally only above the middle with four or five rows of stomata on each side of the conspicuous midgroove, and on the lower surface with two broad bands each of seven or eight rows of stomata ; they are crowded and nearly erect by the twist at their base, and on lower branches are from an inch to an inch and three quarters long, about one twelfth of an inch wide, and rounded and occasionally emarginate at the apex ; and on upper and fertile branches they are somewhat thickened and usually acute, with short callous tips, and generally not more than half an inch long, while on the leading shoot they are flattened, closely appressed, and terminate in long slender rigid points. The staminate flowers are cylindrical, from one half to three quarters of an inch in length and an eighth of an inch in thickness, with dark indigo-blue anthers turning to violet when nearly ready to open ; and the pistillate flowers are oblong-cylindrical and an inch in length, with dark violet-purple obovate scales much shorter than their bracts, which are contracted into slender tips about a third of an inch long, and strongly reflexed. The cones are oblong-cylindrical, rounded, truncate, or depressed at the somewhat narrowed apex, from two and a half to four inches long and about an inch and a half thick ; their scales are gradually narrowed from the broad rounded or nearly truncate apex to the base, and, although usually longer than they are broad, are sometimes much broader than they are long ; they are dark purple and puberulous on the exposed parts, and about three times the length of their bracts, which are oblong-obovate, laciniately cut on the margins, rounded, emarginate, and abruptly contracted at the apex into long slender tips, and dark red-brown.' The seeds ore about a quarter of an inch in length, with deep violet-colored lustrous wing^ which cover nearly the entire surface of the scales, and often become pale yuUow-brown in drying.

Ablen lasiocarpa is an inhabitant of high mountain slopes and summits, and is distributed from at least latitude 61° north in Alaska ' southward along the coast ranges to the Olympic Mountains of Washington, and over all the high ranges of British Columbia and Alberta ; it extends along the Cascade Mountains of Washington and Oregon,* over the mountain ranges of eastern Washington and Oregon, and of Idaho, Montana, Wyoming, Colorado, and Utah, and finds its most southerly home on

' The (lender ipire-like habit of thit tree, which alwsji charao- teriira it and niakei it eaaily distinguishable from the other Fin of western North America, is well shown in the illustration on page 380 of the fourth volume of Garden and Forest, which repre- sents it growing with Tiuga Merleniiana near the timber-line on Mt. liaiuicr in Washington.

' Tlie cone-scales of Abiti latiocarpa vary more in shape than those of any other North American Fir-tree and are of little diag- nostic value. I hare seen them in Montana seven eighths of an inch long and three quarters of an inch wide, and in Ariiona and Oregon nearly an inch wide and half an inch long, while an examination of a large series of cones from different parts of the country haa shown all sorts of varUtioni within theae extreme limits of SIM.

' See G. M. Dawion, Garden and Farttt, i. fi8 ; Rep. Qeolog.

Surv. Can. n. ser. iii. pt. i. Appx. i. 180 B. Macoun, Rep. Geolog. Sun. Cart. n. ser. iii. pt. i. Appx. iii. '226 B.

* The moat southern point at which Ahiei Uuiocarpa haa been noticed on the Cascade Mountains is at an elevation of Bve thou- sand two hundred feet above the sea about ten miles south of Crater Lake, near the extreme southern end of the range {letle £. I. Applegate).

It is a curious fact that this tree haa been unable to cross the lava-covered plains south of the southern end of the Cascade Mountains to Mt. Shasta, and that it is entirely absent from the high California mountains, although Tiuga Afertentiana, its con- stant companion on the northern coast mountains and on the Cas- cade Range, abounds on Mt. Shaata and extenda far southward along the Sierra Nevada.

K>un, Rep. Geolog.

CONiriMC.

SILVA OF NORTH AMERICA.

lU

the Sun Franoiioo P«aki of northern Arizona. On the cooit mountains of Ahuka ' it fornii the timlier* line up to elevation* of five thouund feet above the Ma-level, growing almott habitually in the uoaat region with T»vija Mertentiatvt, and near the head of the Lewei Kiver, in latitude 00°, deMieniHng to the ihorea of Lake Bennett, where it ia very abundant at elevation* of two thouMud one hundred and fifty feet. In southern British Columbia, on the Selkirk Mountains, where it grows p«rhn|>s to Its largest size, Abien latiocarpa is scattered through dense forests composed principally of the western Hemlock, the Patton Spruce, and the Engelmann Spruce, and in all the northern Rocky Mountain region of the United States, where, north of Colorado, it ia the only Fir-tree east of the continental divide, it grows on wet subalpine slopes and plateaus near the timber-line, sometimes forming grove* in park-like openings of the forest, and with the Engelmann Spruce, at elevations of over eight thousand feet above the sea, covers the bottoms of deep canons with continuous forests ; ' on the Cascade and Olympic Mountains it forms the timber-line with Tsuga Afertensiana on high wind-swept rooky ridge* at elevations of from four thousand to nearly eight thousand feet above the sea,* and on the Blue and Powder River Mountains and the other ranges in the interior of Washington and Oregon it grow* with the White Fir and the Lodge Pole Pine, and reaches the upper limits of Iree-grawth ; in Colorado it i* widely distributed, growing usually in the neighborhood of streams at elevations of between Htiven and ten thousand feet above the sea, sometimes forming small groves, but more often scattered among Aspens and Spruces, and occasionally ascending to eleven thousand feet above the sou.* On the Hun Francisco Peaks it principally inhabits northern slopes between elevations of nine and ten thousand fuut, scattered singly or in small masses through the forests of Picea Enqelmanni and I'miiH uriHlitlit!^

The wood of Abies lasiocarpa is very light, soft, and not strong nor durable ; it is piilu lirown or nearly white, with lighter colored sapwood, and contains inconspicuous narrow bands of small snniniur cells and numerous obscure medullary rays. The specific gravity of the absolutely dry wood is (),ii'l7(l, a cubic foot weighing 21.66 pounds. It is probably iittle used except as fuel.

Abien laxiocarpa was, no doubt, one of the Pine-trees which Lewis and Clark noticed in Soptoinlitir, 1805, when they crossed the Bitter Root Mountains in their journey to the Pacific Ocean." Nothing

* " Near Tolcgniph Crack, a tributary of the Skeena River, in about latitude fi8° north on the oaat side of thd coast mountains, the Firs grow higher than other trees, dwarflng at a height of about five thousand feet into low chaparral. This dwarflng seems to be due as much to heavy snow as to altitude, for at the same elevatloi. on ridges where the snow can never be deep the dwarf and erect forms grow close together. This Fir forms beautiful ohaparral, the flat thickly foliaged plumes, broad and fan-ahnpcd, being imbricated over each other by the pressure of the snow, so that the high slopes seem to be neatly and handsomely thatched. In this form it is seldom more than three feet high, yet the bushes bear fertile cones and seem thrifty and happy as if everything were to their mind. In this dwarfed form it reaches a height of flvo thousand Ave hundred feet. At a height of four thousailH feet the trees are erect and more than flfty feet high and one foot in diameter at the ground. The Piue and Spruce of the region lying between the head of Dense Lake aud Telegraph Creek in great part give place to this handsome Fir around the lake, and upward to the north and on the mountains, the tallest being about one hundred feet high and one foot in diameter at the ground and feathered with short branches from top to bottom. The cones, which are three inches long and one inch in diameter, are dark purple, with short dark-colored bracts and very dark seed-wings. The moun- tain side and the slopes on the west side of the lake u forested with this tree." (Muir in lUt.)

Ahia latiocarpa, which growl up to elevations of fully five thoniand feet at the head of the passes which crou the ooast

mountains in latitude 60°, probably grows much farther imrlli on the mountains of the valley of the Yukon Uiver, aUhciiigh I liavw not been able to flnd any record of its oiiitenoe on these iNuuutallls, which arc still very imperfectly explored.

It ia stated by Dr. George M. Dawson, the director of the fieu> logical Survey of Canada, that Ahiet Imiocarim ormtiis I he lliiuky Mountains into the Peace River region, and grows In uiild, duinti situations in the country between Lesser Slave Lake and lliu Athi(» basca River (Can. Nat. n. ser. ix. 320. See, also, Mnuiiun, I'm, Can. PI. 474). 7 have not been able to soo speciiueus, liuwaviir, from any point east of the Rocky Mountains.

Tweedy, Fl. Yellowtom National Park, 11, 74.

' On Mt. Rainier, in Washington, the highest of the viiIiiamIu peaks of the Cascade Range, Abiet laiincarpa grows from four thousand five hundred feet to the eitrenie upper limits uf (I'ua* growth, which is ,it nearly eight thousand fuet. At its jiiwust levels it grows with Abies nobilit and Abiet amabilit ,■ leaving llimn between Ave and six thousand feet, it attains its best sine two thou9.'\nd feet higher, its associate nt high elevations being alwayii Tauga Mertenniana ; above seven thousand feet it '::lings uIusk tn the ground with semiprostrate stems forming great mats of lliiuk branches which, with dwarf plants of the Mountain ilsMluvk anil Pinia albicaulit, cover the most exposed ridges.

* Brandegee, Bot. Gazette, iii. 33.

* Merriam, North American Fauna, No. 3, 120.

History o/ the Expedition under Command of Lemii ami Clark, ed. Cones, U. 698. See, also, Sargent, Garden and Famt, i, yp,

'ill

116

aiLVA OF NORTH AMERICA.

CONimiA.

more waa heard of it until it was found by David Douglas, who collected in the " interior of N. W. America," during his second jo^tmey to this country in 1832, a meagre specimen from which the first description of this tree was made, although it was not well understood until 1876, when Engelmann was drst able to point out its Ixue characters.

Abies laaiocarpa was probably introduced into gardens by Dr. G. C. Parry, who found it in Colorado in 1862 and collected its seeds the following year. Little is known of it as a cultivated plant. Tlie Rocky Mountain Balsam probably always grows slowly,' and in western Europe it suffers from early spring frosts.' It was first raised in the Arnold Arboretiun from seeds gathered by Dr. Parry in Colorado in 1873, and although it is perfectly hardy in eastern Massachusetts, the largest of the plants raised from these seeds is now only ten feet high.'

The most wide';/ distributed of the Fir-trees of the New World, ranging through thirty degrees of latitude, and from the coast mountains of the north, bathed in almost continuous moisture, to the arid mountains of Colorado and Arizona, Abies laaiocarpa lives on for centuries safe in its thin needle-like head, which offers the least possible resistance to the gales that sweep over it continuously, and in its tough branches, which no weight of snow con crush, rejoicing in its hardiness and vigor and seeming as enduring as the rivers of ice which often flow at its feet.

' The log ipeeimen in the Jcanp Collection of North Aneric 'U Wooda in the American Museum of Natural Hiatory, New York, out in Colorado, a only fifteen and three qnarten inches in diame- ter inside the bark and ono hundred and tbirty.«ight year* old, the upwood, whiuh is three qnarten of an inch thick, showing twenty- eight layers of annual growth.

' At least one plant raised from seeds said to hare been collected

by RoesI somewhe'd in North America in 1874, and probably in Coloradc, was alive in England in 1888. (See Syme, Qard. Cknn. •er. 3, iii 686.)

* Among the plants raised in 1873 in the Arnold Arboretum is one only a few inches high, with spreading proutrate stems, which promises to prove an interesting addition to the dwarf conifers that are highly prised by many lovers of onrioo* trees.

EXPLANATION OF THE PLATE.

FI.ATB DCXI. Abies lasiooabpa.

1. A branch with staminate flowers, natural size.

2. A staminate flower, enlarged.

3. An anther, front view, enlarged.

4. An anther, side view, enlarged.

5. A branch with pistillate flowers, natand size.

6. A scale of a pistillate flower, upper side, with its ovules and brack

7. A bract of a pistillate flower,, lower side, enlarged.

8. A fruiting branch, natural size.

9. A eone^cale, lower side, with its bract, natural size.

10. A con»4cale, upper side, with its seeds, natural size.

11. A cone^scale, lower side, with its bract, natural size (from

the Blue Mountains of Oregon).

12. A cone4cale, with its bract, lower side, natural size (from

the San Francisco Peaks, Arizona).

13. A cone^cale, upper side, with one seed removed, natural size

(from the San Francisco Peaks, Arizona).

14. A seed, natural size.

16. Vertical section of a seed, enlarged.

16. An embryo, enlarged.

17. The end of a lateral branch, natural size.

18. Crosa section of a leaf, magnified fifteen diameters.

19. Winter-buds, natural size.

CONiniLB.

or of N. W. lioh the first Engrelmann

found it in tivated plant. BufFers from Dr. Parry in of the plants

ty degrees of re, to the arid bin needle-like ily, and in its and seeming

r4, and probably in 3;me, Oard. Ckrm.

rnolcl Arboretum is Mtrate atems, vhich the dwarf eonifen < treei.

Silva of North Arr'cv

t' K Ffuren tit>i

'%

m

aiLVA OF NORTDAAlEliWA.

covvntL*.

*4 >t until it WM found by Dftvjd Douglas, who collected in th« " tnt«rior of N. W •jrii.j; Ilia M>cond jourii«)i to i\m country in 18.12, a meagre specimen from wliifh the fimt I if Ibis tree wan nude, although it was nut well understood until 1876, when Eii^'lmauii

1^ I tlilq to point oui ith true charactcrH.

Ahtaii lasiocftrpa was probably introduced into gardens by Dr. 0. C. Parry, who found it in Coiiirmio in lWi2 and collected i(« »«d8 the following year. Little is known of it as a cultivutpd jiUnt Til" Jloc'iy Miinntaiu Balsam probably always grows mlowly,' and in western Europe it suffers from ••riy fipring frosts.' It was first raised iu the Arnold Arboretum from seeds gathered by Dr. Parry .: Colofftdo in IH73, and although it is perfectly hardy iu eastern M4S.'iiachusett;s, the largest of the piaoh mined from theHo seinla is now only ten fet^t higli.'

The rnoit widely distributed uf the Fir-trew of the New Wotld, ranging tbroogh thirty degrees «■'. Utundtt, tuid from the coast mountains of iIk! north, bath* "i i:t almost continuous moi.stiire, to the urid wmtitMins of (Colorado and Arizona, Al/iint I'l.- xxirfxi h^.'- yn for centuries safe in its thin ncedle-liti* IuumI, which ofli-rs ihe least possible resistaiicie ( > the gaitw tUit »waep hvit u continuously, and in itA KiiiKh br«n«hi>A, which no weight of snow c*n cntJili, rej«)!ciug in it* hardiness and vigor and seeming •* *i>diiring IU the rivers of ice which oft«n flow at its fiwt.

' IV 'hk •(K'oimrn in tli« Jwop ( WitwU in (Hk AinoiHmn V •Mm" «K( In (!»l»r»4n. !• mky «tv* ■» >• Ull' ifl«Kl> ''

I'WJ^nR* ia Morlh Amerink id 1874, ami probablj iv

. i .„i.„.< in 1888 (8««Symr '■inl.Chrvn

rtum M«<1< aaid to hsTe bMO collaetod Ui»t are highly prixed by ttMy

am. .Ik ' prpmiwrt. t«> pro

''• in the Arnold Arlwretum i..

-M^- ii..->.,trlitt* strnitt, whiih

'Iwarf conifer*

EXPLANATION OP THE PLATE.

Pl.A'nt DCXL AiirRy i a! im iKr*. 1. A brani-li with iiUiiiiinato ilxrurs, natural euo. 'i. A (taminate Uower, «nlart;e<l.

3. All antlMr, front Ti«w, enUrgeil.

4. An *nlb«r, (id* view, e'>!argrd.

f>. A braiKb with pittillate tluwem, natural win: t>. A acaii! of a pintlllase flower, upjwr sidfl, witii ita ovaleii » id liraet Y A Itract of a pistillalo flower, lower side, enlarged. it. A fruiting hrsncb, natural rite.

V. A ci>ue-icale, tower ti'lo, with iU bract, natural (ixe. ^

to. A cune-ticale, upper .tiiiv with ita b«<'<1i;. natural aite.

11. A roi;«-scalu, lower nii!.?, wilh its lirart, natural size (from

the Hluo Mountains of Ori'gon).

12. A cono-aeale, with its bract, lower side, natjral sir.e (from

the San KranriMO Peaks, Arizona). 1.3. A contvscalri, iip]i«r i>i.]e, with one svad rcmored, natoral size (from the San Francisco I'eaks, Arizona).

14. A ^e«d, natural size.

15. Vertical section of n luteA, enlarged.

16. An embryo. enlar^M-il.

17. The end of a lateral iirannh, natural size.

18. Cro4s section of a leaf, inagnitied fifteen diameters.

19. Wiuteivl uua, natural size.

I.'ONIKER*

I, Mv\ rrabablj iv

nold Arlwrctuni Anxe striiift, wbiLh ^.11 ilwtrf ooniCen

Silva of North America,

C.EFairon. del.

Tab DCXl.

EnuHitneitf so.

ABIES LAilOCARPA.Hook

AJiioiyviu- iluva- ' Intp J. Tanrtir Parij-

U-1

oomnRiB.

BILVA OF NORTH AMERICA.

117

ABIES QBANDIS.

White Fir.

Bracts of the cone-scales short-oblong, obcordate, laciniate and short-pointed at the apex, much shorter than their scales. Leaves dark green and very lustrous above, silvery white below, conspicuously emarginate, or on fertile branches sometimes bluntly pointed.

Abiea grandis, Lindlejr, Penny CyeL i. 30 (1833). Forbei, Pinetum Wobum. 123, t 43. Spaob, Hilt. Vig. xi. 422. Nuttall, Sylm, iiL 134. Lindley & Gor- don, Jour. Hort. Soe. Land. t. 210. Corri^re, Traiti Conif. 220. Cooper, Pae\flo S. S. Sep. zii. pt U. 26, 69. Lyall, Jour. Linn. Soe. vii. 143. Henkel A Hoohttetter, Syn. NadeUi. 160. (Nelmn) Senilii, Pinaeeee, 38. S^nfolauze, Conif. 9. Hoopea, Ever- gretni, 211. Engelmanii, Tram. St. Louit Aead. iii. 698 (ezd. var. deru\fiora) ; Oard. Chron. n. ser. zii. 684 1 ziT. 720, f. 138 ; Brewer & Wation Bat. Col. ii. 118. Masters, Gard. Chron. n. ser. zt. 179, f. 33-86, zriL 400 ; zziv. 663, f. 128-131 ; Jour. Linn. Soe. zzii. 174, t 3, f.

4, 6 i Jour. R. Hort. Soe. xiv. 192 Veitcb, Man. Conif.

97, f. 23, 24. Kellogg, Porttt Trees of California, 28. Laaohe, Deuttohe Dendr. ed. 2, 83. Sargent, Forest Trees N. Am. lO't Cinsus U. S. iz. 212 Mayr, Wold. Nordam. 334. Lemmon, Rep. California State Board Forestry, iii. 146 (Cone-Bearers of CaHfomia) ; West-Ameriean Cone-Bearers, 63 ; BuU. Sierra Club, iL 164 (Conifers of the Paeifle Slope).

Pinus grandis, Hooker, Fl. Bor.-Am. ii. 163 (not D. Don) (1839). Antoine, Conif. 63, t. 26, f. 1. Hooker & Amott, Bot. Voy. Beeehey, 394. Endlieber, Syn. Conif. 106 Lawson & Son, List No. 10, Abietinece, 12. Die-

trich, Syn, T. 394. Coortin, Fam. Conif. 67. Parla- tore, De Candolle Prodr. zri. pt ii. 427 (ezol. syn.). W. R M'Nab, Proo. R. Irish Aead. ser. 2, ii. 678, t. 46, f. 4, 4 a. Beissner, Handb. Nadelh. 476, f. 132. Han- sen, Jour. R. Hort. Soe. ziv. 467 (Pinetum Vanieum)

Eoehne, Deuiiehe Dendr. 16.

? Abies aromatioo, Rafinesqae, Atlant. Jour. 119 (Antamn, 1832); New Fl. i. 38. EndUcher, Syn. Conif. 126.— Carri^re, Traiti Conif. 266.

Pioea grandis, Loudon, Arb. Brit. iv. 2341, f. 2246, 2246 (in part) (1838). Knight, Syn. Conif. 39. Gordon, Pinetum, 166 ; Suppl. 62 (ezd. syn. Pieea Parsonsii). Newberry, Paeiflo R. R. Rep. vi. pt iii. 46, 90 (in part), f. 16, t 6. A. Murray, Oard. Chron. n. ser. iv. 136, f. 28, 194, f. 40, 42.

Abiea amabilis, A. Murray, Proe. R. Hort. Soe. iii. 310, {. 3-9 ; 321, f. 40 (not Forbei) (1863) ; Gartet^fiora, ziiL 118.

Abies Gordoniana, Carribre, Traiti Conif ed. 2, 298 (excl. syn. Abies Parsonsii) (1867). S^nMauze, Conif, 9. Bertrand, BuU. Soe. Bot. France, zviii. 379 ; Ann. Sei. Nat. sir. 6, zz. 96.

Abies grandis, a Oregona, Beissner, Handb. Conif. 71 (1887).

Abies oonooTor, Leiberg, Cotitrib. U. S. Nat. Herb. t. 48 (not Lindley & Gordon) (1897).

A tree, in the neighborhood of the coast from two hundred and fifty to three hundred feet in height, with a slightly tapering trunk often four feet in diameter, and spreading somewhat pendulous branches which sweep out in long graceful curves, and on the mountains of the interior rarely more than one hundred feet tall, with a trunk usually about two feet thick, or frequently smaller and much stunted. The bark of the trunk, which on young trees is smooth, thin, and pale, and is marked with conspicuous resin blisters, becomes sometimes two inches in thickness at the base of old trees, on which it is dull gray-brown or reddish brown, and divided by shallow fissures into low fiat ridges, broken into oblong plates and roughened by thick closely appressed scales. The winter-buds are globose, very resinous, from an eighth to a quarter of an inch thick, and covered by thin pale reddish brown scales, those of the inner ranks being united into cup-like covers deciduous in one piece from the branchlets. These are comparatively slender, puberulous during their first year, pale yellow-green when they first appear, and, becoming light reddish brown or orange-brown in their second season, gradually grow darker. The leaves are thin and flexible, deeply grooved and very dark green and lustrous on the upper surface and silvery white on the lower surface, with two broad bands each of from seven to ten rows of stomata, and

J 1

118

SILVA OF NORTH AMERICA.

coHmc&s.

hypodenn cells scattered in an interrupted layer under the epidermis of the upper side and only slightly developed on the edges and keels; on sterile branches the leaves are rather remote, rounded and conspicuously emarginate at the apex, from on inch and a half to two inches and a quarter long and usually about an eighth of an inch vide, and spread in two ranks nearly at right angles to the branchlet ; on cone-bearing branches they are rather more crowded, generally from an inch to an inch and a half in length, leoo spreading or often nearly erect, and bluntly pointed and often notched at the apex ; on the leading shoots of vigorous young trees they are from one half to three quarters of an inch long and acute or acuminate at thb "ipex, which is furnished with a sharp rigid callous tip. The staminate flowers are oblong-cylindrical, and from one half to two thirds of an inch in length, with pale yellow anthers sometimes tinged with purple when they fiiot emerge from the bud, and at maturity hang on slender pedicels one third of an inch long. The pistillate t'owers are cylindrical, slender, from three quarters of an inch to an inch long, a quarttr of an inch thick, and light yellow-green, with semi- orbicular scales and short oblong bracta, emnrginate and denticulate or laciniate at the broad obcordate apex, which is furnished with a short strongly reflesed tip. The cones are cylindrical, slightly narrowed to the rounded and sometimes retuse apex, puborulous, bright green, from two to four inches in leng^th, and from an inch to an inch and a quarter in thickness, with scales which are usually about two thirds as long as they are wide, and are gradually or abruptly narrowed from their broad apex, and three or four times as long as their short piiJe green bracts, which are only slightly contracted below the obcordate irregularly serrate apex, which is furnished with a short mucro. The seeds are th<-ee eighths of an inch long, light brown, with pale lustrous wings from one half to five eighths of an inch in length and nearly as broad at their abruptly widened rounded end as they are long.

One of the most distinct of the American Fir-trees in its widely spreading <;lougated dark green emarginate leaves, and in its green cones with included bracts, Abies grandis atti <ns its greatest size on the alluvial bottom-lands of streams near the coast of southern British Columbia an^l jf Washington, Oregon, and northern California. It is distributed from the northern part of Vancouver Island' southward to Mendocino County, California,' and eastward along the mountains of northern Washington and Idaho to the western slopes of the continental divide in northern Montana, and 80uthv>ard in the interior along both slopes of «he Cascade Mountains^ and to the Blue Mountains of Washington and Oregon, the Powder River Mountains of Oregon, and to the Coeur d'Alene and Bitter Root Mountains of Idaho and Montana. The White Fir does not grow gregariously ; northward near the sea it is scattered always on moist ground through the forests of Douglas Spruces and Hemlocks, and on the bottom-lands of streams with the Tideland Spruce and the Arbur Vitte ; in California, where it does not range inland many miles or beyond the direct influence of the fogs of the Pacific, its companions are the Redwood, which with long naked stems it often rivals in height, and the Tideland Spruce. It is common in Washington and uo>-thern Oregon from the sea up to elevations of four thousand feet above it on the western slopes of the Cascade Mountains ; it is less abundant on their eastern slopes, but farther east is a common tree in forests of Spruces, White Pknes, Hemlocks, and Arbor Vittes, on moist slopes, and in the neighborhood of streams from elevations of two thousand five hundred up to seven thousand feet above the sea-level.

The wood of Ahina grandia is very light, soft, coarse-grained, and neither strong nor durable; it

> G. M. UawsoD, Can. Nat. n. aer. iz. 326. Macoiio, Cat. Can. PI. 474.

' Abits grandit ia abundant and of large aiie on the banka of the Navarro Kirer in Mendocino County from the aeacoaat for a dis- tance of about tweWo milea inland ((«>.'< Carl Purdy). This ia the moat aoutbem point on the coaat of California at which I have beard of this tree.

' The aouthern limits of the range of Atna grandit on the Cas- cade Msuutains of Oregon are atill unoertaio, as it is not always

easy to diatingniah thia tree by the meagre specimens uarally pre- served in herbaria from the nearly related AbUi concoloTf which replaces it in the interior of aoutbcri Oregon. It appeara, bow- ever, to eztcu,-! along their weateru alopes to at least as far south as the head-waters of the Umqua River, and along their eaatern slope to Mt. Jefferson, between Ashland on the west and Upper Klamath Lake on the east of the mountains, the White Fir is always Abia concolor, which also replaces Abia grandit in the interior of California.

COMIFBBJt.

nly slightly unded and r long and gles to the 1 to an inch notched at artera of an tip. The h, with pale at maturity ender, from , with semi- ad obcordate tly narrowed es in length, it two thirds IX, and three id below the ^h'se eighths leh in length

1 dark green greatest size Washington, )uver Island' 1 Washington hv>ard in the kshington and Mountains of it is scattered ! bottom-lands t range inland the Redwood, is common in t above it On s, but farther 1 moist slopes, even thousand

or durable ; it

limens usrally pre- ie» concohr, which It Bppean, bow- least as far south ilong their eastern e west and Upper iVhite Fir is alwsjrs t in the interior of

CONIFKRJB.

MJlt^A Of NOnm AMERICA.

119

is light brown, with thin lighter aohr»A m^ami, md (xmtains broad dark-colored resinons conspicuous bands of small summer cells and mmt»fmi>i itimtife tnednllary rays. The specific gravity of the abjolutely dry wood is 0.354/), a uuhitt hnit WeJ|$l(iHg 22.09 pounds. Occasionally manufactured into lumber in western Washington and OrU|U»», it k med tot the interior finish of buildings, for packing- cttses, and in cooperage.

Abies grandia was probably om (4 tb# V\m4tm% wJiioh Lewis and Clark saw in September, 1805, as they crossed the Bitter Boot MMHfltftJHS m iMt jonrney to the west.' Introduced into English gardens in 18.31 by David Doughw, wfw ft«H4 Jt Heat the mouth of the Columbia River, it has since been ocoasion:i!ly cultivated in i\\» pftri^ m^ grtfdefls of Europe, where it grows rapidly," and gives some promise of attaining the ma.sn\ikm\i \mt^m\m6 and luxuriant growth which make this tree one of the stateUist and most splendid JnfjttbJtftJJk k th« fMests of the northern hemisphere.*

> The History of the Expedition under CommomiilffiDmtim^CIUfii «d. Coues, ii. G98. See, also, Sargent, Garden and t'Hrtitl, i; ^;

Among the trees of largo growth descriM kjf f#wi« m4 ^i»fk ({. e. iii. 831) the third species was said to rascmM* W iM IHtfH tb« Canada Balsam Fir, its trunk being d«scrilM4 «4 (fnm tWH ltH4 § half to four feet in diameter, and iU heigbt Mt fffm cifW? «M* hundred feet This description might (Mppw4 tH f«^'f to Abiet grandii, which is the only Fir-tree t|wt gr»>il/§ in iim Htii^ borbood of ibe camp at the moutb of tb« CnI^wMa KilV Wiwf^ Lewis and Clark passed the winter, and nitefit Htn^ hi^ (itt^if ittifii opportunities for the examination of trees ; bMt Hut ifH¥^ W#f'# ttti4 to be only one eighth of an inch long and me sU^^Ht^l Mf mi iH^ti wide. Dr. Coues, acknowledging the unoertWHty nf ^^m d#<*f»H«*.- tion, suggested that this tree might be Thuya giljimtm: 'fiw M#: tbors of the journal state that " this tre« »fff»f4»f iH l>8l>4itfliiii« quantities, a fine deeply aromatic balsam, resewkllHjg tim tmimm tit Canada in taste and appearance. The suutll i>i»Hlii, AIM, fUi^ Uiig a blister on the trunk and the branches. Ths hitfk fh#t t^ntaUtiti these pistils is soft and easily punctured ; Hm g«H«F)t( ^ppfKfltill-ti of the bark is dark and smooth, but not to r^f^f^i^j^ fof (hut quality p.s the white pine of our country. Jb^ W»d4 H Wiiiy! Iin4 soft." This description evidently refers to snw* *)M'^if<* (tf Pifi The statement tiiii the leaves were only S4f eighl-it n( iVN ilK-h tnHM may have beei the result of a clerical erroF- fi»i ti0 iflt^^itfi may have confounded Ahiet lanocarpa, vh\tM ^\H']I iHH§^ hwift' >i^ii in crossing the Bitter Root Mountains, aw) pffAmMll *lw MM iim continental divide, with the coast species, and i^fl^iHii/ It HMi !i»(g to accept Rafinesque's name of A biea aromtlli':il, lwi^4 fHiif^if 6H the description of Lewis and CUrk's third sf^l'U^) (Nf tht^ Whit^ Fir of the coast, although it is a year swto (ImA iAidkjf'i Attlet j/randit.

* AUei grandie ii described aa growir.g in Belgium sometimes M (h« rate of forty inches in height a year (see Wesmael, Garden tuid Foreil, iii. 404); and in Mr. Schober's Pinetnm in Fatten, Hol- bttd, Abiei grandie has surpassed all other conifers in rapidity of f^«#(h, a tree which in 1S78 had a trunk circumference of twenty- (#0 inches and a height of twenty-one feet four inoheS; having in 1880 a tmnk circumference of forty-four inches and a height of (klrty-flve feet three inches, and in 1892 a trunk oircnmference jf «l*iy-i.ine inches and a height of fifty feet. (See Schober, Tijd. ffedert. Maatich, Bevord. Nijver. September, 1892 [Pinetian Scho- itrianum]. The tallest tree of this species reported in Great Britain )M 1898 was at Riccarton, Midlothian, and was eighty-three feet ibrce inches in heigh' with a trunk three feet eight and one half iMebes in diameter. This tree is said to have grown fifty-three feet in twelve years, or an average of four feet five inches annually. Seteral other specimens in Great Britain were from sixty to sev- eftty feet tall in 1892. [See Dunn, Jour. R. Horl. Soe. xiv. 82. See, also, Webster, Qard, Chron. n. ser. xxiii. 670.])

In th^ Arnold Arboretum plants of Abiee grandie, obtvned in 1880 by Mr. Sereno Watson in northern Idaho, have been kept ^tlve in sheltered positions, but it is not probable that trees of this Sfrecies, to which constant root moisture seems essential, can have tl long life on the Atlantic seaboard.

The log specimen of Abiee grandie, out near Portland, Oregon, iM the Jesup Collection of North American Woods in the American Wtlsenm of Natural History, New York, is twenty-four and one Iralf inches in diameter inside the bark and one hundred and twenty- eight years old, with an inch and one eighth of sapwood showing (wenty..one layers of annual growth.

ii

1.

C'

t

EXPLANATION OF THK PLATE.

Plat* DCXII. Abiks ob&ndu.

1. A branch with lUminate flowen, natural liie.

2. A itaminata flower, enlarged.

3. An anther, seen from below, enlarged.

4. An anther, tide view, enlarged.

6. A brano'n with piatillat" flowen, natural liie.

6. A Mala of a piatillate flower, upper ride, with iti braet

and OTiilei, enlarged. 1. A fruiting branch, natural rice.

8. A eone^cale, lower aide, with iu bract, natural uie.

9. A oone^cale, lower ride, with its braet, natural riu.

10. A cone^ale, upper ride, with ita aecda, natural sik«.

11. A Med, natural size.

12. A leaf of a fertile branch, natural rixa.

13. A leaf of a iterile branch, natural rixa.

14. A leaf from the leader of a young tree, natural riu.

15. Croes section of a leaf roagniflad fifteen diameters.

16. A seedling pUnt, natoral sise.

9,-AvA r.

r.yh '".rr"

^<^

.••;|-V

'-?V

i^-^*^,_

t ***!::;.. ..»**

^'hi

^\z

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*

4T>,

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I

*i^

'P^ ^^

'! i

^rjaMMiWii

Fi '

it* XHK FLATK

B ?

'i. A aMwin--' « '

.1. ABM«Jk>f

4 *tA»<n: W '

li .• '■••I* uf « pMtiiliiU H«»<r, i:y|nri «<!• '

■ml oirule*, rnUri^wl. 7- A fraiiing briuirli, natuml tiu. 8. A cone-»>>»l<>, low«r nido, with it* brti't, iiatnnJ tit* 0. \ eone-tnU. hmer iiide, willi its hrart, nutiirkl mt».

10. A roin^^mlo, up|>ei' udr, w!i(i ii» wwb, nftturiil nUe.

11. A ue<l, natun.1 liis.

12. A lrk( of » fvrtilc !>rivnch, iifctunU ('iM.

13. A l»»f of s •terilf bnuwh, Jiatunil hm.

14. A li-af from Uin WtnUr of a y.«iti|f fr«o. nMarJ kIi* tS. CroM teotioii of a Uaf iiia|{i<iti<Ml Uuieu iliuatum. 16. A Hwdliag plant, nataral aiu

:iH

Silv4 of North Amenc*

Tab DCXll

C. £. Fturan dtrl.

£averi//al sc.

ABIES GRANDIS, Lmdl.

A .Hiccrrnu) liimc ? l,7ip. J. Tancur, far-u.

11

1)

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OOMIF

donti uppc fuloai

AblM

T. !

Ui. n. 1 118

ST.

Soe V.i /on V. Ma ZM Mei Val (Pi Co* hy

64;

Slo

AblM

I*- B.

PlM*

90

PlOM

Oa

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PlOM

heigh one ] yoiin brow horiz fronc oftfa ridge bro\« stem sprei

aiLVA OF NORTH AMEBIC A.

Ml

ABIES OONOOLOR. White Fir.

Bracts of tho oono^goaloB oblong, omurginato or nearly truncate at the broud denticulate ■hort-pointod apex. Loavoa pale blue or glaucous, Btomatiforoui on the upper Burfucc, rounded, acute, or acuminate at tho apex, on fertile brancbe* often falcate, and thickened and keeled above.

Abias oonoolor, LinHlty A Gordon, J<mr. Ifort. 8oe. Land. T. 210 (IMO). Engnlmann, Trans. SI. Louii Aead. Ui. 600 1 Rothroek Wh-Ur'i Jttp. tI. 255) Qard. Chnm. n. Mr. zii. 684, M 14, 1 10 1 Brewtr A Waitm Bot. Col. IL 118. MuUri, Qard. Chron. n. Mr. slli. 648, f. 100, 110, mv. 660, f. 110 1 ur. 3, tIU. 748, (. 147-161 1 Jour. Linn. Soe. xxW. 177, (. 8-11) Jour. K. Hort. Soe. xW. 191.— Vaitoli, Man. Conif. 03. Kdlogg. Forut Trti* of Cali- fornia, 31, Sargent, Fort$t Titti N. Am. lOM C«n.iu« U. S. li. 212 I Qard. Chron. n. Mr. nv. 20. Coulter, Man. Rocky Ml. Bot. 430. Miiyr, WaU Nordam. 334. BeiMnar, Ilandb. Nadtlk. 470, f. 129, 130.— Merriani, NorlK American Fauna, No. 7, 340 {Doath ValUif Kzptd. ii.). lUnwn, Jour. R. Hort. Soe. xiv. 46S (Pinttum Danioum). Koehne, Dtutiehe Dendr. 10. CoTiUe, Contrib. U. 8. Nat. Herb. It. 224 (Bot. Death Vol- ley Sxped.). Lemmon, Wttt-Ameriean Cone-Bearere, 64 i Butt. Sierra Ctub, u. 107 {Conyfert of the Paeifie Slope).

Abies balaamea, J. M. Bigelow, Paoifto R. R. Rep. It. pt. T. 18 (in put) (not Millar) (1806). Torrey, Paeifie R. R. Rep. It. pt t. 141 (in part).

Pioea grandis, Newberry, Pacific R. R. Rep. li. pt iii. 40, 90 (in part) (not Loudon) (1867).

Ploaa oonoolor, Gordon, Pinetum, 166 (1868). Syme, Qard. Chron. n. Mr. iii. 663. A. Murray, Gard. Chron. n. Mf. It. 136, (. 261 ; 194, f. 38, 41.

FlOM liowlana, Gordon, Pinetum, SuppL 63 (1862).

AbiM Lowtana, A. Morray, Proe. R. tterl. Soe. III. SIT,

(. 21-24 (1863) I Qarlef^lora, zllt. 118. Uminon, Hep.

Califiimia State Board Forettry, III. 148, t 16, 10 (Com-

Bearere of California) ; Bull. Sierra Club, li. 164 (ConU

fere of the Paeyfie Slope). —liiMien, Jour, H. tlorl. Hoe,

liT. 102. AbiM BTandla, Carrier*, Trailt Conif. ad. 3, 206 (not Und-

ley) (1807). Bertrand, BuU. Soe. Bot. Franee, ivlll,

378 ; Ann. Sei. Nat. Ur. 6, zx. 04 (eiol. lyn,). Plnua oonoolor, Parlatora, De Candolle Prodr, ivl, pt, II,

426 (1808). W. & MNab, Proo. R. Jrlek Aead. Mr. it,

li. 081,t46, f. 6. Ploea Lowll. Fowler, Oard. Chron. 1872, 304, Abies grandls, var. oonoolor, A. Murray, Oard. Chron, n.

Mr. iii. 100 (1870). Pioea oonoolor, var. yiolaoea, A. Murray, Oard, Chron,

n. ur. iii. 464, 1. 94, 00 (1870). Finns Lowlana, W. R. M'Nab,. i>ro«. R. Irieh Aead, Mr. 9,

ii. 680. t. 46, (. 6 (1877). Abies laaiooarpa, MMtan, Oard, Chron. n. Mr. sill. 8, (.

1 (not NutuU nor A. Murray) (1880). Abies grandls, var. tiowiana, Mutara, Jour, Linn, Bot,

zzii. 176, f. 6, 7 (1887). Abies oonoolor. Tar. lasiooarpa, BalMnar, Handb, Conif,

71 (not Abiee laeioearpa, NuU.) (1887) i Handb. Nadelh,

473. Abies oonoolor, var. Lowiana, Lammon, W*et-Amtri»an

Cone-Bearere, 64 (1896).

A tree, on the Sierra Nevada of California from two hundred to two hundred and fifty fe«t in height, with a trunk ofton six feet in diameter, but in the interior of the continent rarely moro than one hundred and twenty-five feet tall, with a trunk which seldom exceeds three feet in diameter. On young trees, which are very symmetrical, the bark of the tapering stem is thin, smooth, and pale gray brown, and the comparatively short stout branches, disposed in regular remote whorls, stand out horizontally, and, furnished with long lateral branchlets which point forward, form great flat-toppod frond-like masses of foliage ; on large trees, which are occasionally three hundred years old, the bark of the trunk becomes five or six inches thick near the ground, and is deeply divided into broad rounded ridges broken on the surface into irregularly shaped plate-like scales which below are dull reddish brown in color and above are ashy gray, the inner bark being didl orange-color, and the tall mawiva stems, often naked for one hundred feet, are surmounted by narrow spire-like crowns of short branebttt spreading near the very top of the tree and pendulous below. The winter-buds are nearly globoM,

122

aiLVA OF NORTH AMERICA.

CONIFERJt.

from one eighth to one quarter of an inch thick, very resinous and covered by orange-brown scales, thosu of the inner ranks being united into a cup-like cover on the lengthening branchlet and f. Uing in one piece. The branchlets are glabrous, lustrous, and comparatively stout ; during their first season they are dark orange-color, and, becoming light grayish green or pale reddish brown during their second season, they gradually turn gray or grayish brown. The leaves are crowded, distichously spreading, and more or less erect even on the lower branches of young trees from the strong twisting of their base, and are pale blue or glaucous, becoming dull green at the end of two or three years, marked on the lower surface by two broad bands each of from six to eight rows of stomuta, and more or less stomatiferous on the upper surface, their hypoderm cells forming an interrupted layer under the epidermis on the upper side ; on lower branches they are flat, straight, rounded, acute, or acuminate at the apex, from two to three inches in length and about a sixteenth of an inch wide, and on fertile branches and on old trees they are frequently thick, keeled on the upper surface, usually falcate, acute or rarely notched at the apex, from three quarters of an inch to an inch and a half long and often fully an eighth of an inch wide.' The staminate flowers are oblong-cylindrical and from one half to three quarters of an inch long, with dark red or rose-colored anthers which turn yellow in fading ; the pistillate flowers are cylindrical, and from an inch and a quarter to an inch and a half long, with broad rounded scales and oblong strongly reflexed oblong-obcordate bracts laciniate above the middle and abruptly contracted at the apex into short points. The cones are oblong, slightly narrowed from near the middle to the ends, and rounded and retuse at the apex, from three to five inches long, from an inch and one quarter to an inch and tiiree quarters thick, puberulous, and grayish green, dark purple,'' or bright canary-yellow, with scales which are much broader than they are long, gradually and regularly narrowed at the denticulate sides from the rounded apex, and rather more than twice the length of their bracts; these are oblong, emarginate or nearly truncate and denticulate at the broad apex, which terminates in a short slender mucro. The seeds are from one third to nearly one half of an inch in length, very acute at the base and dark dull brown, with lustrous bright rose-colored wings which are widest near the middle, about one third longer than they are broad, and nearly truncate at the apex.

Of the Fir-trees of North America, Abies concolor best endures heat and dryness, and it is able to grow on arid mountain slopes where few other trees can maintain a foothold. Its northern home is on the Cascade Mountains of southern Oregon.' It is common on the Siskiyou and other

sea;

t ,.i

\ ■'•

. i

'I

* The leaves of Abies concolor are usually rounded and only exceptionally notched at the apex, but in dry regions they are often acute or acuminate, and are sometimes furnished with stiff callous tips. In California, on the San Rafael Mountaius, some of the leaves of this tree are acute ; on the San Benmrdino Mountains fer- tile branches bear acute leaves nearly an inch and a half long, terminating in long callous tips, and such leaves are also produced on trees growing on the San Francisco Peaks of Arizona, and on the Ilnachuca Mountains of southern Arizona, and near Santa Fd in New Mexico. On the upper slopes of the southern rim of the Grand CnAon of the Colorado in Arizona, Abies concolor sometimes produces very flat thin strongly falcate leaves gradually narrowed into slender callous-tipped points ; and on San Pedro Martir, in Lower California, its leaves are very thick and rigid, with prominent midribs on the upper side, strongly falcate, acute ur acuminate, with callous tips, from an inch to an inch and a half long and rathe** more than an eighth of nn inch wide. In Colorado and New Mexico the leaves, especially on young trees, are usually but not always of n more glaucous color than farther westward, but the eolor of the leaves can hardly be relied on to separate speciftcally the tree of the Culifumia iSicrros from that of the interior any more than the length of the leaves and the form of their apex can

be depended on to furnish constant speoiflo characters, as English botanists have sometimes believed, for the separation of this Wliite Fir into two species. Although trees east of the Sierra Nevada usually bear longer and more pointed leaves than those which grow on the western slope of the Sierras (the Abies Lowiana of English gardens, see Masters, Gard. Chron. n. ser. xxvi. ?55, f. 14G-148), I have gathered specimens In Strawberry Valley, in northern Cali- fornia, with acute leaves, and such leaves may be found all through the Sierras, while in Colorado and New Mexico trees with leaves obtusely rounded at the apex are common.

3 Brandegee, Hot. Gazette, iii. 33.

In southern Oregon Abies concolor is very abundant on low hills at elevations of between two and three thousand feet above the level of the sea. Although I have not seen it north of a lino drawn from Ashford on the west to Upper Klamath Lake, on the east of the Cascade Mountains, Abies concolor will probably bo found west of the Cascade Mountains as far north as the divide between the waters of the Uinqun and Rogue Rivers, which, mark- ing the southern limits nf distribution of many northern plants and the northern limit of many from the south, is the real northern boundary of the region occupied by the California flora. Speci- mens gathered by Coville in 1807 at Fish Lake, which is one of

CONIFEIUK.

CONIVEaS.

81LVA OF NORTH AMERICA.

123

own scales, and {. Uing first season their second reading, and lir base, and in the lower tomatiferous rmis on the ! apex, from ches and on rely notched an eighth of quarters of illate flowers tunded scales ly contracted aiddle to the nch and one le,* or bright nd regularly he length of broad apex, le half of an colored wings y truncate at

ess, and it is

Its northern

ou and other

ractera, as English ition of this Wliito ;lie Sierra Nevada 1 tliose wliicl) grow towiana of English i. 75C, f. 14C-148), f, in northern ChU- B found all tlirough :o trees witli leaves

r abundant on low lou^and feet above n it north of a lino iniath Luke, on llio r will probably bo lortli as the divide LiverSt wbicli, mark- northern plants and I the real northern fornia flora. Speci- ke, which is one of

cross ranges of sonthem Oregon and northern California, and on the high peaks of the California coast ranges.' With Abies magnifica it forms almost exclusively one of the principal forest belts on the western slopes of the Sierra Nevada four hundred and fifty miles long and in breadth extending from five thousand up to nearly nine thousand feet above the level of the sea.^ It is abundant on all the cross ranges that divide the San Joaquin Valley from southern California, and on the San Bernardino and San Jacinto Mountains between elevations of four and eight thousand feet above the sea,' and finds its most southerly home on the Pacific coast on Mt. San Pedro Martir in Lower California.* In Oregon, east of the Cascade Mountains, it occurs at an elevation of seven thousand seven hundred feet on the high mountains on the east side of Warner Lake with Pinua ponderosa, and on the Warner Range." It is common at high elevations on the east slope of the Sierra Nevada, on the high desert ranges of the Great Basin, and in the canons and on the slopes of the high mountains of Utah and western Colorado ; on the outer ranges of the Rocky Mountains east of the continental divide, it is found only south of the heights which separate the waters of the Platte from those of the Arkansas River, sometimes ascending to elevations of eleven thousand feet above the sea, and southward often forming a large part of extensive for ata. It is common, too, on the mountains of northern New Mexico and Arizona^ up to elevations of six thousand feet above the sea-level, but it is less abundant on the mountains on both sides of the boundary between New Mexico and Arizona and Mexico, where it usually grows only in the bottoms of elevated canons.

The wood of Abies concolor is very light, soft, coarse-grained, and not strong nor durable ; it is very pale brown or sometimes nearly white, with narrow inconspicuous resinous bands of small summer cells and numerous obscure medullary rays. The specific gravity of the absolutely dry wood is 0.3638, a cubic foot weighing 22.67 pounds. It is occasionally manufactured into lumber, and in northern California is used for packing^ases and butter-tubs.

Abies concolor was discovered by August Fendler^ near Sante F^ in 1847; in 1851 John

the most northern tributaries o( the Mackenzie, and separates tba waters of that stream from those of the Santiam, oan doubtfully be referred to this species. On the east side of the Cascade Mountains Ahia concolor probably ranges at least as far north as the head-waters of the Mitelius River southeast of Mt. JetFenon.

* K. Brandegee, Zoe, iv. 176,

' Muir, The Mountains of California, 172, t. ' S. B. Parish, Zoe, iv. 362.

* Brandegee, Zoe, iv. 210.

* Merriaui, in lilt.

' Merriam, Norlh American i^auna, No. 3, 120.

' August Fendler (January, 1813-1883), the son of a carver in wood and ivory, was born in Gumbinuin in eastern Prussia. Los- ing his father in infancy, be was sent to the town gymnasium when twelve years old, and at sixteen was apprenticed to the town clerk. Afterward he learned the trade of a tanner, believing that it would enable him to travel over Europe and America, In 1831 FiMidlcr obtained a nomination to the Royal Polytechnio School in Berlin, but was obliged to abandon his studies at the end of the year on account of delicate health, and in 1834 sailed from Bremen for Baltimore, where he arrived with only two dollars in his pocket. For ten years Fendler wandered over the eastern states, maintaining himself by working in tanneries or lamp factories and by teaching school.

Returning to Prussia in 1844, he made the acquaintance at Kiinigsberg of Dr. Ernst Meyer, the botanist, who showed him the way to his career of usefulness by pointing o»t the fact that he could support himself by collecting for sale herbaria of the plants of the western United States. Returning to St. Louis, where he had previously lived for some time, he began ooUeoting pUtnta with

the advice and assistance of Dr. Engelmann. In 1847 an oppor- tunity was obtained for him to accompany the United States troops, which during the Mexican War took possession of Santa Ti; here he remained during a year, and, after Wislizeous, was the first botanist to investigate the flora of the sonthem Rocky Mountaina. Returning from Mexico, Fendler undertook a botani- oal journey to the region of Salt Lake, but lost his outfit before he reached the Rocky Mountains, and was obliged to go back to St. Louis, where he found that all his possessions had been de- stroyed in a great fire which had devastated the city. He next visited the Isthmus of Panama, making collections in the neighbor- hood of Chagres, and then, returning to the United States, estab- lished himself at Memphis, where for three years he carried on the camphine light business. This became unprofitable owing to the introduction of coal gas, and in 1854, craving new scenes, Fendler sailed for Venezuela, where at Colonia Tovar, at an elevation of six thousand feet above the sea, be remained fur five or six years, making large collections of plants which now have a place in tho principal herbaria of the United States and Europe. Returning to Missouri in 1864, Fendler cleared in the forest a farm for himself near Allenton. Here he lived for seven years, and then, selling his farm, returned to Prussia with the intention of remaining there. His love of the United States, however, brought him again across the Atlantic, and in 1876 he settled in Delaware, where ho devoted himself to botany, meteorology, to which ho had always paid much attention, and to speculative physics, publishing at this time a book entitled, The Mechanics of the Universe. Repeated attacks of acute rheumatism compelled him to seek a warm climate again, and iii 1877 Fendler landed at Port of Spain, in tho island of Trinidad, where he passed the remainder of his days, living mainly on the

<l

,\

124

8ILVA OF NORTH AMERICA.

OONIFB&a.

^!! \

J«St«f* fonnd it on the mountains of northern California, hut for many years his specimen was bflli«v«d to have been gathered from a tree of Abies laaiocarpa, and it was not until 1873 that Eflgelinann was able to make known the true characters and the distribution of Abies concolor. Introduced into England by Jeffrey and by Lobb in 1852, it has proved one of the handsomest and ffloitt satisfactory of garden conifers from southern Scandinavia to northern Italy.' On the Atlantic gettboard it is hardy as far north, at least, as the coast of Maine ; and Abies concolor from the Rocky Mountains growing here during the last twenty-five years always vigorously, compact in habit, beautiful in its voried shades of blue, and free from diseases and the attacks of disfiguring insects, is now more lull vt promise as an ornament of the parks of eastern America than any other Fir-tree.*

proflliw of small piece of groond which he had bought, but lUalHUIiiing his Mtiritf as a botanical collector.

Mniif of the plants collected by Fendler in New Mexieo were |*tllillslied bjr Asa Gray in the fourth volume of the new series of tbo Atptniiir' nr (A« American Academy of Artt and Sciences, in a vtassMial paper entitled Planta Fendlerianas Novi'Mexicana, The itame nt this honest, kindly, simple, earnest man is preserved in out gardens In FendUra, a beautiful-flowered shrub of the Saxi- (ritge family, of Texas and New Mexico. (See Gray, Am. Jour. tim, ser. 3, uIt. 109. Canby, Bot. Gaaetle, x. 285, 301 [An AuU>- btafffaphy and tome Reminucencet of the late August Fendler].)

i See >l. 41.

* Under the names of Abiet concolor violacta and AUa violaeea, Ihe bluest leaved forms of the Bocky Mountain tree are found in

European collections. A seedling form with erect branches {Abtee concolor fattigiata, Carriire, Seo. Hart. 1890, 137) appeared in France a few yean ago in the nuriery of Thibault & Keteleer at Sceaux, near Paris.

* In the eastern states Abiet concolor from Colorado is the only American Fir-tree which is really satisfactory in cultivation. There are a number of specimens of the California tree in different gar- dens from eastern Massachusetts to Pennsylvania. (See Farsous, Gardener's Monthly, xvii. 369 [as Pieea Partomiana]. Sargent, Garden and Forest, vi. 468.) These appear ae hardy as the plants raised from seeds gathered in Colorado, but they grow with less vigor and rapidity, and the largest of them, which are from forty to fifty feet tall, are already thin near the ground, and have passed the period of their greatest beauty.

EXPLANATION OP THE PLATE.

il til s

Flats DCXIIL Abibs concolor.

1. A branch with stamioate flowers, natural size.

2. A staminate flower, enlarged.

3. An anther, front view, enlarged.

4. An anther, side view, enlarged.

6. A branch with pistillate flowers, natural size.

6. A scale of a pistillate flower, lower side, with its bract

and ovules, enlarged.

7. A fruiting branch, natural size.

8. A cone-scale, lower side, with its bract, nataral size.

9. A eone-scale, upper side, with its seeds, natural size.

10. A seed, nataral size.

11. An end of a lateral branch, natural size.

12. Cross section of a leaf magnified fifteen diameters.

13. Winter-buds, nataral size.

CONIVEILa.

tecimen was 1873 that es concolor. dsomest and the Atlantic m the Rocky bit, beautiful is now more

bnnehes {Abie$ 37) cppcued io ult & Keteleer at

onido U the only ultivation. There e in different gar- a. (See Fttraoua, siana]. Sargent, ardy aa the plant* ey grow with leu ich are from forty d, and have paased

Silva of North Airiemca

ABl

!

li t

:• !|

/uHi

xrivA ov Nonrn amkhica.

xmavtM

V ..,* , .; vi* lUe raountaJi«» of northern Californui, but for many years hit <y<i<iwaa w** i to hi>T« bean gathered front a trfw of /46ie4 la*iwarpa, and it waa nut lui^S lt$73 tit*' l^QiMlfltaan «a» ablo to inuko kuowu th« tru" c.h.imcterj and the distribiitiou of Abu* %-oncnl'i' luM\H{iic>i'i into EnRidud by .l«'ffr«y and by I.obb in 1(S5'2, it haa proved ono of the handlnouient hj. BMist satisfactory of garden comfirH fiom noutbern Scandinavia to nortboru Italy.' On iXw Atlm '■ wiai:>oard it is liardy far north, at l»«a«t. ui the coast ^•>i Maiiif ; and Abies concolor from thw H.- Mountains growinif bero duriiij? ib<! Ih-h'. iwenty-fivr jiirs alway* vifrorously, compact in habit, bp.i. in its varisd shades of Wufc, aud fro. t'rom diseai*** and the aiuwks of diHtignring inscota, ia now u fidl of pnxniso ha ao ornament of the jiarks of oa*t<!rn AmeriK a than any other Fir-titse.'

H I

pt.«)iim) of a atiMll ftmt of grouaH wlii';h '•- S^' '-"■' KaKiuiiiuii; lii» »elirlt.T »« » boUiiii;«l collect

Miiiy iif the pUiit c-iUccUd hy beoillur ir. ■. » si-\' piiblisluvl liy A«» <'.r»y tn lh« ftinrih »cTlunip o( lln> n»« . IbH Mtmtin of «*• t-trrwan Acadm^ 0/ ArU nit^i SntK.

i'«M A Mfdlian fiM-m with nriK^t bnuichc* ( AK <m. C«iT**ni, Hiv. Hvri. l«!)l>, lUV) »ppe»tt.> r*— ifTo tu the nuriwry ot Tbibauh & Kfit^Wi

sIm; ti-.w

' -1 Sfr* fimcolor fi-win Colorado w tho ooi) ^;iv butisfiiotory in cuttivAtiun. Tli.'f*- '»•' rahfoniitt trfe iu (LfT«pent gur- . IVnTisjflvaiiia. (?5«<> PttfMHii, . f\i:tn f'fjruaiisianu]- Sargeiit, ,, ;>•<»- ApfHMr HS hardy aji the plnnU

•WM4( f/ani MXto )ittt>i<t-«t >• i'juianAo, hut tlii'y g'ruw with lew Tip.r Miii ntsiiiUI}, kid tk» tei-dW* «{ Uieiii, which iiro fmm forty "W «ir,KvWl.' rMiaa mA Abia noivnn, U> Dttr (net Out. wr* almnair **>* »*»' ^<>' tCnMi"!, uid luve puH-il

EXPr,ANATION OF THK PLATK.

7.

8.

9. 10. 11. 12. 13.

PLArK DCXIII. AlinCS OOMCOlflB. A hraiirh witli stan'inMa rtuwers, natural »izB. A atamiimte flower, enUr^eH. An anther, front vif>ir, enlarged. An uither, lide rinw, enlarged. A Hninrli with pistillnte tlowors, nitunJ tite. A «iJr of a pistillntff fl.jwer, lower aide, wiUi its bract

and otuIhi, cnUrgud. A fraitiog branch, natural 6iz«. A cont-scals, lower aide, with its brad, !iatur.il m.K. A eono-eottle, apper aido, writti its sood?, natural Mte. A aeed, uataral ihe. A 0 mid uf a hitoral branch, natural «ij.e. Oroaa a«ctii>n of a leaf niagnifitnl fifteen diaineteni. Winlerbuda, natural w».c.

>< inien w». rmcotm

II the \. 1.0.,.

iH now ».*

t.' I ai'iif-artt! .^ 1. .':, K.il.'l. . .

mdo U th« onl) llivntiun. TL.r* » in (l'.fl'(<r«nl g«r- i (Svo Paruma. nm-i]. Sftrgctit, trdy an ttie plnii'^ y (ifrow with IcM ii liFH /iiim furty

Silva of Norlti America.

Tab. DCXIII.

C t: Fa.r<'n ,lel .

ABIES CONCOLOR, l.indl &Gord.

A.Hinvrcn.r MrtJ^'.

Imp ^T Tanrtir , J^iirus'

Tiapme

\

1

Ii

«=Ef.Trs««aBwaiisv*;^

aUy

CONiraRil.

UIVA or NOttTB AMERICA.

125

ABIfii AMABILIS.

Wliit0 t\t.

Bracts of the cone-8c»|ei» rb^mbk Of oblotig-obovate, gradually narrowed into long slender tips, half as long m (h@if >mt\m, Leaves dark green and very lustrous above, silvery white below, rounded* fU>totl6d< Of acute, or on fertile branches acuminate and occasionally stomatiferous on i\m yppof 6Ufface.

Abie* amabUis, Forbei, Pinttum W«b#m, i^, i 44 (1839). Lindley & Gordon, Jour, ffftft, SU: tmdiii 210. CarriJire, TraUi Conif. 'i\9, ^ (^«||, j/iMW: LitUti Soc. Tii. 143. Henkel & Ho«lMt#M(>F, Sffti, Nidetk 169 S^n&Iauze, Conif. 6. H#»p«l, Mmgfmil, »99 (exel. tyn. Abiet Uitiacarpa). K- Umh, Pim4f: H. jut. \h 211 (excl. syn. Abiei latiocurpa)^ r^ UHg^UnHfHii OUfdt Chron. n. ser. xiv. 720, f. 136-1« > ffot, QltmHg, ♦»»/ 4; = Veitch, Man. Conif. 86. LmcIh, fimmftt timdfi »l. »» 83 Sargent, Jforert 3V<im N. 4m, Wh (Jmm V, A bi< 213 Muton, Jour. Linn. Soa, tm Hi, h 1^< t; 9j Garrf. CAiwi. ser. 3, iii. 764, i. lO^i Jim, A llsfh Sttii xiv. 189. Mayr, Wald. Nordam, S6J/ = fc#»HH««, H»pi California State Board Fonttry, m, \9^ {§l)m=timfiif* of California); Wut-Ameruun Oomfimfm,6ii Bull Sierra Club, u. 163, t 24 (OoM/tn fif tfm Po^ifk Slope). Beiunei, Handb. Nadelh: m, f, J8«/ = ««fr WD, Jour. B. Hart. Soc. xiv. 466 iPhMm Smmm)i Koehne, DeuiMKe Dendr. 16.

FinuB grandis, D. Don, Lambert Pmun, i^, i- 0^§?);

Pioaa amabUis, Loodon, Arb. BrU. n, Sm ^ pmj, I IMi

2248 (1838). Knight, Syn. Conif. 39. Gordon, Pin«-

tum, 164 (ezcL tyn. Pinui lasioearpa) ; ed. 2, 213 (excl.

•yn.). Newberry, Paeifia B. B. Bep. vi pt. ii. 61,

1. 18. (NeUon) Senilis, Pinaeeas, 36. Aoea grandis, London, Arb. Brit. it. 2341 (in part) (not

Abie* grandie, Lindley) (1838). tiava amabiUs, Antoine, Conif. 63, t. 26, f. 2 (1840-47).

Hooker & Amott, Bot. Voij. Beechey, 394. Endlicher,

Syn. Conif. 104. Lawson & Son, List No. 10, Abie-

tinea, 11. Dietrich, Syn. Coaif. v. 394. Parlatore,

De CandolU Prodr. xvi. pt ii. 426 (in part). W. B.

M'Nab, Proa. B. Iriih Aead. ser. 2, u. 677, t 46, f . 3, 3 a

(excl. syn.). Pinvm lasiooarpa, A. Murray, Bep. Oregon Erped. 1, t. f.

(Picea on pUte) (not Hooker) (1863). AMefl Krandis, A. Murray, Proe. B. Sort. Soe. iii. 308,

f. 1-2 (not Lindley) (1863) ; Qartevflora, x'" 118. Abies lasiooarpa, A. Murray, Proe. B. Sort. o'oo. iii. 314,

f. 17 (1863). Abies grandis, var. densifoUa, Engelmann, Trant. St.

Louie Aead. iii. 699 (1878).

A tree, often two huudFiw^i ftn4 Miy tmi jfl height, or at high altitudes and in the north usually not more than seventy or mghiy U^ t»llf wHb fl iftitik from four to six feet in diameter, in thick forests often naked for one hundreil mA Mif (mi) Of JU open situations densely clothed to the ground with comparatively short branches »w^}U}g AoWft Jtt graceful curves and furnished with elongated lateral pendulous hranchlets. Uutil (b# ifm is ftbdtit otie hundred and fifty years old, when, in favorable situations, it may he one hundred Mvl tw^ij^--|it6 feet high, the bark of the trunk is thin, smooth, and pale or silvery white, and on (M if^m ii iisdotaea near the ground from an inch and a half to two inches and a half in thickness, An4 k iftegahfiy divided into comparatively small plates covered with small closely appressed reddUb hfSWn Of teddkh gray scales. The winter branch-buds are nearly globose and from an eighth U) A qfMft#f o( ttii hioh in thickness, with closely imbricated dark lustrous purple scales thickly coated with tmilii The btahchlets are stout, clothed for four or five years with soft fine pubescence, light ormg»=hf§Wti dtifitig their first season, dark purple in their second, and ultimately become reddish browHr fhs hikiea are flat, deeply grooved, and very dark green and lustrous on the upper surfsAA An4 ^\i^y ifhite on the lower, with broad bands of about six rows of Btomata occupying the spmm h^mi ibs ptottiinent midrib and the recurved margins, resin ducts close to the lower side and hypo4#m mWs fomihg an interrupted border under the epidermis on both surfaces and on the edges ; on Sim^ hftkmhea they are obtuse and rounded and notched or occasion- ally acute at the apex, from tilfm «|UM(«tS t)t an inch to an inch and a quarter in length, from one

» ,-. ■i't&^i/rZ&'i ^■'^^

196

BILVA OF NOHTH AMERICA.

comrzRM,

sixteenth to one twelfth of an inch in width, often broadest above the middle, erect bj a twist at their base and very crowded, those on the upper side of the branch being much shorter than those on the lower and usually parallel with and closely appressed against it; on fertile branchlets they are nearly erect, acute or acuminite, with callous tips, occasionally stomatiferous on the upper surface near the apex and from one half to three quarters of an inch in length ; on vigorous leading shoots they are acute, with long rigid points, closely appres'ied or recurved near the middle, about three quarters of an inch long and nearly one eighth of an inch wide. The staminate flowars are oblong«ylindrical and from one half to three quarters of an inch in length, with strawberry-red anthers, and at maturity hang on slender pedicels from an eighth to nearly a quarter of an inch long. The pistillate flowers are oblong- cylindrical, from three quarters of an inch to an inch in length and about a third of an inoii thick, with broad rounded purple scales and rhombic dark purple lustrous bracts erose above the middle and gradually contracted into broad points. The cones are oblong, slightly narrowed to the rounded and often retuse apex, deep rich purple, puberulous, from threo and a half to nearly six inches in length and from two to two and a half inches in dia^aeter, with scales from an inch to an inch and an eighth wide, nearly as long as they are broad, gradually narrowed from the rounded apex, and rather more than twice as long as their reddish rhombic or oblong-obovate bracts terminating in long slender tips. The seeds are light yellow-brown and half an inch long, with obliquely cuneate pale brown lustrous wings which are three quarters of bn inch in lengrth and somewhat less in breadth.*

Abies amabilis inhabits both slopes of the Cascade Mountains,' the coast ranges of Oregon ' and Washington, and the mountains of southern British Columbia from Vancouver Island * to the vailey of the lower Fraser River.' On the Cascade Mountains it extends from elevations of three thousand up to about six thousand feet or nearly to the timber-line, mingling below with Tsuga heterophylla, Picea Engelmanni, Abies nobilis, and Abies grandis, and above with Pinus albicaulis, Tsuga Mertensiana, and Abies lasiocarpa, and at high altitudes it often grows alone on the margins of alpine meadows singly or in small isolated groves. On the Olympic Mountains of northwestern Washington, where it probably attains its greatest sl?«, Abies amabilis ia the most common Fir-tree, occupying well-drained slopes and benches and less commonly the banks of streams at elevations of from twelve hundred feet up to the timber-line, which is here about four thousand five hundred feet above the sea, being most abundant and, with the Hemlock, forming a large part of the forest between elevations of three and four thousand feet. On the mainland of British Columbia, associated with Tsuga heterophylla, Tsuga Mertensiana, Pinus albicaulis, and Pinus monticola, it is common above the forests of Pseudotsuga at elevations of from four to five thousand five hundred feet above the sea.

The wood of Abies amabilis is light, hard, not strong, and close-grained ; it is pale brown, with

' On a ridge of the Olympio Mountains aeparating the iraten of the Sulduo from thoae of the QuUljhute, I found, on August 19, 189(1, at an elevation of four thousand &vu hundred feet abore the sea, an Abies from sixty to eighty feet in height, growing with Ahiea tatioearpa and Abia amaHlis, with the slender spire-like head and the foliago of the former and the cones of the latter. It was, perhaps, a natural hybrid between these species.

' A bits amabilit ranges nearly to the southern end of the Cas- cade Mountains of Oregon, tbe most southern tree seen by Dr. Coville, in 1807, being " on the eastern slope of Old Bailey Moun- tain, which lies on the west side of Diamond Lake about twenty miles north of Crater Lake. Proceeding northward from this point, we did not see the tree again until we reached the extreme southern head-waters of the WilUmette Hirer, about twelve miles north of Diamond Lake. Here on the northern slope of the Calapooia Moun- tains, close to their junction with the crest of the Cascades, the tree grew in great abundance on northtrn slopes." (Coville, in litl.)

' The most southern point at which Abia ttmahili$ has been seen by Mr. A. <T. Johnson of Astoria on the coast ranges is on Saddle Mountain, twenty-Bve milea south of the mouth of the Columbia River.

* In 1887 Abie$ amalnlu was fonnd on Vancouver bUnd by Mr. John Macoun, on tbe summits of Mounts Monk, Benson, and Arrow- smith, where it grows with Ttuga Merlauiana, (See Maooun, Col. Can. PI. iv. 336.)

* In July, 1880, Abia amabilit was first fonnd in British Colum- bia by Engelmanu, Parry and Sargent, on the high mountains south of Yale on the lower Fraser River.

The northern range of Abie$ amabilit is still to be determined. It grows so abundantly to a large siie at high elevations on the mountains rising above the lower Fraser River valley that it may be supposed to extend much farther north along the coast ranges of British Columbia.

CUHiyHRA.

8ILVA OF NORTH AMERICA.

127

nearly white lapwood, and contains dark-colored resinous bands of imall •URllMf entls and numerous thin medullary rays. The speciiio gravity of che absolutely dry wood is O.'l'i'iH, a oulno foot weighing 26.35 pounds. Under the name of larch it is occasionally used in Wa«hiiigtoii in tie interior finish of buildings.

Ahiea amabilia was discovered on the Cascade Mountains just south of th« Columbia River in September, 1825, by David Douglas, who introduced it into Englisli gurdeiiit.'

Unsurpassed among Fir-trees in the beauty of its snowy bark, dark grmm lustrous foliage, and great purple cones, Abies aniabilia can never be forgotten by tlioM) who liiivo seen it at midHummer towering high above alpine meadows clothed with Lilies and gruat nodding l)))gt«)oth Violets, Dryanthus and Cassiope, Rhododendrons, Lupins, Painted-cups, and all the other llownrs which make the upper valleys of the northern Cascade Mountains the most charming natural gurdiiiiH of the continent. When transferred from its mountain home Abies amabilia does not reully Hourish, although a few of the oldest specimens in Europe have produced cones." On the Athtntio Mttbourd it grows vary slowly and gives little promise of becoming an ornament of our gardens.*

Douglu, Companion Bot. Mag. ii. 93. See, alio, Sargent, Oa -d. Chrm. a. ter. xvi. 7.

> See Fowler, Oard. Chrm. 1872, 286.

Very few pUnta having been railed from Douglaa'a aeeda, Ahit$ amabiiis haa alwaya been rare in Europe until 1882, when large ji 'pliea of aeeda were aent to England from Oregon.

' Probably the oldeat plant of Abia amabUU in the eaitem United State! ia in the Pinetum of Mr. Joaiah Hoopea of Weat Cheater, Pennaylvania. It ia graft taken from the plant in the Edin- burgh Botaiiio Garden raiaed from aeeda oolleoted by Donglaa. It haa grown very alowly, and in 1893, when it wna about twenty-five yeara old, it waa only aix feet high. (See Oardm and Forett, ii. 228 : vi 468.) Id eaatem Mnaaaehniettai where Abitt amabUit

waa iutroduonl in IfMO tlinmgh tb« Arnold Arboretnia, It haa proved ratbar tender and gtnwn v«ry ilnwiy,

Even in ita native fariiat* AliUt iimahtUii la a alow-growing trea. The log apeoimen in tkn itomp (iitllnetlon of North American Wooda in tba Amerlaaii Momiihi «f Natural Itiitory, Now York, out on tba Caaeada Moundtiiia iif Of«Kn«i, near the Columbia River, ia aevenleen and una half IimImm Ih diameter Inalde (he bark and one hundred and eighty yiu* old, with two and one eighth inchea of aapwood oonUiiiing MtVfNty l»yi<f« of annual growth. A tree out in 1896, un tba baiika itt the Noldiio River, Waaliington, in a region of eaeaaaiva rainfall ii|Ni«lally favifrable for the rapid growth of treea, waa one bundrad iiMt twKnty.flva feet high, with a trunk nineteen iuebaa in dl»iii«t«ri «(hI mm buiidred and fifty years old.

! !

11

I

! I

s

iil

)

EXPLANATION OF THE PLATE.

Platb DCXIV. Abikh amabilm.

1. A bi-snch with ttaminate flowers, iutur»l aixa.

2. A itainiiuta flower, enlarged.

3. An uther, seen from below, enlarged.

4. An anther, side view, enlarged.

6. A branch with piatillatd flowers, natural siia.

6. A bract of a pistillate flower, enlarged.

7. A scale of a piatiUate flower, upper side, with its bract and

oTules, enlarged.

8. A fruiting branch, natural size.

9. A cone-scale, lower side, with its bract, natural size.

10. A eon»4cale, upper side, with its seeds, natural size.

11. Vertical section of a seed, enlarged.

12. An embryo, enlarged.

lo. The tip of a leading shoot, natural size.

14. Cross section of a leaf magnified fifteen diameters.

16. Winter-buds, natural size.

16. A seedling plant, natural size.

Silv* of North Arnertc*

m^'^

-::.'< 'y

\1

if

'■'■'-■f4:

J

'ff'i^' 'y.:

,4'\

^ o

!

^

ir ^1

-■:i

»X»>tA!<IATKM or

.,•■, u.'ii Initu b«l»*. ««larfk4. t. An kiiilinr, •ido «i<w, rnlargxl S A btwirh witb (lialillalc llowen. n»t«n> ■•• A A brM!t u/ |itttiUiU« H.'Wrr oniMKwl

1. A k^J* 'it » |*rtill»»<i llowdT 'i(.,*t M''- ^

ovulm. «pl»rg»iL

8. A frailinjf brmnoh. nalnril »i«.

9. A c<>iM»-«i-ai<-, lower Me. wi'l' it» bfiwt, iiUurkl mm>

10. A coii»-o«a!». opptr »\if, with iu MaiU, natural mm.

11. Vertifal wfliun of ••wl, enlirgsd.

12. An rmhryn, riilarKcH.

in. llif! tip of a Iriuliiiij ahixtt, tiaturil aits. 14. Craa Mellon of le:i( maj^nilinl fiftc'Sn ilia l.'f. Winl»r-ba(li. natural »i\ui. m A Mwlling I'laat, natural nu.

Stivk or North Am«ncA

T4b DC XIV

I,'

C. K. Faron- dsL.

/Iitplltt tr.

ABIES AMABILIS , Forbes,

A lUarrptij: liirtw

Imp. J !'it/ieut Pfifu

0

^qniMM

Jr J<

coMirsj

B]

rigid i yellow loosely

Abies V Laud Oardi State nia); Club,

Finus V (1836;

Pinus bi (1837; 30.— licher, trioh, ; tore, M'Nal

Pioea bi (18381 BrU. cecB, 3

Toxodiu Lambi

Abies bi

A

feet in i long sii pyramic while tfa neigh be one ha fissured three thicknei increasi and the reddish The let base, w long sl( which

CONirERJB.

8ILVA OF NORTH AMERICA.

129

I

;■!

ABIES VENUSTA.

Silver Fir.

Bracts of the cone-scales oblong-obovate, obcordate, furnished with elongated rigid flat tips many times longer than the pointed scales. Leaves acuminate, dark yellow-green and lustrous above, silvery white below. "Winter-buds large, with thin loosely imbricated scales.

Abiee ▼enusta, K. Koch, Dendr. ii. pb ii. 210 (1873) Lanche, Deutsche Dendr, ed. 2, 82, t. 16. Sargent, Cktrden and Forest, ii. 496. Lemmon, Bep. California State Board Forestry, iii. 161 (Cone-Bearers of Califor- nia) ; West-Ameriean Cone-Bearers, 64 ; Bull. Sierra Club, ii. 166 (Conifers of the Paoifie Slope).

Pinus venuBta, Douglas, Companion Bot. Mag. ii. 162 (1836).

Pinna braoteata, D. Don, Trans. Linn. See. xrii. 442 (1837) ; Lambert Pinus, iii. t Antoine, Conif. 77, t. 30. Hooker & Arnott, Bot. Voy. Beeehey, 394. End- lieher, Syn. Conif. 89. Walpers, Ann. v. 798 Die- trich, Syn.y. 393. CJonrtin, Fam. Conif. 56. ParU- tore, De Candolle Prodr. xvi. pt. ii. 419. W. R. M'Nab, Proe. B. Irish Acad. ter. 2, ii. 674, t. 46, f. 1.

Pioea braoteata, London, Arii. Brit. iv. 2348, f. 2266 (1838). Gordon, Pinetum, 146. Lawson, Pinetum Brit. ii. 171, t. 26, 26, f. 1-7. (Nolson) Senilis, Pino- eece, 37. Coleman, The Qarden, zzxv. 12, f.

Taxodium sempervirens ? Hooker, lean. iv. t. 379 (not Lambert) (1841).

Abies braoteata, NnttaU, Sylrn, iii. 137, t. 118 (1849).

Hartweg, Jmir. Bbrt. Soe. Lond. iii. 226. Lindley & Gordon, Jour. Bart. Soe. Lond. v. 209. Carri^re, Traiti Conif. 196. Hooker, Bot. Mag. Ixxix. t. 4740. Lemaire, III. Hort. i. t. 6. Nandin, Rev. Sort. 1854, 31. Planchon, Fl. des Serres, ix. 109, t. 899. A. Murray, Edinburgh New Phil. Jour. n. ser. x. 1, t. 1, 2 j Oard. Chron. 1859, 928 ; Trans. Bot. Soc. Edinburgh, vi. 211, t. 1, 2. Henkel & Hochstetter, Syn. Nadelh. 167. S^n^clauze, Conif. 7. Hoopes, Evergreens, 199. Bertrand, Bull. Soc. Bot. France, xviii. 379 ; Ann, Set. Nat. sir. 5, xx. 96. Engelmann, Trans. St. Louis Acad. iii. 601 ; Oard. Chron. a. ser. xii. 684 ; Brewer & Watson Bot. Cat. ii. 118. Veitch, Man. Conif. 89, f . 14, 15. Kellogg, Forest Trees of California, 27. Sargent, Forest Trees N. Am. 10<A Census U. S. ix. 213. Masters, Gard. Chron. set. 3 ; vii. 672, {. 112 ; Jour. B. Hort. Soc. xiv. 190. Mayr, Wald. Nordam. 337, t. 9. Beissner, Sandb. Nadelh. 488, t 138.— Hansen, Jour. R. Hort. Soc. xiv. 459 (Pinetum Dani- cum). Koehne, Deutsche Dendr. 17. Eastwood, Ery- thea, T. 73.

A tree, from one hundred to one hundred and fifty feet in height, \nth a trunk sometimes three feet in diameter, and comparatively short slender usually pendulous scattered branches furnished with long sinuous rather remote lateral branchlets sparsely clothed with foliage, and forming a broad-based pyramid which fifteen or twenty feet from the top is abruptly narrowed into a thin spire-like head, while the lowest branches often sweep the ground, unless the tree has been excessively crowded by its neighbors. The bark of the trunk, which is smooth and pale above, near the base of the tree is from one half to three quarters of an inch in thickness, light reddish brown, slightly and irregularly fissured and broken into thick closely appressed scales. The winter branch-buds are ovate, acute, from three quarters of an inch to an inch in length and from one quarter to one third of an inch in thickness, with very thin loosely imbricated pale chestnut-brown ovate acute boat-shaped scales increasing in size from below upward, the outer accrescent, persistent at the base of the young branch, and the inner united into a cup and deciduous in one piece. The branchlets are stout, glabrous, light reddish brown for three or four years, and covered during their first season with a glaucous bloom. The leaves are thin, fiat, rigid, linear or Unear-lanceolate, gradually or abruptly narrowed toward the base, which is enlarged into an oval disk, often falcate, especially on fertile branches, acuminate, with long slender stiff callous tips, dark yellow-green and lustrous and slightly rounded on the upper surface, which is marked below the middle with an obscure groove, and silvery white or on old leaves pale on

ISO

8ILVA OF NORTH AMERICA.

CONIFERJB.

f' i

the lower surface, with bands of from eight to ten rows of stomata occupying the space between the liruttd tnidrib and the thickeued strongly revolute margins; they are remote, two-ranked from the CONSplouous twist near their base, and spread at nearly right angles to the branchlets of lower sterile iirittiohefi, or are somewhat ascending on upper fertile branches, and are from one inch and a half to two inches and a quarter long and from an eighth to a sixth of an inch wide, with resin ducts cluiie to the epidermis and hypoderm cells in an interrupted band on the upper surface and at the angles and midrib ; on leading shoots they are rounded on the upper surface, and, standing out almost At right angles, are more or less incurved above the middle, from an inch and a half to an inch and three quarters long and about an eighth of an inch wide. The flower-buds resemble the branch-buds in shape and in the texture and color of their scales, which become scarious and silvery white in the inner ranks, forming very conspicuous involucres at the base of the flowers, which open early in May. The buds of the staminate flowers are produced in great numbers near the base of the branchlets on branches from the middle of the tree upward, while thosu ^f the pistillate flowers appear near the ends of the branchlets of the upper branches only. The staminate flowers are cylindrical, from three quafters of an inch to an inch and a quarter long and a quarter of an inch in diameter, with pale yellow anthers which fade to a dark reddish brown and at maturity are suspended on slender pedicels often half an inch in length. The pistillate flowers are oblong and about an inch and a quarter in length, their scales being oblong, rounded above and nearly as long as thoir cuneate obcordate yelloW'green bracts, with spreading lobes deni.iculate at the apex, and slender elongated erect slightly ipreading or contorted or variously twisted awns. The cones, which are borne on stout peduncles (tometimes half an inch in length covered by the scales of the flower-buds, vary from oval to Mubcylindrical in shape, and are full and rounded at the apex, glabrous and pale purple-brown, from three to four inches long and from an inch and a half to two inches thick, with thin scales strongly incurved above the body of their bracts, obtusely short-pointed at the apex, obscurely and unequally denticulate on the thin margins, full and rounded on the sides, which are graduaUy narrowed to thr, eordate base, and about one third longer than their oblong obovate obcordate pale yellow-brown bracts which terminate in flat rig^d tips from an inch to an inch and three quarters long ; from above the middle of the cone these point toward its apex, and are often closely appressed to its sides, and Mpreading below its middle frequently are much recurved toward its base. Firmly attached to the cone- scales, the bracts fall with these from the thick conical sharp-pointed axis of the cone. The seeds are dark red-brown, about three eighths of an inch in length and nearly as long as their oblong-obovate pole reddish brown lustrous wings, which are rounded at the apex.

AMes venusta in its scattered branches, its large long-pointed buds covered by thin loosely imbricated scales, its broad sharply pointed leaves which are never crowded and are alike on all parts of the tree, and in its glabrous cones with the long exserted awns of the bracts and thick central axes, differs more from the usual forms of the genus th:<n any nfbcir Fii-tree. Of the species of Abies now known no other occupies such a small territory, for it grows only in a few isolated groves, the largest containing not more than two hundred trees, scattered along the moist bottoms of canons, which in Htimmer often become completely dry, usually at elevations of about three thousand feet on both slopes of the outer western ridge of the Santa Lucia Mountains in Monterey County, California, its associates being (iuercua chrysolepin, Quercua densiflora, Quercus Wializeni, Arbutus Memiesii, Umhellularia Cali/ornica, Acer mat-rophyllum, Pinua Coulteri, Pseudotsuga mucronata, and Alnus rhomhifolia}

' The most southern point from which A bie$ venuita hH been fe|ior(e(] is in Hear CaAon, which faces the easti and is about twenty- five fnites south of l^os Burros Mines, near Punta Crda, where there is a grove of about two hundred trees. It is scattered along the banks of the San Miguel CaBon on the eastern slope of the (HKiat ridge, just south of the trail from King's City to Los Burro* Mines, nnd grows in a caSon immediately north of the Swi Miguel

Gallon, and in a cation at the head of the Nacimiento, while ten miles farther north tbe presence of two trees has been reported. These stations are at elevations of about three thousand feet above the level of the sea, and I have been unable to hear of trees grow- ing above six thousand feet, aa described by Douglas (Companion Hot. Mag. ii. 162), or of the trees of which William Lobb wrote in 1883;

CONIFERA.

CONIFER^E.

8ILVA OF NORTH AMEIUOA.

131

letween the

from the

ower sterile

and a half

resin ducts

and at the

out almost

inch and

)ranch-hud8

vhite in the

ly in May.

ranchlets on

ear near the

from three

er, with pale

ider pedicels

nd a quarter

kte ohcordate

erect slightly

»ut peduncles

rom oval to

!-brown, from

sales strongly

ind unequally

TOwed to thr,

-hrown bracts

[>m above the

its sides, and

id to the cone-

The seeds are

iblong-obovate

^ thin loosely on all parts of k central axes, of Abies now res, the largest "ions, which in on both slopes ., its associates Umhellularia I rhomhifolia}

cimiento, while ten has been reported, bouaand feet above hear of trees grow- loiiglaa {Companion liam Lobb wrote in

The wood of Ahiea venuata is heavy, not hard, and 00AFH9^ained \ it is light brown tinged with yellow, with paler sapwood, and contains broad ooDspiououg reeiflOUS bands of small summer cells and numerous obscure medullary rays. The specific gravity tA the abttolutflly dry wood is 0.6783, a cubic foot weighing 42.27 pounds. Although it is perhaps oooMiODally utl«d for fuel, the inaccessibility and steepness of the canons which this tree inhabits and the HpArMMM of the population of the region have prevented employment of the wood for other purposeg.

Abiea venuata was discovered* by Dr. Thomas Coulter^ lidlj in 1863 it was introduced by William Lobb' into English gardens. Fortunately this bpftutiful tre<«, one of the handsomest and most interesting of its race, has thus found a foothold in tba Old World/ for the fires which are frequent and destructive in the forests of the dry coast ranges of tioutberH California seem destined sooner or later to exterminate it from its last retreat in America *

" Along the summit o( the central ridges, and about the highest peaks, in the moat exposed and coldest places imaginable, when no other Pine makes its appearance, it stands the severity of the cli- mate without the slightest perceptible injury, growing in slaty rub- bish which, to all appearance, is incapable of supporting vegetation. In such situations it becomes stunted and bushy, bat even then the foliage maintains the same beautiful dark green color, and when seen at a distance it appears more like a handsomely grown Cedar than a Pine." (See Gard. Ckron. 1863, 436.) Since Lobb'd time fire baa probably destroyed all the trees except those which warn protected by the moisture in the bottoms of the deepest caSons.

> Tate Hooker, Bot. Mag. Ixxix. t. 4740.

< See iii. 84.

See x. 60.

* In sheltered positions in the milder parta of Great Britain and in northern Italy Abia vmiuta has grown rapidly and vigorously and has produced cones. The tallest specimen in England of which I have heard is at Eostnor Ca.<tle, in Herefordshire, where there is a tree over sixty feet in height \. II.Kent tnUtt.). The largest specimen in the park at Tortworth Court, Gloucestershire, whicb

WM prsbHbljF ptKHl«4 bstWMin 1868 and 1862, in May, 1897, was flftyHwn tuti in b«i^t, with trunk two feet in diameter at one foot nbnvA (Im gtimu4. (8m Qard. Chron. ser. 3, xxi. 306.) Hr. Kent r»p«rt« mnn\ otiltt healthy specimens from forty to Bfty feet in bpiftll in iifteteni parts of England and Scotland. For n(>t»s Ofl Abiu vmuila Ih Knrope, see, also. Fowler, Gard. Chron.

UTS, 8M. = N i«(Mlw«, aardm and Foral, U. 667 Maston^

Qard, Gkrm, mt, 8| t. 848. —J. 0. Jack, Garden and Foretl, iv.

an,

Iff tiM mitn (/Hl(«d Slates Abiet venuila has not proved hardy iff Uiy p»r( of (Iw militfy where it has been tried.

f Abm nmmla {H'oblibly always grows slowly, as might be ex- P«8t«d itsm th« aridity of the region it inhabits. The log specimen in tb« JmhP (!()ll««tinrt of North American Woods in the American MlWHin «l Nutuntl History, New Tork, out by T. S. Brandegee iff nn« «:{ %\m mflotio of the Santa Lucia Mountains facing the oeam, imm\,}l=timt Wld three quarters inches in diameter inside (be b»rt( MhI bHHdred and twenty-four years old, with an inch fff Mtpweed «m»ki\ii of torty.«ne Uyera of annual growth.

iiii

■i

-^i.™-^-

EXPLANATION OP THE PLATES.

Plate DCXV. Abixs tenusta.

1. A bnuich with Btaminatn flowers, natanl size.

2. A ataminate flower, enlarged.

3. An anther, aide view, enlarged.

4. An anther, seen from below, enlarged.

6. A branch with pistillate flowers, natural size.

6. A scale of a pNtillate flower, upper side, with its bract and

OTules, enlarged.

7. A bract of a pistillate flower, lower side, enlarged.

8. A leaf, natural size.

9. Cross section of a leaf magnified fifteen diameters. 10. Winter-buds, natural size.

Platr DCXVI. Abies TBNUgTA.

1. A fruiting branch, natural size.

2. A cone-scale, lower side, with its bract, natural size.

3. t cone-scale, upper side, with its seeds and bract, natural size. 4 A seed, enlarged.

6. Axis of a cone, with its peduncle, natural size.

I

..:^ •**-*,\

'X

■*s>

'\

.;rfl»»

■"5«^

I

i

-k**^'

iiili

H^^

Exi'iJk.NAn<>» * i«* nj^nm.

i .<>. %.rt(>irr, j**ii fron: ti«lo«', tauitMvi.

5. A br»n«li with fiMtilUtn tIow«iii, natur&l am.

C. A scuIr of a pistillate Howcr, upper ' with ita bntc) uid

T. A brnci of ^ pi»titliir** i^cfff. \-*'*. ivi', iit^ryfj/

8. A leaf, uatural iii/«.

9. Crmi Koction oF a leaf magnitied ljft«en diantoter^ 10. Winter-bad«, natural bim.

Plate DCXVI. Abiks tbntista.

1. A fruitinf; liranch, natural mie.

2. A I'oiie-icale, lower 8i<lu, with its bract, natnral «ir.n.

',: A i-ono-Hcalft, upjier aid*, with ita aeedi and bract, nataral aize.

4 A aecd, «nlarge<l.

<'' Kiif of a cune, with iU pwlunele, natiral niie.

Silva of North America

Tab. DCXV.

)

u.-i

' [

Ul

C-E.Fa^rn^n tiW

Himein .

ASlES VENUSTA, K.Koch.

AfUffrmtf i/imf '

Tmp. . K Tarwtir, Paru'

^"Si

*

._,L .lir

3ia

^^'

:^

\\\ I

H

k\

ABIES VKNU3TA

III

P

I.' '

Silva of North America

T«V DC XVI

C E fii^m tiel

JUipiMf

ABIES VENUSTA, K.KocK.

A. JiiOitetw i/inw

Imp.J.Taneur. J\iris.

cotwnttLM.

8ILVA OF NORTH AMERICA.

ABIES NOBILIB.

Red Fir. Laroh.

Bracts of the conc-scalcM sputulutc, full, rounded, and flmbriute iibovo, long* pointed, recurved, nearly covering their hcuIch. Leaves light blue-green, diNtinetly grooved above, rounded and emurginutc at the apex on lower branchcH, crowded, incurved, nearly equally 4-8ided and acute on fertile branches.

▲blM nobUla, Uodley, Penny Cyel. i. 30 (1833). ~ Purbei, Pinetum Wohum. 110, t. 40. Link, Linmra, it. 632. Lkwwn & .Son, Agrie. Man, 374. Spaeh, Uitt. Vtg. xi. 419. NutuU, Sylva, Hi. 136, t. 117.— LindUy & Oor- don, Jour. Hort. Soe. Land. y. 209. Carri^re, Traiti Conif. 198. Hankel A Hochitfittar, Syn. Nadelh. 168. S^nfclkuza, Conif. 10. K. Koch, Dtndr. ii. pt ii. 209. Engelmann, Trant. St. Lonli Acad. iii. 601 (in part) ; Qard. Ckron. n. wr. xii. 684 (in part) ; Brewer Jc Wat- ion Bot. Cat. ii. 119 (in part); Bot. QoHette, vii. 4. Veiteli, Man. Conif. 101. Laueha, Dtuttche Dendr. ad. 2, 83. Sargant, Forett Trees N. Am. XOtK Census V. S. ix. 214. Maatan, Oard. Chron. a. aar. xxir. 652 146 ; Jour. Linn. Soe. xxii. 188 (excl. bab. Mt Sliiuita and Tar. magn\liea) i Jour. R. Hort. Soe. xit. 193. Syma, Oard. Chron. n. aar. xxt. 396. Mayr, Wold. Nordam. 360. Lamroon, Rep. California State Board Forestry, iii. 141 (Cone-Bearers of California) ; West- American Cone-Bearers, 61 ; BuU. Sierra Club, ii. 164 {Conifers of

the Paei/le Slope). ha\unn, ffamlb. tfitdllH, 4114, f. l:i6, 137. Hanaan, Jour. K. Hurl. Sue. ily. 470 (Pinetum Danieum). Koahna, Deulinke Demtr. VI,

Pinna noblUa, D. Don, Lambert Pinus, iii, t, (IM.'I7), Houkar, Fl. Bor.-Am. ii. 162. Antolna, Conif. 77, I. 20, r. 2. Hookar Ai Amott, Bot. Voy. Bssehsy, im. Endliebar, Syn. Conif. 90. Lawaon 4 Non, LUt No, to, Abietinea, 12. Diatrleb, Syn, v. 303, Cuurtin, Fam. Conif. 67. Parlatora, De CandulU Prodr, xvl, pi. ii. 419. W. R. M'Nab, Proe. U. JrUh AeaJ, Mr. 2, Ii, 690, t. 49, f. 20, 20 a, b.

Pioea nobUia, Loudon, Arb. Brit, iv, 2342, I, 2240, 2260 (1838). Knight, Syn. Conif. 30.— Umllay * UiitiUin, Jour. Hort. Soe. Lond. y. 200. Oordon, Pinetum, 140 1 Suppl. 48. Newberry, Paci/ie R. B. B*p, *l. pt. III, 40, 00, f. 17. Uwaon, Pinetum BrU. ii. IHI, (. W, 20, (. 1-18. (Nelaon) Sanilia, Pinaeew, 00.

Pioea (Pseudotauga) noblUa, Bartrand, Ann. Hal. Nat, tit. 6, XX. 86 (1874).

A tree, in old age ' with a comparatively broad and somewhat rounded head, and uitiialiy from on* hundred and fifty to two hundred and occasionally two hundred and fifty feet in height, with u niiWNivo trunk from six to eight feet in diameter, short rigid limbs disposed in regular remote whorls, uiiil iihort stout remote lateral branches standing out at right angles, the ultimate divisions genorully pointing forward and the whole forming great flat-topped masseG of foliage. Until the tree is from ei^lity to one hundred feet in height the tapering stem is covered with thin smooth pale bark and uluthed to tli« ground with branches which form a regular open pyramid gradually narrowed to the slender itpox, but from the lower portion of the trunks of older trees the branches gradually fall, oft«ii leaving them naked for one hundred or one hundred and fifty feet when fully grown, the bark on the old trunks being from one to two inches in thickness, bright red-brown, and deeply divided into brood flat ridges irregularly broken by cross fissures and covered with thick closely appressed Hoahi*. Tho winter branch-buds are ovoid-oblong, about an eighth of an inch in length, and covered by uvata acute red-brown scales usually thickly coated with resin. The branchlets are comparatively Hluiider, puberulous for four or five years, bright reddish brown during their first season, and then gntdually

> The log ipeoimen in the Jeiup Colleotion of North American thick and mth one hundred and twelve layen of annual ({rnwtb,

Woods in the American Muaenm of Natural Hiatory, New York, It ia probable, therefore, that trees of thia apeciaa live, iiiMlur favof-

out on the CRUCftde Muuntaina near Portland, Oregon, is twenty and able conditions, far beyond three hundred years, wbliill \im unuitlly

one half inches in diameter inside the bark and two hundred and been considered the limit of the Ufa of any of the Awarioan l''lf>

ninety-two yeara old, with sapwood three and one eighth inches trees.

1

Mi

134

SJ'^.VA OF NORTH AMERICA.

CONIFEILS.

CONIi

grow darker. The leaves are marked on the upper surface with deep sharply defined grooves which sometimes do not reach quite to the apex, and are rounded and obscurely ribbed on the lower surface, stomatiferous above and below with numerous rows of stomata, dark or light blue-green, and often very glaucous during their first season, with generally a single fibro-vascular bundle, resin ducts close to the epidermis of the lower surface and midway between the edges and the midrib, and hypoderm cells in an interrupted band chiefly confined to the middle of the leaf on the upper and lower surfaces and to its edges ; the leaves are crowded in several rows and are erect, those on the lower side of the branch by the twisting of their bases, shorter on the upper side than on the lower and strongly incurved with the pointo erect or pointing away from the end of the branch ; on young plants and on the lower sterile branches of old trees they are flat, oblanceolate, rounded and usually slightly notched at the apex, from an inch to a'^ inch and a half long and about a sixteenth of an inch wide ; on fertile branches, where they are more crowded than on sterile branches, they are much thickened and often almost equally four- sided, acuminate and furnished at the apex with long rigid callous tips, and generally from one half to three quarters of an inch in length ; and on leading shoots they are flat, gradually narrowed from the base, which is about an eighth of an inch h le, acuminate, with long rigid points, and about an inch long. The staminate flowers are cylindrici;' and from three quarters of an in ..h to an inch in length, with reddish purple anthers, and at mixturity are suspended on slender pedicels from one quarter to nearly one half of an inch long. Ihe pistillate flowers, which are mostly confined to the upper branches, but are often scattered ovnr those below them, are cylindrical, from an inch to an inch and a half long, and from one quarter to one third of an inch in diameter, with broad rounded scales much smaller than their nearly orbicular bracts, which are erose on the margins and contracted above into ?1(>nder elongated strongly reHoxed tips. The cones are oblong-cylindrical, slightly narrowed, but fuU and rounded at the apex, from four to five inches long and from two to two and a half inches in diameter, purple or olive-brown and pubescent, wi^h scales which are about one third wider than they are long, and gradually narrowed from y'.e rou)>d>Hl apex to the base, or more often are full at the sides, rounded and denticulate above the i: \-\&, and t\\^n abruptly contracted and wedge-shaped below ; they are nearly or entirely covered by tlieir strongly .eflexed pale green bracts which are spatulate, full and rounded above and fimbriate on the largiiis, with brc id foliaceous midribs produced above the body of the bract into short broad flattened points. The seeds are half an inch in length, pale reddish brown, and about as long as their wings, whicb am gradually narrowed from below to the nearly truncate slightly rounded apex.

Ahiea nobilis inhabits the Cascade Mountains from the slopes of Mt. Baker in northern Washington * to the valley of the Mackenzie River in Oregon,' and the coast ranges from the northern slopes of the Olympic Mountains in Washington ' as far south, at least, as the valley of the Nestucca River in Oregon. Probably attaining its largest size on the high coast mountains of Oregon, it is most abundant on the western slopes of the Cascade Range in Washington and northern Oregon, where it is common from elevations of two thousand five hundred up to five thousand feet above the sea, and forms the largest part of the forest between elevations of three and four thousand feet, mingling below

with amai Case

strea resin absol luml

Sept ama

park the i

eastc mucl inha

» B

Oard.

X

Engh

feet i

gronn King-

During the sommer of 1897 Abia ndhUit wu fonnd od the south side of Ht. Baker by Mr. A. J. Johnson. (See Corille, Gar- den and Farat, x. 617.)

As the northern end of the Cascade Mountains has been Tery Uttle explored, Abiea nobilU may be supposed to range somewhat to the north of Mt. Baker, which is the most northerly of the high volcanic peaks of the Cascades, and possibly to reach the borders of British Columbia.

The Fir found by Lyall on the Cascade Mountains, near Lake Chilukweyuk, and doubtfully referred by him to Picea nobilii (bal-

tameat) (Jour. Linn. Soc. vii. 143), may possibly have been Abie$ nobilis at a more northern station than it has since been seen, and north of the boundary of the United States, but I have not seen the specimen.

' See CoTille, /. c.

* In August, 1896, I found a single small plant of Abitt nobUit on a slope above the Solduc River at an elevation of three thousand feet above the sea and near the nnrthem base of the Olympio Mountains, and the following year this species was seen by Dr. C. Hart Herriam in the same region.

COMFS&dE.

Dves which er surface, often vety lose to the cells in an and to its branch by d with the iwer sterile apex, from shes, where jually four- one half to from the mt an inch in length, quarter to the upper inch and a wales much above into ed, but full f inches in r than they full at the iped below ; :e spatulatc, luced above length, pale o the nearly

in northern the northern be Nestucca in, it is most , where it is the sea, and ghng below

lave been Abie$ B been aecn, and ave not aeen the

of Ablei nobilii F three thousand }f the Olympic tag aeeu by Dr.

CONIFERS.

SILVA OF NORTH AMERICA.

135

with Tsuga heterophylla, Paeudotmga mucronata and Abies grandia, and above with Ahiea amahilia, Ahiea laaiocarpa and Tauga Mertenaiana, On the eastern and northern slopes of the Cascade Mountains it is less abundant and of smaller size.

The wood of Ahiea nohilia is light, hard, strong, and rather close-grained ; it is pale brown streaked with red, with rather darker colored sapwood, and contains broad conspicuous dark-colored resinous bands of small summer cells and thin obscure meduUary rays. The specific gravity of the absolutely dry wood is 0.4561, a cubic foot weighing 28.42 pounds. Occasionally manufactured into lumber, it is used under the name of larch for the interior finish of buildings and for packing^t^ases.

Ahiea nohilia was discovered on the Cascade Mountains just south of the Columbia Biver, in September, 1825, by David Douglas, on a day made memorable also by his discovery of Ahiea amahilia?

Sent by Douglas to England, Ahiea nohilia at once became a popular ornament of European parks, in which it has already grown to a Iarg;e size and produced its beautiful cones in profusion.^ On the Atlantic seaboard it has grown well in the middle states,' and proved hardy in sheltered positions in eastern Massachusetts, where, however, it gives little promise of growing to a larg;e size or of displaying much of the beauty and vigor which make this Fir-tree one of the stateliest and most splendid inhabitants of the forests of the northwestern states.

' Douglas, Companion Bot. Mag. ii. 93. See, alio, Sargent, Oard. Chrm. n. aer. zri. 7.

* The speoimen in the Finetom at Dropmore, near Windaor, in England, planted where it now ttands in 1837, waa seventy-one feet in height in 1893, with ita lower branches still sweeping the gronnd (J. G. Jack, Garden and FomI, vi. 14) ; and at Birr Castle, King's County, Ireland, in 1891, there was k specimeD eighty-three

feet in height (See Dunn, Jmr. B. Hort. Soc. ziT. 86. For other notes on Abia nobUit in Europe, see Hooker, Jour. Bot. and Kew Gard. Mite. ix. 8o. Hutchinson, Trans. Highland and Agric. Soc. ser. 4, xi. 24. Gard. Ckron. n. ser. ziz. 14, f. 2; ser. 3, zz. 274, f. 62. —Webster, Traru. ScoUiih ArboricuUural Soc. zL 61.) ' See (Jardm and Forest, vi. 4fi8.

; .

1 it

EXPLANATION OF THE PLATE.

Plate DCXVII. Abies nobilis.

1. A branch with atamiiute flowers, natural aiie,

2. An anther, end view, enlarged.

3. An anther, aeen from below, enlarged.

4. A branch with pistillate flowers, natural size.

6. A scale of a pistillate flower, upper side, with its braet and ovnles, enlarged.

6. Vertical section of a scale of a pistillate flower, with its bract and

ovules, enlarged.

7. A fruiting branch, natural size.

8. A cone^cale, lower side, with its braet, natural size.

9. A cone-scale, upper side, with its seeds and bract, natural size.

10. A seed, enlarged.

11. An embryo, enlarged.

12. A leaf of a sterile branch divided transversely, upper side, enlarged.

13. A leaf of a leading shoot divided transversely, lower side, enlarged.

14. A leaf of a lower sterile branch, natural size.

15. A leaf of a cone-bearing branch, natural size.

16. Cross section of a leaf of a fertile branch, magnified iiiteen diameters.

17. A seedling plant, natural size.

Silva of Nor

I I:

!il

m

EXPLANATTO!* •'«F Ttff P?^ATK

i M

ft- A sVk'u jI i ^«'.iii«i*. H«»*»f, <41)M* V -■ - ' !"■■

i r-n. (tv Jjtaioo >< k J'jJb ol a piitillato flowpr, mth . < .;

; A fnittinu hruirii. uMorHl mU;

8 A i-onn-fU'dlc, lower »i<li', with it» bnutt. naM""'! iliw.

9. A ronp-srale, upper sidii, with its seedn and bract, nacani mm.

10. A need, cnlar^red.

11. An embryo, enUrged.

12. A leaf of a Ktorlle branch divided transversely, npper »id«, enlarged. 1.3. A lea{ uf a les^iiug Ah(K>t divided trannversoty, lowe* side, enlarged.

14. A leaf of a lower Bterile branrb, natural .size.

15. A leaf of a eone-bearing branch, nainral size.

16. CroM section of n leaf of a fertile branch. ina)rnifleil fiiter.n diameters.

17. A !eedlin<;; plant, natural >i<>^.

Silva of North America.

Tab. Dcxv;i,

I

I i

i

C.F.Fihrofi </**/:

fm^Mimeiif . r.

ii

ABIES N0BIL:S , Lindl.

A./tithtt'u.v t/i/>Kr :

Imp. J. Tan^nr Parij.

f

CONinULS.

BILVA Of NOBTB AMERICA.

137

ASim MAONIFIOA.

fled Fir.

Bracts of the (Bon9'i»<3ttl6« oblMig^spatulate, acute, short-pointed, shorter than their scales. Leaves hh)(u--|{r^^ fltltt often glaucous, tetragonal, bluntly pointed on sterile and acute, crowd^U »li4 itttiUi'Ved on fertile branches.

Abies macnifloa, A. Murray, Pm, H: If»fh Sm Hi Mtii t. 26-33 (1863); QarUnflom, m, Ji»,-- M««fc«l A Hoohstetter, Syn. ffadelh. 4(9- ^K, Umii, Dihdf^ ». |it. ii. 213.— Engelmuio, Trant, Mf, fiimin Amd: ))). 601; Qard. Chron. n. »er. xij. B86, f, JMJi lifmtf * Walton Bot. Cat. ii. 119; Bol. Giuuttg, »i», 4: = V*it*1*( Man. Conif. 99. Sargent, Vo,-ett frm N.- Am.- i(f(h C'eniut U. S. iz. 214; Oard. Chron- N, m, »»¥.- m:=MMUstt, Oard. Chron. n. »er. xw, 669, f, M# i i/mn'.- Jt: Hart. Soe. xiv. 193. Syme, Oard, Ohrm, ft, mt, Hf. fWR Mayr, WcUd. Nordam. 361.-^ |>»HH#», ti^pi OnUjifmia StaU Board Fortitry, iii, H'i, >.. 13 {(J»m=Hmi'»t> of California); Wett-Ainmmn Oitnti^Hmmg, 61 j MuU. Sierra Club, u. 165 (Ooniftfl of th* J^lMUs Slopi)^ Beiuner, JTitiufi. Nadelh. ^9, f, l^, = Hmmil Jmlr. B. Hort. Soe. xiv. 469 (Pinetltm fimimm)- l/imshtn, DmUaeKb Dendr. 17. }li»rmm, Nnfih Aimfkm fauna,

"So. 7, 340 {Death Valley Exped. i!.). Corille, Cowtrib. U. S. Nat. Herb. n. 224 (Bot. Death Valley Eieped.). Pioea maffnifloa, Gordon, Pinetum, ed. 2, 219 (1867)

A. Murray, Gard. Chron. n. aer. iii. 105, 762, {. 156. Pinna amabiUa, Parlatore, De CandoUe Prodr. zvi. pt. ii.

426 (in part) (not Antoine) (1868). W. B. M'Nab, Froe.

B. Irish Acad. aer. 2, ii. t 46, f. 3-3 a.

Abies amabilis, Vaiey, Bep. Dept. Agrie. U. S. 1876, 34 {Cat. Forest Trees U. S.) (not Forbes) (1876).

Finns magnifloa, W. R. M'Nab, Proe. B. Irish Aead. set. 2, ii. 700, t 49, t. 30, 30 a (1877).

Abies nobilis, Engelmann, Qard. Chron. n. ler. zii. 684 (in part) (not Lindley) (1879) ; Brewer & Watson Bot. Col. ii. 119 (in part).— KoUogg, Trees of California, 33 (in part).

Abies nobilis, var. magnifloa, Kellogg, Trees of Califor- nia, 35 (1882). Maaten, Jour. Linn. Soe. zzu. 189, t. 5, f. 19-21.

A tree, in old age * iw<iA#JOM% »«Mfl«wfaat tonnd-topped and often two hundred and fifty feet in height, vith a trunk eight or im fmi JN dittm«ft«r and often naked for half the height of the tree, and comparatively small and short hrAmb^ UftHiged in r gnlar remote whorls, the upper slightly ascending and the lower somewhat p9n4' l0M# AHd ftlfftished with rigid remote btoral branches, the ultimate divisions pointing forward mA t\i§ whtAe {tmuing great broad stiff flat-topped frond-like masses of foliage. Until it is about om bHWJfd f«tlt high the tapering trunk of Abies magnifica, like its branches, is covered with thio smootti ^hm^J white bark which, as the tree grows older, begins to darken near the ground ; and, when Mljf ^nmii^ ihe bark of the trunk is from four to six inches thick and is deeply divided into broad r3!}B4s4 Mges hitiktm by cross fissures and covered by dark red-brown scales which in falling disclosa th^ hfigUi ^nmmttiH'eA inner bark. The winter branch-buds are ovate, acute, and from one quarter to om ihUA ut m itieh long and are covered with bright chestnut-brown scales, those of the outer ranks being lJmti«utNtc« m the margins, with prominent midribs produced into short tips. The branchlets are stont. JIgljt yellttW-gteen and slightly puberulous during their firs' season, and then light red-brown and InetrOMS fm immt ««• eight years, finally becoming gray or silvery white. The leaves, which are persistent nSHAity ftif nhmii teii years and are pale and very glaucous during their first season, and later become hlu^grfrntf «f# flltMost equally four-sided, ribbed above and below, with from six to eight rows of stomatft on §Mb of (ht; (mt sides, gen'^rally two fibro-vascular bundles, resin ducts close to the epidermis and miAw^y heiUfem ih« sides and the midrib of the lower surface, and hypoderm

' The log speumen in the Je»i)p fif^f^tf^fim itf Swifc A««>«(!«n Woods in the Amorican Museuw »f S#^f#( JJwtofJ'V J>«# totk, which is only twenty-five inches m ^hmfl^f im4^ iim imiti It two

hundred and sixty-one yean old, with sapwood three eighths of an inoh thick and ninety-seven years old.

!

138

SILVA OF NORTH AMh.RICA.

CONIVERJB.

oells at the four angles ; on young plants and the lower branches of older ones they aro oblanceolate, somewhat flattened, rounded or bluntly pointed at the apex, from three quarters of an inch to an inch and one half long and one sixteenth of an inch wide, those on ^he lower side of the branch spreading in two nearly horizontal ranks by the twist at their base, while those on the upper side of the branch, which are curved from below the middle, ar'> often almost erect or bent forward at various angles to the branch ; on uppur and especially on fertile branches the leaves are much thickened, with more prominent midribs, acute, with short callous tips, from one third of an inch in length on the upper side of the branch to an inch and a quarter on the lower side, crowded, erect and strongly incurved, completely hiding the upper side of the branch ; and on leading shoots the leaves are about three quarters ol an inch long, arcuate, and acuminate, with their long rigid callous spinescent tips pressed against the stem. The staminute flowers are oblong^ylindrical, from one half to three quarters of an inch long and about a quarter of an inch thick, with dark reddish purple anthers. The pistillate flowers are oblong, an inch and a half long and nearly an inch thick, with rounded scales much shorter than their oblong pale green bracts which terminate in elongated slender tips more or less tinged with red. The cones are oblong' cylindrical, slightly uarrowed to the rounded truncate or retuse apex, dark purplish brown,' puberulous, from six to nine inches long and from two and a half to three and a half inches in diameter, with scales often an inch and a half wide and usually about two thirds as wide as they are long, gradually narrowed to the cordate base, somewhat longer or often only two thirds as long as their bracts, which are oblong- spatulate, acute or acuminate, with slender tips, slightly serrate above tLe middle and often abruptly contracted and then enlarg^ed toward the base. The seeds are dark reddish brown, three quarters of an inch long and about as wide as '.heir lustrous rose-colored obovate cuneate wings, which are nearly truncate and often three quarters of an inch wide at the apex."

Ahxts magnifica is distributed southward from southern Oregon,' finding its most northerly home on the Cascade Mountains, where it is common at elevations of between five and seven thousand feet above the sea, forming sometimes nearly pure forests or mingled with Tsuga Mertenaiana at its

' Mr. J. G. Lemmon hit found in the neif^liborliood of Meadow Lake, Sierra County, California, amall and evidently ttunted treea of AbieM magnificat vi^ conea averaging four or five iuobea in length, which be describes •« " of a yellowish color uutil maturity " (Abia magrU/iea, var. zanthocarpa, Ixsminon, Rep. California Stale Board Fortttry, iii. 145, t. 14 [Cotie-Bearen of California] [1890] ; WeMt-American Cone-Bearen, 63 ; BuU. Sierra Club, ii. 166 [Coni- fert of He Pacific Slope']).

* On the Cascade Mountains of Oregon, on Mt. Shasta and on the cross and coast ranges of northern California, the bracts of the oone-ecales of Abief magnifica are full and rounded or obtusely pointed and not acute at the apex, and are nearly a* long or usually longer than their scales, the exserted bracts becoming bright golden brown at maturity in their exposed parts and loosely reflexed, leaving a considerable part of the scales of the cone uncovered. This is :

Abie$ magnifica^ var. Shastentitf Lemmon, Rep. California State Board Forettry, iii. 145 (Cone-Bearen of California) (1890) ; Wett- American Cont-Beartn, (12, t. 1 1.

tAbiet nobilit robutla, Carriire, Traiti Conif. ed. 2, 269 (1867).

Masters, Oard. Ckron. a. ser. xxiv. 662, f. 147 ; Jour. Linn. Soc.

xxU. 102, t. 6. Abies nobUii, var. glauca. Masters, Jour. Linn, Soc. xxii. 189, f.

18 (1887). Abie$ Shasleniiii, Lemmon, Garden and Forett, x. 184 (1897) ;

BuU. Sierra Club, ii. 165 (Conifert of the Pacific Slope). Co-

Tille, Garden and Forest, x. 616.

The plant figured by Or. Masters ai Abies nobilis robusla is evi- dently of thi'i form, but the plant previously described by Carriire

under this name liad not fruited, and it is impossible to decide from his deMriptian whether it was the form with included or exserted bracts, and his varietal name, which is much older than Lemmon's Skastensis, caunot therefore be safely adopted.

At the lowest elevations on Mt. Shasta, where this tree is found, the cones are of the normal size and shape of the species, and the bracts, although full and rounded at the apex, are not exserted or protrude but slightly beyond the scales ; at Ligher elevations the cones are often oval in form and not more than four inches long and two and a half inches in diameter, with comparatively longer and much exserted bracts. On the soutiiem SiciTa Nevada at very high elevations the bracts of the cones of individual trees of Abies mag- nifiea are identical in their shape with those of the north and are much exserted, but in all the central part of the range occupied by this tree its cone-bracts are acute and included ; and, except in the shape and length of the cone-bracts and in the oval form of the smaller cones produced on trees growing at high altitudes, I can find no charaotera to distinguish from the Fir of the central Sierra Nevada the var. Shanlensis, which is the only form from Mt. Shasta northward. In habit, bark, and foliage the two forms seem iden- tical, nor have I seen trees with cone-bracts which appeared inter- medinte in form between those of the species and its variety.

* See Coville, I. e.

The most northern point where Abies magnifica, var. Skastensis, was seen by Dr. Coville in 1897 was on the mountains east of Odell Ijike and south of Dav^s Lake, at a point many miles south of the moat southern station at which Abies notUis has been observed (CoviUe, I. c).

CX>NIFERA.

>lanceolate,

to an inch

spreading

Jie branch,

ngles to tho

I prominent

side of the

completely

arters or an

at the stem.

gr and about

>ng, an inch

r pale green

are oblong-

puberulous,

with scales

ily narrowed

are oblongs

ten abruptly

e quarters of

3h are nearly

rtherly home en thousand isiana at its

ouible to decide with included or muob older tlian dopted.

this tree is found, 9 apeclea, and the re not exaerted or ler elevationa the ir incbea long iind itivelj longer aud ivada at very high eea of AbieM mag^ the north and are te range oceupied j ; and, eicept in 9 oval fonii of the h altitudea, I can the central Sierra 1 from Mt. Shaata

forma aeem idcn- h appeared ioter-

ita variety.

CONIFERS.

BILVA OF N0Ji77I AMERICA.

139

upper limits, and below with Pinua contorta and Pinua pondcrom. Tt U common on the Trinity, Scott, and other cross ranges, and on the high peaks of tho coauf nngit ot northern California ; ' on the slopes of Mt. Shasta, at elevations of between six thousand ilv« hundred and eight thousand feet above the sea, it is the principal inhabitant of great forests in whi»h AMeii concolor, its constant companion at low elevations, often appears ; southward it extends nlonK th« entire length of the western slope of the Sierra Nevada, on which it is the principal tree in tliu tutmi lielt between elevations of six and nine thouaitnd feet above the sea, sometimes descending in <iihi1 slindy canons a thousand feet lower; toward the southern end of the range it ascends to elovationH of over ten thousand feet, although above eight thousand five hundred feet, where it attains its largest »m on the fine soil of moraines and often forms continuous nearly pure forests, it is scattered uiid usuiilly of smaller size ; ' it is also abundant on the eastern slope of the northern and central parts uf tite Hiorro range at high elevations and on the Washoe Mountains, one of its eastern spurs in Nevadn.*

The v'ood of Abies magnifica is light, soft, not strong, compurotivcly durable in contact with the soil, but diSBcult to season; it is light red-brown, with thick somewhat darker sapwood and a satiny surface, and contains broad conspicuous dark-colored bands of sniiill Niimmor cells and numerous thin medullary rays. The specific gravity of the absolutely dry wood in 0.4701, a cabic foot weighing 29.30 pounds. It is largely used for fuel, and in California is ocousionAlly manufactured into coarse lumber employed in the construction of cheap buildings and for pooking^aitttN.

Abies magnifica was discovered by Fremont in Deoernber, 1840, during his second journey to California, probably on the Sierra Nevada.* The variety Shaittemiii was discovered on Mt. Shasta by Jeffrey in October, 1852.* Introduced into Europe nearly fifty years ago," Abies magnifica has grown well in many parts of Great Britain' and in France and northern Italy ) in the eastern United States it is hardy in sheltered positions as far north as eastern Massachusetts, but, like many other trees of western North America, it gives little promise of long life on the Atlantic seaboard.

Beautiful in its early years in its symmetrical shape and in its coloring, and massive and superb in its prime, with its tall dark stem and narrow crown, through .vhieh the light filters softly to the ground, hardly interrupted by its slender branches and their embracing leaves, the great Red Fir, the noblest of all its race, is a fit associate of the Sequoia, the Sugar Pine, the Yellow Pine, the Libocedrus, and the Douglas Spruce in the forests of the Sierra Nevada which these trees make glorious.

> On Snow Mountain in Lake County, Alna magtajka, var. Shot- leniit, ia the moat abundant tree above elevationa of aiz thouiaod feet. (See K. Brandegee, Zm!, ir. 176 [aa i4Nei noiiUi].)

Muir, The Uaunlaini of California, 173, t.

' Huir, in lilt.

* Tate Herb. Engelmann. ' Tat» Herb. Engelmann.

* Abia magnijica ia aaid to have been introdnoed into England in 1851. (See Nioholaon, Oard. Diet.) Jeffrey, perhapa, drat aent the aeedi to England, but probably ot the var. Shaileniii, ta he doea

not appear to h»r» vialM tba eentral Sierra Nevada. There waa 10 much ooiifualAtl, h«W8V»r, about the origin, the true character, and tba mmM »f flmny «f lb* Paclflo ooaat conifera when they were intradu««d into MHKJitnd, that It is hardly poaaible to decide who flrat aent tlia umiU n( thia tree to Europe.

* Abiti nmgnifiim In I)«>II«vmI la one of the hardieat of all the Pir-treea in Orxat Hritain, where there are a number of specimens wbicb, in ISOS, ir«r« itum tlilrty<fl«e to forty feet in height. (See Dunn, Jowr, H, Uerl, Heti, lif. M.)

|i

», var. Shaslmtit, taina east of Odell niles south of the as been observed

KXFLANATION OF THE PLATES.

Platr DCXVIII. Abih maonifioa.

1. A bniwh with itaminftte flowen, natunl liie.

2. As Mither, lida view, enlarged.

3. An anther, front view, enlarged.

4. A branch with piitillate flowen, natural liza.

6. A scale of a piitillate flower, upper side, with iti bract and ornlee,

enlarged. ft. A bract of a piitillat* flower, lower aide, enlarged.

I *

FLiTB DCXIX. AbIB MAOMinOA.

1. A fruiting branch, natural size.

2. A eone-acale, lower lide, with its bract, natural size.

3. A cone-scale, upper side, with its seeds, natural size.

4. A seed, natural site.

6. Vertical section of a seed, enlarged.

6. An embryo, enlarged.

7. A leaf of a sterile branch divided tranSTenely, enlarged.

8. A leaf from the upper side of a cone-bearing branch, natural size.

9. A leaf from the lower side of a cone-bearing branch, natural size.

10. A leaf from a sterile branch of a young tree, natural site.

11. End of a leading shoot, natural size.

12. Cross section of a leaf, magnified fifteen diameters.

13. Seedling plants, natural size.

Platk OCXX. Abies HAONmcA, var. Shabtbmsu.

1. A fruiting branch, natural size.

2. A cone-scale, lower side, with its bract, natural size.

3. A cone-scale, upper side, with a seed, natural size.

4. A seed, natural size.

•vli'-.r

ABIES

iiiiimi^ii liiii III I iiiniiii ■ml j;-jj;b— iiiwa>>»Afti«*«m

KIPIJiJNATIUN OF Tinf fUATU.

PlATK DfXVlll

1. A knuich with •UmiiMtUi 4k'* •^ 7, An Mtiiar, tUI* '>*• m>>.<i*f-<

4 A ..-.■, . >

'4 it< bTMl aad ovaJm,

'^»!«»

^<«i*> mu»mw.i

i. A :ii».'<l, nitturki tiu.

ft. Vvrtiest kwIiiii uf m<k1. enlargad.

6. An embryo, enUripKl.

1. A loaf of a ntiM-ilR hranr.h Hiviiloil tranaTrnely, nnlarifod.

8. A Ivaf from the upprr aiilu ut a •.-ona-lx'arinK brnn"h, natural liw.

9. A Wnt fniiu lh« lnwcr wit: iif conft-b«aring lirniieh. natural aiie.

10. A Imf fruin a atcrito liraiuh of a yuan;; true, natural nixe.

1 1. Kn<l of a IcadiiiK ahiKit, natural iiixi.

12. CmM Mtrtiiin of a leaf, magniUetl Hflacn (liaitu-tar*.

13. SwHilioK (tlantji, nutural titx.

Platk UCXX. AniRK MAUNmca, uar. Shaktknius. i A fniiling lirati<-ti, natiiru) the 3. A <'w«-«<'ttl«. lower side, willi iu brart. natural niw,

3. A ea«»-«eal«, upper tide, vith a (eed. nutural (lie.

4. A M)e<l. natural aiu).

Silva of *<orth Aiti»ric»

T.», nrxviii

3

, ' E FiLivn Jc/

ABIES MAGNIFICA. A Murr

Hatn^e .^

A Jiu\reti.r iitrt\r> '

hup J /'tittf^w jUrui

LI

SilvB. of North

Tab DCXIX

i'.'£/i»ii»i Jm'

AB;F.S MA'.

f

-'f

I''

; i. ^■1

i

;

Silva, of North Americ

Tab DCXIX

VK.FtiJtm del

Rapine- sc

ABlEi MAONiriCA.A Murr

A liunr^ur liirnr ' 2mp. J. Taneur. Paru

\

SiW«, of North Amcnc*

5-^fe

"^

v

V

. l-i^A,""-,''"^ N P' '■■

I'

I

.In

I

Silva, of North Ariieno*

Tab, DC XX.

^

C £■ Faxon. dtU'

JlapuiB sc.

ASiES MAGNIFICA, vat. SHASTENSIS.Lemm

4flm¥iiiBfi mfMt

Irrji. ^/ Taflfur .^.7.".'>.

INDEX TO VOL XIL

NuBM of Ordtn an ia tMAiJ. OAmAu; of admiclad Qtmtn md

ol •yiuHiyiiu, In itallM,

W|mUt Mi4 oilMT rioft aunm. In romaa type;

AUei,06.

iINn, 1, 10, 50, as.

Abiei Ajanemu, 21,

AbieM AjanemtM, nr. mfcrmjxmia, 31.

Atna alba, 33, 37, 99.

Akiei alba caruUa, 40.

Abia Albertiana, 73.

il6ui ^fcociMiui, 21.

Abia Alcapiiana, 21,

Abiei (mabilit, 128,

Abie$ omaMu, 117, 137,

AbUi Amerieana, 33, 37, 63, 107.

Abie$ Avuricana carvlea, 40,

Abia ApoUinif, 90,

ilMtt ApoUmii, $ Panaekaiea, 99,

jl6ia ApoUinit, y Regina Amalia, 99.

Abia Araragi, 60.

i<Mef oretica, 39.

ilitef argentta, 100.

i4Met ilriamua, 113.

tAbia ammatiea, 117.

Abiea Baboreiuia, 06, 100.

Abies balsamea, 107.

AbieM babamea, 113, 121.

Abia balmmta, p Fra$m, lOB.

Abiea balaamea Hudaonia, 109.

Abia baUami/era, 107.

Abia bioolor, 21.

Abia bifida, 101.

Abia bi/oUa, 113.

Abiei bracbyphylla, 102.

i4Me( braeUata, 129.

il6ie> Bridgaii, 73.

i46ia Sninontana, 61.

i4Wef Canadetuii, 37, 63.

ilfttea Canadmiit f 73.

j4iie« Caroftniana, 69.

Abies CephaloiiioA, 96, 99.

Abia Cqahalonica, a Pamamica, 99.

Abia Cephalonictt, 0 Areadiea, 99.

Abia Cephaloniea robiuta, 99.

Abies Cephalonios, var. Apollinia, 99.

Abia Cephaloniea, var. Regina Amalia, 99.

Abiea Cilioica, 96, 98.

Abia eandea, 40.

Abia eoimuitata, 43.

Abiea ooDoolor, 121.

Abia ooneolor, 117.

Abia eoncolor, var. latiocarpa, 121.

i4M» <wneD<or, var. Lowiana, 121.

j4Mea mrvi/olia, 37.

i46«a denticulata, 28.

ylMu diverat/biia, 60.

y4Uei Douglarii, 87.

il6u< Douglarii, var. macraearpa, 98.

>4iia Douglarii, var. laxifolia, 87.

ytitei dumiua, 61.

AUes, •eonamlo prop«rti«l uf, iW.

ilUat £icU<n, lUl.

Abia EngelmamU, 43,

ilMei Bngelmanni glauea, il,

Abia tzetUa, 23, 2S, 00,

i4Ma eteelia dtnudala, 'H,

Abia txceUa, var. mtdiotimn, M,

ilMei exeiUa, var, virgata, tM,

Abiufalcala, SB.

ilMuyrrsM, 101, 103,

Abiafirma, var. i(A</a, lOt,

Abies Fraseri, lOS.

i4Me< Frauri, 107.

iiiiei ProMeri (B) nami, tOO,

iiMci Prateri, var. UudionI, t09,

Abies, fuii^al disMWi of, 101,

^Uu CMn<, 21.

ilitea Omelini, 4.

iliiea Gordoniana, 117.

Abiea grandia, 117.

/l»t« ^ratidJi, 113, 181, 130,

.ilMea gratutit, a Origomi, 117,

i4iK« grandii, var, cowotor, 131,

^Mm grandii, var, d'ni{fliini, I3A,

ylAMf grandii, var. Lomam, 131,

jlMa helerophylla, 73.

.4iK< hirltUa, 07,

ilftiM Hiipaniea, 100,

Abiea bomolepia, 90, 103,

i46ier Hookeriana, 77,

Abiea, hybrid, 07,

Abies, insect enenitM of, Ml,

Abies insignia, 07,

i4itM Japonica, 103.

i46tea Jezoeniii, 21,

i4&te< Kamp/eri, 3.

AMm Kkulrow, 23,

i4ii<t £arix, 3.

Abies laaiocarpa, 113,

i46ie> laiiocarpa, 120.

it&Mj laiiocarpa, var, Aritmtita, 119,

..4M« 'oza, 37.

i46tM teplolepii, 2.

./IfttM Lowiana, 121.

/IttM macrocarpa, 03.

Abiea magniftea, 137,

Abiea magntOea, var, 8liMt«n»ls, IfW.

.!6>M magnijica, var. lanlhoeurpg, lili,

yl.'wa J/ariarui, 28.

i4it«i medioxima, 24,

i4iin Hfenzieiii, 21, 47, 00,

ilfttea Memietii Pnrryana, 47,

i4M«» Mertemia, 77.

il6h» lUerlemiana, 73, 77>

i4MM microcarpa, 7,

ilMea microphylla, 73,

.^Ues mieroipirmo, 31,

^M« m/nor, 09.

AMm Mom), 96, 101.

ilMfO Morlnda, 22.

i^Mv mucrvmila, 87.

iIMM mueronaln, var. poluafru, 87.

ilAfea nephrolepii, 101.

i4M«* nljfni, 28, 33, 43.

i4M«/r nfjrro, * -uAra, 33.

AMm nobJ' .33.

/iM«« nn!n/ 137.

r/<MfanoMr</u»< 130.

i4WM no*"',t, var. j._ a, 138.

/(M«« ni/. >. var. /ia^{/7ra, 137.

Abim Nordmanniana, 96, 98.

Abiea Nordinanniana apeciosa, 97.

Ahia ffum'-'ica, 100.

AM^i obmiii , 24.

Abl''i Omorika, 22.

A: orimlalii, 22, 23.

Ai '^ationiana, 77.

i^Aifii Pallonii, 73, 77, 80.

i4<r<e« peclinala, 23, 63, 99.

vIMm peclinala, 0 Apollinii, 99.

Ahien pendula, 7.

Abies I'ieea, 06, 09.

i4M<f PfcM, 23.

i<Mu /%» (B) AppoUimi, 90.

Abies Ploea, economie propertiea of, 100.

Ablei Pichia, 98.

AHu Pindnm, 06.

Abiea Pinsapo, 96, 100.

Abiei Pinmpo, var. Baborenrii, 100.

Ahleipolila,21.

Abia proeera viminalii, 24.

ilA<«s Regina Amalia, 00.

Abies reliKiosa, 97.

Ablei retigioia glauceiceni, 91.

/4Wm rubra, 33, 37.

i4/rf«« ru^a ccerulea, 40.

Abies Hsohalinenaia, 97.

Ablei Schrenckiana, 26.

i4Mea sejinuaio, 98.

Abiei Shaiteniii, 138.

AMea BIblrica, 96, 07,

AMa SUnrica, var, alba, 98.

/4 Mea Sibirica, var. rwpAroJqnf, 101.

ilftfea Silrheniii, 21, 66.

/(Mm SmUkiana, 21, 22.

i4ti«« ipecia, 81.

^M«« ipectabilii, 66.

ilMe.1 ipinuloia, 22.

i4 //iff mhalpina, 113.

i4Me« lubalpina, yat./allax, 118.

i4MM laxifolia, 63, 87, 69.

i4if«s laxifolia, var. patula, 68.

t A bieiThunbergii, 21.

Ablei Torano, 21.

142

INDEX.

Abiti trigomtt 5fi.

A Met Tiuga, 60.

Abiti Tiuga nana, 60.

Abut umbellala, 101.

AbiM Voitobi, D6, 101.

A bit! yeilchi, var. .S'licWiiwiuti, OT,

Abiu veniiitn, 120.

Abitt puifaru, DO.

Abica Wubbiitim, 0(1, 08.

/4iici >r«Muiiia, 0 I'iiidnm, B8.

.i4Ai«# IVii/iunufmii, 77.

AilplgeM MbiuticoUtUt 25.

AilrlKS* Abietii, 26.

ilii'idiimi eintiniim, 101.

Algerian Kir, 100.

An(Jn>gynoiis Huwurt of Pioea. 2IK

Aiitboitvinella brachyitomai 61.

Aapidiutui Abietia, 61>

Aatcriua auda, 101.

Balm of Fir, 100. liaUHm Fir, 105, 107, lia Balaam, Cauula, 100. Bnlra of Oilead Fir, 107. BaUamea, 07. B«er, Spruce, 31. Black Spruce, 28. Blue Spruce, 47. Hlytriilium tignatum, 61. Botrytia cinerea, 84. Butrytia Uouglaaii, 84. Bracteatea, 07. Drianfon manna, 4. Burgundy pitch, 23.

Cieoma Laricia, S. Cnonia Abietia-Canadenaia, 61. Cflorna Abietia-pectinatie, 61. Calyptospora (ioppertiana, 61. Canada balaam, 100. Canada pitch, 6S. Canker of Larch, 5. Cephalonian Fir, 09. Chermea laricifolie, 5. Chineae Uemlouk, 60. Chryaomyxa Abietia, 61. Chryaomyia Ledi, 26. Chryaomyxa Rhododendri, iiSw Cilioiau Fir, 00. Coleophora laricella, 6. Colorado Sprucp, 47. Colpoma morbidum, 26. CoNiriKA, 1.

Daayaoypha Agaaaixii, 6, 101. Daayscypha oalycina, 8. Daayacypha Willkommii, 6. Dendroctonua frontalia, 26. Dendroctonua ruflpennia, 26. Douglaa Spruce, 87. Dryochotes alfaber, 26.

Kngelmann Spruce, 43. Kuabiea, 07. Eupicea, 20. European Larch, 3. European Spruce, 23.

Fendler, Angoat, 123.

Fendlera, 124.

Fir, Algerian, 100.

Fir, Balm of Gileail, 107.

Fir, Balaam, 105, 107, 113.

Fir, Cephalonian, 09.

r\t, CUician, 09.

Fir, Omik, 00.

Fir, llinialayan, 08.

Fir, Mexican, 07.

Fir, Norduiann, 08.

Fir, Had, 87, 133, 137.

Fir, Silver, 120.

Fir, White, 117, 121, 126.

Fungal diaeaaea of Abiea, 101.

Fungal diaeaaea of Larix, 6.

Fungal diamuea of I'icea, 26.

Fungiil diaeaaea of I'aeudotaugt, M.

Fungal direaaea of Tauga, 61.

Fuaiaporium Berenice, 101.

Geleohia abietiaella, 61, Geleohia obliquiitrigella, 86. Gibbea, Lewia Reave, 70. Orandes, 07.

Gnipbolitba brarteatana, 84. Greek Fir, 00. Gum, Spruoe, 31.

Hemlock, 63, 60, 73, 99. Hemlock, Chineae, 00. Hemlock, Himalayan, 61. Hemlock, Mountain, 77. Hemlock, oil of, 06. Hemlock reain, 66. Hemlock, Sargent'a, 66. Hemlooka, Japaneae, 00. Hfuperopfuce, 50, 60. Haptm/teuce t'alioniana, 77. Himalayan Fir, 08. Himalayan Hemlock, 61. Himalayan Larch, 3. Himalayan Spruce, 22. Howell, Thomaa, 62. Hybrid Abiea, 07. Hyleainua aericeua, 26. Hypodermella Larioia, 6.

Inaect enemiea of Abiea, 101. Inaeot enemiea of IatIx, 6. Inaect enemiea of Pioea, 26. Inaect enemiea of Paeudotauga, 84. Lueot enemiea of Tauga, 61.

Japaneae Hemlocka, 60. Japaneae Larch, 2. Japaneae Paeudotauga, 84.

Laehnoa Abietia, 26.

Lachnna laricifex, 6.

Urch, 7, 127, 133.

Larch, Canker of, 6.

Larch, European, 3.

Larch, Himalayan, 3.

Larch, Japaneae, 2.

Larch Sack-bearer, 6.

Larch Saw-fly, 6.

Larix, 1.

Larix Atlaiea, 4.

Larix Americana, 7.

Larix Americana pmdtila, 7.

Larix Americana prolifera, 7.

Larix Americana rubra, 7.

Larix Archangetica, 4.

Larix aduci/olia, 'A.

Larix communis, var. 0 Sibiriea, 4.

Larix communis, 7 Ro*sica, 4.

Larix rammunu, var. I penduUna, 3.

Larix Dnhuricn, 4.

Larix Vakurica, a ly;>>«i, 4.

Larix Paktirica, f prolrala, 4.

Larix Daliurica, var. Kurilanaia, 4.

Larix Dohurica, var. y Japmiea, 4.

Lurix decidua, 3.

Larix dtciiiua, communii, 3.

Larix decidua, y Americana, 7.

Larix decidua, 9 pendula, .1.

Larix, economic propertiea of, 8.

Larix Eumpmt, .1, 4.

Larix Europtta communi», 3

Larix Euri)/}tra cimipnt'ta, 3.

Larix Kuroptea Inxn, 'A.

Larix Kuropcea pendula, 3.

Larix KuropiTa, li/pica, 3.

Larix Europaa, var. Dahurica, 4.

Larix Europata, var. Sibiriea, 4.

Larix, fungal diaeaaea of, 0.

Larix Griffilkiana, 2.

Larix GriRithii, 2.

Ijarix, inaeot enemiea of, 6.

Larix inltrmedia, 4, 7.

Larix Japonica, 2.

Larix Japonica macroeai^, 2.

Larix Kampferi, 2.

Larix Kiempferi, var. minor, 8.

Larix Kamltchalika, 4.

Larix Kurilemit, 4.

Larix tarieina, 7.

Larix tarieina, var. microcarpa, 8.

Larix tarieina, var. pendula, 8.

Larix Larix, 3.

Larix Larix, economic propertiea of, 3, 4.

Larix Ledebourii, 4.

Larix leplotepie, 2.

Larix leplotepit, $ Aturrayana, 2.

Xoriz leplotepif, var. minor, 8.

Larix Lyallii, 16.

Larix mieroearpa, 7.

Larix occidentalia, 11.

Larix pendula, 7.

Larix pyramidatui, 3.

Larix Huuiea, 4.

Larix Sibiriea, 3.

Larix tenuifolia, 7.

Larix vulgarii, 3.

Laaioapharia atuppea, 61.

Liparia monarcha, 24.

Lyall, David, 16.

Lyallia, 16.

Maekenxie, Alexander, 76. Manna, Brianyon, 4. Melampaora Tremube, 6. Helexitoae, 6. Helicla balaamicola, 101. Mertena, Karl Heiorich, 80. Mertenaia, 80. Mexican Fir, 07. Micropeuce, 00. Momi, 101.

Monohammua eonfuaor, 26. Monohammua deutator, 26. Moth, Nun, 24. Mountain Hemlock, 77.

Nectria balaamea, 101. Nematua Eriohaonii, 6. Nobilea, 07. Nordmann Fir, 08. Norway Spruce, 24. Nun moth, 24.

Oil of Hemlock, 66. Omorika, 20, 23.

INDEX.

Ooipem Abiatam, M. 0n(0o PiM, 90.

Pktton Spruce, 77.

Paridarmiuin Abialinum, 20.

Perideriiiium Abiatiiium, var. dMolmat, 30.

Fcridermiuin balMinaum, 101.

Paridarmium t»liinin«ra, 01.

Parldarniium Paokil, 01.

Paiiu arooaa, 101.

PieamlO.

/>ina, OS.

Pica* Ahiaa.'iO, 23.

Pioe» Abiea, andru^ynou* flowen of, iiO.

Pica* Aliiet, aaoiioiiiio propartia* o(| 9S, 84.

PisM Abiai inadioiimH, 23.

Pioan Abiaa TimiiialU, 24.

Pioaa Abiai virgata, 24.

Pioas Abiaa, v»r. iovorts, 24.

Pica* Abiaa, T«r. monatroao, 24.

Pica* Abiaa, Tar. pcnduin, 24.

Pioaa Abiea, var. pyrainidnlii, 24.

Pioaa Abies, var. atrlgoaii, 24.

Picta aeutianma^ 33.

PUxa Ajarumtis, 21, 156.

PicM Ajanentu, gmiiina, 21.

Picea AJaneruiM, fi aubintegtrrimat 21.

Picta AjntietuiM, var. miemptrma, 8L

Picta alba, 37.

Picta alba caruka, 40.

Picea alba, var. arcUca, 30.

Picta Aleockiana, 21.

Picta Alcoquiana, 21.

Picta amabilit, 113, 126.

Picta Apallinui, 90.

Picea baUamea, 107.

Picta baUamta, var. Umgifolia, 107.

Picta balmmiftra, 107.

Pica* bicolor, 20, 21.

Picta Hfolia, 113.

Picta brackyphylla, 102.

Picea bracttata, 129.

Picta brtvifolia, 28.

Picta brtvifolia, var. lemifFMlnKa, 28.

Pioea Breweriana, 51,

t Picta Cali/omica, 77.

Picea Canadeiiais, 37.

Picea Canaden$i», 03.

Picea Canadensis, androgynoiu flowen of,

20. Picea Canadensis glauoa, 40. Picea Ctphalonica, 99. Picta Cilicica, 98. Picta earulea, 40. Picta Columbiana, 43, 44. Picta concolor, 121. Picea crmeolnr, var. violacta, 12t. Picta Douglatii, 87. Picea, economic properties of, 20; 23. Picea Kngelmanni, 43. Picea Engtlmanni, var. Franciicttna, 43. Picta txctha, 23. Picea czcclta denudala, 24. Piceii exctUa, $ medioxima, 24. Picta iXctUa, $ viminalis, 24. Picea txreUa, var. ntrigota, "iA. Picea exi'Mu, var. virgata, 24. Picta firma, !01. Picta firma, var. A, 102. Picta Jirma, var. B, 101. Picea Fraxeri, 105, 107. Picta Fraaeri Hudmnia, 109. Picea Fraseri Hud:tonica, 109. Picea, fungal diseates of, 26.

Pieta gUiueetetna, 01.

Pi«m (ilabui, 20, 21.

Piiuu grandit, 117, 181, 18S.

Picta hirltUa, 97.

Picta Hondoitm, 81.

Picea, insect anamiaa of, SS,

Picta Japonica, 108.

l*iae* Jasoensis, 20, 81,

Pitta Khulrow, 22.

Picta hthmaria, 90.

Picta latiocarpa, 113.

Picta laxtt, 37.

/Vra Louiana, 121.

iVm £oi(>ii, 121.

Picta magnijica, 137.

Pioaa Mariana, 28,

Pieta Mariana, 33.

Picea Mariana, var. DoomatU, 81.

Picea Maxiniowicsii, 26.

Picta JUenxitrii, 47, 86.

Picta Mtruiaii, var. critpa, OS,

Pieta miemptrma, 81.

PiVm monlana, 23.

fVna Morinda, 28.

ficM ni'jm, 28, 33.

/'imo ni'^m Doumtlii, 31.

/'uwa nigra, a ntfuamea, 28.

/>ic«a ni'yra, var. glauea, 37.

A'Ma nipm, var. gritta, 33.

/Vera ni'yni, var. rubra, 33.

/Vera noAi/if, 133.

Pieta nobilit (baltamta f), 184.

Picta Nnrdriumniana, 08,

Pi'era Numidica, 100.

Picea obovatn, 20, 24.

Picea obovata, viir. 3 Sohnnokiau, 25.

Picea Omorilia, 20, 22.

Picea orientalis, 20, 22.

Picea Parrjrana, 47.

Picta Partontiana, 124.

Picta peclinata, 100:

Pieta Pichta, 98.

Pieta Pindrow, 98.

Picta Pinmpo, 100.

Pieta polila, 21.

(Picta) Pttudottuga ncbUit, 133.

Picea pungent, 47.

ficra pungent, a viridit, 47.

/'I'wa pungtns, 0 glauea, 47.

Picra pungetit glauea pendiJa, 48.

Picra pungent, var. ATM^ i4<&er( von SacAsen,

48. /Sera rtliginta, 97. Pt'cra rtligiota glauetteau, 01. Picea rnbens, .')3. /Vera ruftra, 28, 33. Picta rubra putilla, 37. /Vera iSchrtttckiana, 25. Picea Sitchensis, 65. Picta Sitlccemit, 66. Picea Smitbiana, 20, 22. t Pieta Tianickanica, 26. Picea Tornno, 20, 21. Picea Veitchi, 101. Picea vulgarit, 23. Picea vulgarit, var. AUaica, 28. Picta Webbiana, 98. /'I'cra Withmanniana, 98. Pieris Menapin, 5. Pine, Oregon, 90. Pinipestis reiiiculella, 25. Pinsapo, 100. Pinui, 1, 19, 59, 83, 96. /VfHu Abiet, 23, 24, 98, 99.

f/Vmui4MM, 81.

f /Vnw >4M«f aeu(<st<iiia, 88.

Pinut Ahitt iUI<a,m.

Pimut-Abiti Am*ricana, 03.

Pimit Abin baUamea, 107.

/Vnw i4At« Camif/mju, 28, 68.

Pinui Abitt taxa, 37.

/Vnitf ^6iM /'lera, 23.

/Vnw Abia, a ptclinata, 100.

/Vnw Abiet, b Htqinm Analia, 90.

Pinut Abitt, fi Apollmu, 00.

/Vnw ilAtet, I <4/i«i/iiiu, 09.

/Vnw /46iM, I /'anaeAaica, 90.

/Vnw jIAim, I Difflino/u, 24.

Pinut Abif, Cephttloniea, 09.

Pinw .4A<«<, var. mct/iozi'ma, 24.

/Vnw a/Aa, 33,37.

Pinut alba, 0 arnica, 39.

Pinut Atct)*fuiana, 21.

/Vnw amiibilit, 113, 128, 137.

/Vnw Americana, 28, 03.

/'mw ^merieana rubra, 33.

/%iw /Imen'eana, a alba, 37.

/Vnw Apollinii, 99.

/>inw i4rani9i, UO.

/Vnw Babortniit, 100.

/Vnw ftabamm, 105, 107.

A'nw baltamea, var. /Vweri, 106,

Pinut baltamta, var. longifolia, 107.

Pinw AiArfa, 101.

/Vnw brachyphylla, 102.

/>inw bracttata, 129.

/Vnw £runon>an<i, 01.

/Vnw Canadtntit, 37, 63, 7a

/Vnw Canadtntit fi t, 87.

Pi'nw Canadtniit, 0 nigra, 28,

/Vnw Ctphalonica, 09.

/Vnw Cilicica, 98.

/Vnw etnerra, 23.

/Vnw eommu/afa, 43.

/'tnw concolor, 121.

/Vnw Dahuriea, 4.

Pinw Douglatii, 87.

/Vnw Douglani, 0 penduia, til.

PinuM Douglatii, var. brenibraeteala, 87.

/Vnw Douglani, var. taxi/olia, f>7.

/Vnw t/umoin, 80.

/Vnw exctlta, 23.

Pinw txctlta, 0 medioxima, 24.

Pirtut Jirma, 101.

/'inw Fraatri, 106.

Pmus glabra, 40.

/Vnw grandit, 117, 128.

/•inw Griffithii, 3.

Pinw Harryana, 102.

Pinw Air(el/a, 07.

Pi'nw homolepit, 102.

Pinw Hooktriana, Tt.

Pinut inltrmrdia, I.

Pinut Japonica, 21.

Pinw Jtzotniit, 21.

Pi'nw Kampferi, 2.

/Vnw Kamtschatika, 4.

Pinw Khutrow, 22.

Pinu» too, 3.

/Vnw laricina, 7.

Pinw £ariz, 2, 3, 4.

/Vnw Lariz aUo, 7.

/'inw £arix (<4nwrtean(i!), 4.

Pinw Larix Americana nigra, 7.

/Vnw Zartz Canadensis, 7.

Pinw Zartz ni^o, 7.

Pinw Larix niAra, 7.

/Vnw £artz, a communii, 3.

144

INDEX.

I'uuu Larit, t rutm, 1. I'mut Imtu, t nijn, 1. /'t'niM l.nnr, A nltn, 7. Ptnut l.nru, I laio, .1. yinw l.nru, rompaeta, 5. lUntif LnriM, ^ ruttrUt 'X

I'inuM iMrir, t itthut 'X I'inua latiarnrpn, IKI, l!iS. l-ihUM lain, :)7, 7U. t'inu* hnifhrnthi^ 4. I'miui Uplfiifpu, *i. ftnu* Linnana, till. /'I'riMi /.jf(j//ii, lA. /*inuj imi^i'A'Yi, 137. lUwu A/rirmmr, *i8, lUt. /'inui .Utiriami nthra, <'t3.

/'inuii Mrmifii, Tkr. iril^ SB.

nntu Merltfuiana, 73, 77.

Viniu mitmcarpat 7.

/>inui niynl, '.jH, ,13.

/N'nta nohilis, 133.

/'initf MWifMnnuitHi, DA.

Pi'niu Nullallii, II.

/*i'n(M f)AiiiMi/a. 2*2, 20.

Piniu nhovala, 0 .SVAnmritvina, *iS.

/'iniM f>morii-a, *2*2.

Pinu* ttrienlatu^ 22, 2A.

/*tniu imentatit, $ tongi/oUa, 3ft.

/'inu» /'nffnnMiui, 73, 77.

PinuM ptclintita, 00.

Pinui ptndula, 7, 03.

Pinuj Piem, 23, 07. 00.

/N'nu Pieta mtdiozima, M.

/•inia Pirhia, 08.

/'I'niu Pindroie, 08.

/'I'nuf Pintapo, 100.

PinutpolUa, 21.

/'inu< rtUgiota. 07.

Pt'nu ra&ra, 33.

/'inuj ruAni, B vto^iuwa, 40.

/'I'niM rutni, var. arrdra, 37.

Pimu rubra, rar. airftni longi/olia, 37.

/'tnui niira, Tw. «zru/«a, 37.

Pinui Srhrenrkiana, 26,

Pinut lelmolepii, 101.

PinuM Sihirica, 07.

Pinm Sitboldii, 00.

/>inuj Sileheruvi, 68.

/'I'nuj SmUhiana, 23.

n'nu ap. 113.

/'inut ipKtabiiii, 06.

/>iniM laxi/olia, 87, 107.

/>inu Itlragona, 37.

rfi'nuf r*uH&<r;u, 31.

/*»!» 7irAono.<t>ana, 108.

/■intu rnija, flO.

Pinut Tiugo, H nana, 60.

PinuM Veilehi, 101.

/'iniu KnuMa, 129.

Pinui viminatit, 24.

/'fMM Wtkhiana, 08. llUih, llurxuiidjr, 23. lltoh, Cwiwl*, IIA Pltjoplithorua piilNtrnloa, 98. Pul^graphua ruHiMntiia, 2A. Puljrp4iriia uftti'iiukJia, 5. Fuly|Miriia pirriniia, 20. Puljr|H»riia l*ilutj*, 01. Puljrp4irua vtilvfttua, 28. Propuliilium 'Uiigip, 01.

P»twtt*t»utfn I hmiflntii, 87. PMuiiiittut/n Ifimiflntti fitnutintn, 87. Pttruittttugn l>tntt/iiniii Uu\/'iAui, M7. Pttwiottugn Owtgltuii, Tftr. gtaura, 88. Pttwttilguffa Ihuyiwii, vnt. mtumrarpa, flfl. Paauilutaiiifa, eotinumir pmp«rUea uf, 84. IHrijilut«ii|{», funfpil ilia««ai4 of, 84. P$*wiottuifa t/tauiftvfiUt 01. I'tnuiloUuK*, iiuiei't enemisa ol, 84. Pacudutaugn, <Upuioac, 84. PaeudotaiiK* J*|Hmica, 84. Puitilofuyn Lindtryana, 87. PaaudoUufpi marrooBrpa, 03. Paeudiitauga inucronata, 87. PifuilfMtugn lazi/otia, Tar. tianffata, 88. PttudtHtuga taxi/oiia, var. auWnaa, 88.

K«h1 Kir, 87, 13.1, 137. Red .Spnice, :«. Rcain, llpiiiliKk, OR, Rhagium limatiiDi, 38. Ruat, Hpruoa, 30.

Naok-baanr, I^trah, 8. 8arf(*nt'a liiiinlook, 08. Baw-Hy, Ureh, 0. Hoolytua uniarinoaua, 84. 8h« Batiam, 106. Siberian Sprun, 26. Silnr Kir, 120. 8itka SpruM, 66. 8nak« Spruoea, 24. Sphairclia laricina, 8. 8prmi> br«r, 31. 8pruo«, Black, 28. Spnics, Blu«, 47. 8pruoe-biul Worm, 28. Spmrit, Colorado, 47. Spruce^oone Worm, 26. 8pruce, I)ou|{Ua, 87. Spruce, Kn^lmann, 43. Spruce, European, 23. Spruce gum, 31. Spruce, llimalajan, 22. Spruce, Norwaj, 24. Spmoe, Patton, 77. Spruce, Red, 33. Spmoe Kuat, 26. Spruce, Silierian, 88. Spmoe, Sitka, 86.

■praM, Tideland, 68. Mpriiee, Weeping, 61. Hpnwe, White, 37, 4S. Hprut4tta, Hiiake, 24. Htiiganoplyolia piiiicolaaa, 8. Stegannptjfrha Kataliurgiaoa, M. Siraaburg Turpentine, lOU

Tamanwk, 7, II, 16.

Taimiium mtpminnt t, 139,

Tvnu variana, *J6.

TatraiiyohuN tt>lMriua, 6.

TIdeland Npruf«, 08.

Tomieua I'iiii, 20.

Tortrii fuinifemna, 86.

Tricboaphieria paraaitiea, tOI.

Tauga, 00.

7>u|;a, 83.

Tiuga Ajantntii, 31.

Ttuga Aiherliana, 73.

Tauga Araragi, lit).

Tauga Araragi, Tar. nana, flO.

Ttugo Hrunnniana, 01.

Tauga Canadeiiaia, 03.

Tauga Caruliniana, 00.

Tauga divrraifulia, 00.

Ttugo Pimglani, 87.

Ttuga Haugltitii hrevittrarttata, 87.

Titiga Ihtugliuii fattigiata, 87.

Ttuga Douglam, var. laji/olia, 87.

Tauga duuiuaa, 00.

Tauga, eooiioniio propertiee of, 61.

Tauga, fungal diaeaaea of, 01.

Tauga heterophylla, 73.

Tiuga Hnolnriana, 77.

Tauga, inaeot enemies of, 61.

Ttuga Lindlrfana, 87.

Ttuga macrocarpa, 03.

Tauga Mertenaiana, 77.

Ttuga Merlrmiana, 73.

Ttuga Palloniana, 77.

Ttuga Palloniana, var. Hoottriana, 77.

Ttuga (Pitudnltuga) Japonica, 84.

Tiu^ RoetlU, 77.

Ttuga Sitboldii, 00.

T>u^ Sirholdii, B nana, 60.

Ttuga Silchintit, 68.

Ttuga laxifalia, 88.

riu^a Tt^ja, 00.

Turpentine, Straabnrg, 100.

Turpentine, Venice, 4.

Venice turpentine, 4.

WaUpe, 40. Weeping 8praoe, 61. White Fir, 117, 121, 188. White Spruce, 37, 43.

XjrIeboruB otelatua, 26. Xjlotanu bivittatui, 88.

1.77.