There are a number of varieties of
T. chinensis, though there is much dispute over which are valid and whether some constitute distinct species or not. All in all there are six varieties, though not all are accepted universally. These are: •
T. c. var.
chinensis is the type variety and occurs across most of the range in
mainland China and
Tibet. Its seed scales are pentagonal-ovate, subsquare, or suborbicular, while its branchlets are in diameter and grey to yellow-grey in colour. The cones are ovoid and tall by wide. •
T. c. var.
formosana is the variety that occurs exclusively in
Taiwan. Aljos Farjon, a conifer expert from the
Royal Botanic Gardens at
Kew, considers this variety identical with the type, but according to Raven and Wu it differs from the type by having seed scales which are compressed orbicular to nearly semiorbicular. Otherwise, however, it is like the type. •
T. c. var.
patens is found only in western
Hubei province on Changyang Xian. It differs in having brownish yellow to brown branchlets, which are between to longer in diameter than the type. The seed cones also differ in being slightly larger, ovoid-globose in shape, and with seed scales that are smooth, shiny and almost square. This variety is recognized by Raven and Wu. •
T. c. var.
forrestii is treated as a separate species, namely
Tsuga forrestii, by some authorities. The cones are larger, more slender and narrow-ovoid to ovoid-cylindric. The branchlets are slightly thicker, while the seed scales are narrowly ovate or oblong with the exposed part striate and glabrous with a thickened margin. Regardless of its taxonomic status, it is considered threatened by the
IUCN. It occurs only in northeast
Guizhou, southwest
Sichuan and northwest
Yunnan. •
T. c. var.
robusta is probably the most universally recognised of the varieties. It is present in western
Hubei and western
Sichuan. It again exhibits the thicker branchlets and larger cones, but the cones are stout and shortly cylindric. Also, the seed scales are square-orbicular with the exposed part being pubescent and the margin not thickened. In addition, the
bracts are cuspidate at the apex. •
T. c. var.
oblongisquamata is considered a separate species by Raven and Wu, namely
T. oblongisquamata, but as a variety by Farjon. It occurs in the northern part of the range, namely in southern
Gansu, western Hubei and northwest Sichuan. It differs most sharply in lacking visible
stomatic bands beneath the leaves. Otherwise the seed scales are more loosely arranged and loosely elliptic in shape, being nearly twice as long as they are wide. ==Uses==