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Compilation
Salix planifolia

17 Images see all

Lectotype of Salix chlorophylla-denudata Andersson [family SALICACEAE]
Lectotype of Salix chlorophylla Andersson [family SALICACEAE]
Paratype of Salix nelsonii C. R. Ball [family SALICACEAE]
not on sheet of Salix pulchra Chamisso variety palmeri Ball [family SALICACEAE]
Isotype of Salix nelsonii C. R. Ball [family SALICACEAE]
not on sheet of Salix pulchra Chamisso variety palmeri Ball [family SALICACEAE]
Salix planifolia unrecorded subsp. pulchra (Cham.) Argus [family SALICACEAE]
Salix planifolia Pursh subsp. pulchra (Cham.)Argus [family SALICACEAE]
Salix planifolia Pursh subsp. pulchra (Cham.)Argus [family SALICACEAE]
Paratype of Salix nelsonii C. R. Ball [family SALICACEAE]
Syntype of Salix chlorophylla Andersson [family SALICACEAE]
Salix planifolia Pursh subsp. pulchra (Cham.)Argus [family SALICACEAE]
not on sheet of Salix tyrrellii Raup [family SALICACEAE]
not on sheet of Salix pulchra Chamisso variety palmeri Ball [family SALICACEAE]
Salix novae-angliae Andersson var. myrtillifolia (Andersson) Andersson [family SALICACEAE]
not on sheet of Salix planifolia Pursh variety nelsonii (Ball) Ball [family SALICACEAE]
Salix novae-angliae Andersson [infrasp.unranked] pseudomyrsinites (Andersson) Andersson [family SALICACEAE]
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Name

Identification
Salix not on sheet L. [family SALICACEAE ] Verified by [Not on sheet], Salix eriocephala Michx. [family SALICACEAE ] Verified by [Not on sheet], Salix chlorophylla Andersson [family SALICACEAE ] (stored under name); Verified by Floderus, B.G.O., 1938 Salix chlorophylla Andersson [family SALICACEAE ] Verified by Dorn, R.D., 2002 Salix planifolia Pursh [family SALICACEAE ] Verified by Dorn, R.D., 2002
Related name
  • Salix ovalifolia
  • Salix phylicifolia
  • Salix chlorophylla-denudata
  • Salix planifolia
  • Salix arctica
  • Salix stolonifera
  • Salix not on sheet
  • Salix chlorophylla
  • Salix cordata
  • Salix eriocephala
Common name
  • Tyrrell’s willow, Flora of North America Vol. 7
  • Tea-leaf willow, Flora of North America Vol. 7
  • Diamond-leaf willow, Flora of North America Vol. 7

Flora

Entry for Salix pulchra Chamisso [family SALICACEAE]
Herbarium
Flora of North America (FNA)
Collection
Flora of North America
Resource Type
Reference Sources
Entry From
Flora of North America, Vol 7,
Names
Salix pulchra Chamisso [family SALICACEAE], Linnaea, 6: 543. 1831
Salix divaricata Pallas subsp. pulchra (Chamisso) Voroschilov [family SALICACEAE]
Salix phylicifolia Linnaeus subsp. pulchra (Chamisso) Hultén [family SALICACEAE]
Salix phylicifolia var. subglauca (Andersson) B. Boivin [family SALICACEAE]
Salix planifolia Pursh subsp. pulchra (Chamisso) Argus [family SALICACEAE]
Salix planifolia var. yukonensis (C. K. Schneider) Argus [family SALICACEAE]
Salix pulchra var. yukonensis C. K. Schneider [family SALICACEAE]
Treatment Author(s)
George W. Argus
Information
Shrubs, 0.1–3(–4.5) m. Stems: branches yellow-brown or red-brown, not or weakly glaucous, (slightly or highly glossy), villous in patches to glabrescent; branchlets yellow-green or brownish, glabrous, puberulent, or densely villous, (buds caprea- or arctica-type). Leaves: stipules (usually marcescent), foliaceous, (linear or lanceolate, 2–9.8–23 mm), apex acuminate; petiole convex to flat adaxially, 2.8–10(–15) mm, glabrous or puberulent adaxially; largest medial blade narrowly elliptic, elliptic, or obovate, 22–75 × 8–26 mm, 1.7–4.7 times as long as wide, base cuneate, margins flat to slightly revolute, entire, crenate, or serrulate, apex acuminate, acute, or convex, abaxial surface glaucous, glabrous or pubescent, midrib pilose, hairs (white, sometimes also ferruginous), straight, adaxial highly to slightly glossy, midrib glabrous or sparsely pubescent; proximal blade margins entire; juvenile blade green, glabrous or pubescent abaxially, hairs white, sometimes also ferruginous. Catkins flowering before leaves emerge; staminate stout or subglobose, 21–53 × 12–19 mm, flowering branchlet 0–3 mm; pistillate densely flowered, slender to stout, 27–82 × 8–20 mm, flowering branchlet 0–3(–8) mm; floral bract brown or black, 1.6–2.8 mm, apex acute or rounded, abaxially hairy distally, hairs straight. Staminate flowers: adaxial nectary narrowly oblong to oblong, 0.6–1 mm; filaments distinct or connate less than 1/2 their lengths, glabrous; anthers purple turning yellow, ellipsoid to shortly cylindrical, 0.4–0.8 mm. Pistillate flowers: adaxial nectary narrowly oblong to oblong, 0.4–1.6 mm, longer than stipe; stipe 0.2–0.8 mm; ovary pyriform, long-silky, beak slightly bulged below styles; ovules 12–16 per ovary; styles 1–1.8 mm; stigmas slenderly cylindrical, 0.44–0.63–0.96 mm. Capsules 3.2–5.6 mm. 2n = 76.
Phenology
apr-may (spring), jun-jul (summer)
Altitude range
0–2000 m;
Distribution
Asia (Chukotka).Asia (Kamchatka).Asia (Lena-Kolyma).Asia (Okhotia).Asia (Russia [Anadyr]).Asia (Siberia).USA AlaskaCanada B.C.Canada N.W.T.Canada NunavutCanada Yukon
Discussion
Plants with branchlets densely villous with white, gray, or, sometimes, ferruginous hairs have been named var. yukonensis. This hairy variant occurs scattered throughout populations in both North America and Russia and does not seem to warrant taxonomic recognition. The closely related Salix planifolia shows similar variation.
Hybrids:
Salix pulchra forms natural hybrids with S. planifolia and S. scouleriana.
Salix pulchra × S. scouleriana is known from Alaska. It resembles S. pulchra in its long, linear stipules, general leaf shape, and relatively long styles; and S. scouleriana in its juvenile leaves with abundant ferruginous hairs, petioles densely villous to velvety, and relatively short stigmas.

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