Volume IV (1988) - Flora of New Zealand Naturalised Pteridophytes, Gymnosperms, Dicotyledons
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Salix L.

SALIX L.

Trees or shrubs, sometimes prostrate and rooting at nodes; bark rough and fissured or smooth. Winter buds with 1 outer scale. Lvs usually alternate, rarely opposite, entire or shallowly toothed; petiole usually short; stipules sometimes 0 or inconspicuous, sometimes conspicuous, usually caducous, especially on strong vegetative shoots; lamina generally lanceolate or elliptic to obovate, often with glandular margin. Small lvs often present at base of lateral shoots. Catkins erect or pendulous, appearing before, with, or after lvs. Fls entomophilous, each subtended by an entire bract. Perianth reduced to 1-2-(4) glands, more rarely these united to form a basal semi-annular lobed ring. ♂ fls with (1)-2-(12) stamens; anthers usually yellow, sometimes red. ♀ fls with 1 short or very short style and 2 stigmas. Capsule 2-valved, usually maturing well after lf maturity. Seeds nearly always numerous, very small or minute.

General Key

Key

1
Trees, occasionally shrubby; catkins maturing with or just after lvs; bracts of fls uniformly green or yellowish green
2
Small trees or shrubs; catkins mostly maturing before lvs; bracts of fls at least partly black or dark brown
8
2
Trees with branches and branchlets not obviously pendulous except in ultimate shoots
3
Trees with branches and branchlets pendulous
6
3
Branches and shoots strongly contorted
Branches and shoots straight or evenly curved
4
4
Shoots usually ± yellow, rarely red, green, greenish brown or olive, not brittle; lvs silky grey beneath, usually eventually glabrous, but sometimes hairs persistent
Shoots usually pale green to brownish or dark green, occasionally yellowish, moderately to very brittle; lvs soon glabrous or remaining slightly hairy beneath until maturity
5
5
Shoots very brittle, snapping with an audible crack; plants almost always ♂
Shoots ± moderately brittle, not usually snapping audibly; plants ♂ or ♀
6
Shoots golden yellow; catkins with ♂ and ♀ fls
Shoots green or brownish green; catkins unisexual
7
7
Lvs narrow-lanceolate, 1-2 cm wide; ovary sessile; gland 1
Lvs lanceolate, 1.5-3.5 cm wide; ovary shortly pedicellate; glands 1-2
8
Lvs elliptic-lanceolate or wider; catkins usually broadly cylindric-oblong or ovate-oblong; gland mostly oblong, broad-oblong to square, infrequently narrower
9
Lvs usually linear or linear-lanceolate, occasionally wider; catkins usually cylindric; gland usually linear or cylindric to oblong, occasionally wider
13
9
Striations below bark of 1-2 year old shoots few to many; if plant ♂, then gland ± rectangular to square, if plant ♀, then ovary tomentose or villous
10
Striations below bark 0; if plant ♂, then gland linear to oblong, if plant ♀, then ovary glabrous
12
10
Lvs usually broadly lanceolate to elliptic or ± obovate; catkins 2.5-5.5 cm long, cylindric; plant ♀
Lvs obovate or broad-elliptic, less commonly elliptic; catkins 1.5-3.5 cm long, broad-cylindric, or oblong to almost ovate; plant either ♀ or ♂
11
11
Striations below bark many and prominent; lvs generally obovate; catkins broad-cylindric to cylindric-ovate; plants ♂ or ♀
Striations below bark few, not very obvious; lvs predominantly elliptic or elliptic-obovate; catkins broad-oblong; plants ♂
12
Shoots and lvs soon becoming glabrous; catkins shortly pedunculate; plants usually ♀, very rarely ♂
Shoots and lvs densely and persistently hairy; catkins subsessile; plants ♂
13
Lvs persistently and densely hairy below, alternate; shoots never with glaucous-white bloom
14
Lvs soon glabrous, either opposite towards shoot apices, or if all alternate, then 1-2 year old shoots with glaucous-white bloom
15
14
Lvs with silky hairs below; plants ♂ or ♀; ovary tomentose
Lvs tomentose below; plants ♀; ovary glabrous
15
1-3 year old shoots with glaucous-white bloom; lvs alternate; plants ♂; catkins broad-cylindric, 3-5-(6) cm long
Shoots lacking bloom; lvs opposite towards shoot apices; plants usually ♀; catkins narrow-cylindric, 1.5-3 cm long

Key to Vegetative Characters

Key

1
Trees, occasionally shrubby, with rough fissured bark; lvs usually > 5× as long as wide and linear-lanceolate, lanceolate, oblanceolate, or narrow elliptic-lanceolate, nearly always glabrous or nearly so at maturity
2
Small trees or shrubs, if trunk well-developed, then ± smooth; lvs either < 4× as long as wide and ovate-lanceolate or oblong-elliptic, or > 4× as long as wide, linear to lanceolate, and usually densely hairy or glaucous below at maturity
8
2
Branches and branchlets not obviously pendulous, except in ultimate shoots
3
Branches and branchlets pendulous
6
3
Branches and shoots strongly contorted
Branches and shoots straight or evenly curved
4
4
Shoots usually ± yellow, rarely red, green, greenish brown or olive, not brittle; willow sawfly galls 0, or pale green or yellowish; adventitious rootlets growing in water whitish
Shoots usually pale to dark green, olive or brownish green, occasionally yellowish, moderately to very brittle; willow sawfly galls usually present, ± red; adventitious rootlets growing in water red
5
5
Shoots very brittle, snapping with an audible crack; lvs soon glabrous
Shoots usually moderately brittle, not usually snapping audibly; lvs becoming glabrous shortly before maturity
6
Shoots golden yellow; stipules on long shoots with ± straight apices
Shoots green or brownish green; stipules on long shoots ± curved near apices
7
7
Lvs narrow-lanceolate, 1-2 cm wide, those on catkin-bearing shoots < 1 cm wide
Lvs lanceolate, 1.5-3.5 cm wide, those on catkin-bearing shoots usually > 1 cm wide
8
Lvs usually elliptic-lanceolate or wider, rarely lanceolate; shoots green, olive or brown, never with glaucous-white bloom
9
Lvs usually linear to lanceolate or oblanceolate, occasionally wider and then shoots with glaucous-white bloom for 1-3 years
13
9
Striations below bark few to many; lvs not bitter to taste, persistently hairy; angle between lf midrib and main veins > 45°
10
Striations below bark 0; lvs bitter to taste, becoming glabrous, or if remaining hairy, then angle between lf midrib and main veins < 45°
12
10
Lvs usually broadly lanceolate, or elliptic, sometimes obovate, usually acute
Lvs usually obovate or broad-elliptic, less commonly elliptic, rounded to cuspidate, rarely acute
11
11
Bark of older shoots often with brownish markings, with many, prominent striations; lvs generally obovate, grey or glaucous below, either with rough, reddish brown hairs or soft, grey hairs below
Bark of older shoots uniformly coloured, with few, indistinct striations; lvs predominantly broad-elliptic, or obovate-elliptic, with soft, greyish white hairs below
12
Shoots and lvs soon becoming glabrous; lvs bitter to taste; angle between midrib and lateral veins > 45°
Shoots and lvs persistently hairy; lvs not bitter to taste; angle between midrib and lateral veins < 45°
13
Lvs persistently and densely hairy below, alternate; shoots and buds green or dark reddish or purple, lacking glaucous-white bloom
14
Lvs soon glabrous, either opposite towards shoot apices, or if all lvs alternate, then buds and 1-2 year old shoots with glaucous-white bloom
15
14
Shoots green or yellowish green when young; lvs with appressed or silky hairs below, not bitter to taste
Shoots dark reddish to dark brownish purple; lvs with woolly tomentum below, bitter to taste
15
1-3 year old shoots with glaucous-white bloom; lvs alternate, shining green above, acuminate
Shoots green, grey-green, ± reddish, lacking bloom; lvs opposite towards shoot apices, ± glaucous above, acute

c. 300-500 spp., N. temperate regions, few S. to the Andes and South Africa. Naturalised spp. 11 and 5 hybrids.

Spp. of Salix, willows, were introduced to N.Z. during the earliest period of European settlement and their attractive appearance, ease of vegetative propagation, and the rapid growth of most spp., ensured that they were soon very widely distributed. The spread of willows was so rapid that on occasions the first Europeans entering an area found willows already there, and by the beginning of the 20th century willows already occupied a place in Maori culture. Since then, except in tussock grasslands and remaining areas of indigenous forest, willows have become so much a part of the N.Z. scene in all modified lowland and submontane regions that it is difficult to imagine the countryside without them. Thus, riverbanks, lakesides, drainage channels, swamps and almost all wet places, now frequently support a vegetation dominated by Eurasian spp. and hybrids of Salix comprising sallows, osiers, crack and white willows. Their role in stabilising the banks of waterways has been of great importance in helping to prevent floods and they have been used to prevent erosion in other habitats as well. Conversely, their rapid growth and free-rooting habit has resulted in the choking of waterways and the invasion and domination of swamps. This deleterious aspect began to manifest itself within 2 decades of the original introductions.

Since the Second World War, willows have been systematically introduced for evaluation of their potential usefulness by the Soil Conservation Centre, D.S.I.R., now at Aokautere, Palmerston North. Some have subsequently been released to catchment boards for planting in their particular regions. In addition to those described, several prostrate or semi-prostrate spp. are on trial for suitability in colonising high country screes and similar habitats, and osiers other than S. viminalis are being increasingly grown for basketry. Canterbury, Poverty Bay, and the Manawatu, were the main areas of introduction this century.

The taxonomy of many of the spp. is very complex because of the large amount of hybridisation here as well as in their countries of origin. Dioecism is another factor complicating willow taxonomy; in N.Z. most spp. are represented by only one sex, in certain instances by probably only one clone. Recently there has been a deliberate attempt to try and keep the sexes of one sp. apart in cultivation, or to introduce only ♂ plants, because of the added weed problem of freely seeding plants.

Notes on identification

The spp. and hybrids described here include all those which occur commonly in wild habitats such as riverbanks, swamps, and lakesides, whether they are truly wild or whether in some cases they may have been originally planted but this is no longer evident.

The descriptions have been mostly drawn up from fresh material. This is because colour of vegetative parts and catkin bracts, shoot brittleness and appearance below the bark, lf taste, habit of the tree or shrub, and appearance of the catkin glands, are all best seen in live plants. Lf measurements and stipule comments do not always embrace the very large lvs sometimes occurring on strong sucker, water, or coppice shoots. Likewise the small prophylls often found near the base of shoot laterals are excluded from the figures. A key based on vegetative characters only has been included because the catkins, especially ♂, are very ephemeral. It is impossible to encompass every hybrid in either key because of the many different crosses and back-crosses that may occur when several spp. grow together. This is particularly true of osiers, sallows and bitter willows, between which almost any hybrid combination may occur. Within the tree willows, hybrids also occur freely. Fls of most naturalised willows are illustrated in Figs 106 and 107.

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