Nature Notes
Intro
Author
Volume
Volume/Title
Home

MOUNT RAINIER NATIONAL PARK NATURE NOTES
Vol. XVI March - June - 1938 Nos. 1 & 2


Individual Descriptions of Native Plants

-oOo-

WILLOW FAMILY. (SALICACEAE).

Two genera of plants are included in this family - the Poplars (Populus) and Willows (Salix). All species in this family are either shrubs or trees with alternate leaves, small greenish to yellowish flowers borne in catkins with staminate and pistillate catkins on separate plants with the fruit a capsule and with seeds having a tuft of hairs. While the two genera are quite distinct in general character and are readily distinguished by the novice, the differences between the various species of willows are not always so well defined and their identification is sometimes quite difficult.

The following key points out the significant differences between the various species included in this family. Those species which attain tree stature in this park, marked thus (*), will be described more fully in a later issue of "Nature Notes" which will deal specifically with the forests of Mount Rainier National Park.

Field key to species.

1.Leaves broadly ovate, acute and finely toothed, with long petioles; buds with several scales and resinous; a tree of the lower elevations, generally in moist places along streams... Black Cottonwood (Populus trichocarpa).
1.Leaves usually narrow, short petioled; buds with but one scale and not resinous; small trees to prostrate shrubs... 2.
2.Low prostrate alpine shrubs only a few inches high
... 3.
2.Erect shrubs or small trees
... 4.
3.Leaves lanceolate, acute at each end, deep glossy green on both sides, about 1/2 inch long and with prominent veins... Cascade Willow (Salix cascadensis).
3.Leaves oval, obtuse at apex; green and shiny above but lighter below; underside of leaves greyish and "powdery"; less than 1/2 inch long; strongly not veined beneath. A very dwarfed shrub above timberline . . Arctic-alpine Willow (S. nivalis).
4.Species most characteristic of sub-alpine zones - from about 4000-6000 feet
... 5.
4.Species more characteristic of lower elevations - from about 2000-5000 feet
... 7.
5.Leaves "powdery-like" on underside but not hairy... 6.
5.Leaves with thin layer of dense silky matted hairs on both sides when young (with age leaves nearly free of these hairs); green on both sides; margins entire or nearly so. Grows 3-9 feet high; leaves generally oblanceolate in outline, 1-1/2 - 3 inches long. One of the most common willows in the Hudsonian meadows in moist situations... Upland Willow (Salix commutata).
6.Leaves variable in outline - ovate-lanceolate to obovate, rounded at base and cuspidate at apex; 2-4 inches long, hairy above, especially along veins; margins of leaves with numerous rounded teeth to nearly entire. A shrub from 3-12 feet tall; fairly common in Hudsonian meadows in moist situations
... Barclay Willow (Salix barclayi).
6.Leaves lanceolate or ovate-lanceolate, rounded to cordate at base, 2-4 inches long, glabrous to "powdery appearing" on underside, margins slightly saw edged. A tall shrub or small tree, 6-15 feet tall; not common
... Mackenzie Willow (Salix mackenziana).
7.Trees with longitudinally rough furrowed bark on lower trunk at least; leaves lanceolate and taper pointed, hairless and appearing as if covered with white powder on underside, upper side dark green and hairless; young twigs hairless also ... Gland Willow (Salix lasiandra).
7.Shrubs or small trees; bark not furrowed; leaves hairy, sometimes "powdery" beneath young twigs hairy... 8.
8.Catkins appearing before leaves; leaves varying in outline but usually broadly oblanceolate, margin entire or with small rounded teeth; dull green above and paler below with either a "powdery" appearance or slightly hairy on the underside but never with a dense matted silky sheen of fine hairs
... Black Willow (Salix scouleriana).
8.Catkins appearing with the leaves
... 9.
9.Leaves on underside with a densely matted silky sheen of hairs; leaves generally spatulate in outline; 2-4 inches long; a tall shrub or small tree common along streams... Sitka Willow (Salix sitchensis).
9.Leaves not matted on underside with silky sheen of fine hairs... 10.
10.Leaves dark green and thinly hairy above, pale and powdery and silky below, entire margin rolled back; leaves elliptic lanceolate to oblanceolate in outline
... Geyer Willow (Salix geyeriana).
10.Leaves dark yellow-green on top and hairless, silver-white below with midveins minutely hairy, margin of leaves not rolled back; leaves leathery, with yellow stem and midveins
... White Willow (Salix lasiolipis).

-oOo-

Descriptions continued...

<<< Previous
> Cover <
Next >>>

http://www.nps.gov/mora/notes/vol16-1-2e3.htm
17-Jun-2002