Meadow Willow

Salix petiolaris

''Salix petiolaris'', common name slender willow or meadow willow, is a species of willow.

General: A medium to tall, deciduous shrub with few, clumped stems, to 1–3 m tall; twigs yellowish-green, reddish, or dark brown; young twigs covered with short, dense hairs, becoming smooth with age (glabrate).

Leaves: Alternate, simple, pinnately-veined, petiolate. Leaf blade linear-lanceolate to narrow-oblanceolate, 2–7 cm long, to 1.5 cm wide; dark green and lustrous above, glaucous beneath, the lower surface with silky, reddish-brown hairs when young; leaf base tapering (cuneate) to slightly rounded at the base, the apex sharply pointed (acuminate); margins entire, or upper margins usually finely toothed (serrate), less frequently entire; petiole 3–10 mm long; stipules absent.

Leaf blades 2.5-7 x 0.3-2 cm, commonly with red-brown hairs mixed with the white ones, and branchlets flexible at the base, tearing at the junction of yearly growth (vs. S. sericea, with leaf blades 4-15 x 1-4 cm, with only white hairs, and branchlets brittle at the base and snapping cleanly at the junction of yearly growth).
Salix petiolaris staminate catkins Salix petiolaris (Meadow Willow) staminate catkins with yellow anthers tinted red and almost ready to dehisce. From a large shrub in a shrub carr/sedge meadow wetland. Geotagged,Salix,Salix petiolaris,Spring,United States,catkins,meadow willow,shrub carr,staminate catkins,wetland,wetlands,willow

Appearance

Plants 1-6 m. Stems: branches red-brown or violet, not or weakly glaucous, (dull or slightly glossy), puberulent; branchlets yellow-green to red-brown, sparsely pubescent or moderately densely velvety, (buds alba-type or intermediate). Leaves: stipules rudimentary or absent; petiole shallowly grooved adaxially, 3-11 mm, pubescent, or velvety to glabrescent adaxially; largest medial blade lorate or very narrowly elliptic, 38-110 × 6-19 mm, 5-9 times as long as wide, base cuneate or convex, margins flat to slightly revolute, entire, serrate, serrulate, or spinulose-serrate, apex acute to acuminate, abaxial surface glaucous, densely long-silky to glabrescent, hairs (white, sometimes also ferruginous), adaxial dull or slightly glossy, glabrous or sparsely pubescent, (hairs white, sometimes also ferruginous); proximal blade margins sometimes serrulate; juvenile blade moderately densely long-silky abaxially, hairs white, sometimes also ferruginous. Catkins flowering as leaves emerge; staminate stout to globose, 12-29 × 6-17 mm, flowering branchlet 0.8-3 mm; pistillate loosely flowered, stout to globose, 12-39 × 6-18 mm, flowering branchlet 1-11 mm; floral bract brown, tawny, light rose, or bicolor, 1-2 mm, apex rounded, abaxially sparsely hairy, hairs straight. Staminate flowers: adaxial nectary square, ovate, or oblong, 0.3-0.7 mm; filaments distinct, hairy basally; anthers purple turning yellow, ellipsoid or globose, 0.4-0.6 mm. Pistillate flowers: adaxial nectary oblong to ovate, 0.3-0.9 mm; stipe 1.5-4 mm; ovary pyriform, beak abruptly tapering to styles; ovules 6-12 per ovary; styles 0-0.5 mm; stigmas slenderly to broadly cylindrical, 0.26-0.4-0.8 mm. Capsules 5-9 mm. 2n = 38.
Salix petiolaris (meadow willow)  Geotagged,Meadow Willow,Salix petiolaris,Summer,United States

Naming

Salix petiolaris Smith, Trans. Linn. Soc. 6: 122. 1802.
Salix gracilis Andersson
Salix gracilis var. textoris Fernald
Salix petiolaris var. gracilis (Andersson) Andersson
Salix × subsericea (Andersson) C. K. Schneider

Distribution

Alta., B.C., Man., N.B., N.W.T., N.S., Ont., P.E.I., Que., Sask.; Colo., Conn., Ill., Ind., Iowa, Maine, Mass., Mich., Minn., Nebr., N.H., N.J., N.Y., N.Dak., Ohio, Pa., S.Dak., Vt., Wis

Status

It is listed as a species of special concern in Connecticut by state authorities. It is also listed as threatened in Ohio, and endangered in Pennsylvania.

Habitat

Marshy and swampy ground, shores, streambanks, ditches, and bogs and fen margins, usually in ± open places. Tolerant of mesic conditions if competing vegetation is sparse.

Reproduction

Flowers: Unisexual, male and female catkins (aments) on different shrubs (plants dioecious); catkins are borne on short leafy branches and appear with the leaves. Staminate catkins 1–2 cm long; pistillate catkins 1-2.5 cm long. Bracts oblanceolate, 1–2 mm long, brown, hairy.

Fruit: A cluster of narrow-conical capsules, each 5–7 mm long, densely covered in fine silky hairs, especially towards the base.

Flowering occurs from mid-April to June.

Predators

Salix petiolaris (Meadow Willow) [Salicaceae]
(Observations are from Dmitriev & Dietrich, Clark et al., and Wilhelm & Rericha)

Coleoptera (Beetles)
Buprestidae: Agrilus politus (Willow Gall Limb Borer) WR2017; Chrysomelidae: Calligrapha multipunctata Clk2004, Chrysomela laurentia Clk2004, Chrysomela scripta Clk2004, Crepidodera browni [adults feed on leaves, larvae feed on roots] WR2017, Crepidodera decora Clk2004, Crepidodera digna Clk2004, Crepidodera heikertingeri Clk2004, Crepidodera nana Clk2004, Crepidodera sculpturata Clk2004, Crepidodera solita Clk2004, Tricholochmaea decora Clk2004, Zeugophora consanguinea Clk2004; Curculionidae: Ellescus ephippiatus [larvae mine central rachis of inflorescences] WR2017

Homoptera (Sucking Insects)
Aphididae: Aphis farinosa [found on young shoots & leaves] WR2017, Chaitophorus viminalis [found on young shoots & leaves] WR2017; Cicadellidae: Erythroneura rosa DD2010

Hymenoptera (Bees, Wasps, Ants, & Sawflies)
Formicidae: Formica obscuriventris [this ant feeds on the honeydew of such aphids as Aphis farinosa and Chaitophorus viminalis while the latter are feeding on this willow] WR2017, Tapinoma sp. [this ant feeds on the honeydew of such aphids as Aphis farinosa and Chaitophorus viminalis while the latter are feeding on this willow] WR2017, Temnothorax ambiguus [this ant feeds on the honeydew of such aphids as Aphis farinosa and Chaitophorus viminalis while the latter are feeding on this willow]

References:

Some text fragments are auto parsed from Wikipedia.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Salix_petiolaris
https://www.michiganflora.net/species.aspx?id=2637
https://gobotany.newenglandwild.org/species/salix/petiolaris/
https://gobotany.newenglandwild.org/species/salix/sericea/
http://northernontarioflora.ca/description.cfm?speciesid=1005080
http://wisflora.herbarium.wisc.edu/taxa/index.php?taxauthid=1&taxon=4957&cl=64
http://www.illinoiswildflowers.info/plant_insects/plants/salix_petiolaris.html
Taxonomy
KingdomPlantae
DivisionAngiosperms
ClassEudicots
OrderMalpighiales
FamilySalicaceae
GenusSalix
SpeciesS. petiolaris