
Salix exigua, with its long, thin leaves, is the most distinctive of the willow species. The leaves have a very short petiole, and mature blades are 50 - 124 mm long, linear, with an acuminate leaf tip and either a serrate or entire leaf edge. Coyote willow is a shrub < 7 m tall, and spreads clonally by root-sprouting. The
Salix exigua (Coyote Willow) - Gardenia
Very frost tolerant, Salix exigua (Coyote Willow) is a suckering, deciduous shrub forming a thicket of slender gray-green branches bearing linear, finely toothed, silky, silvery leaves when young, later gray-green. Coyote Willow is dioecious with separate male and female plants.
Salix exigua - Wikipedia
Salix exigua (sandbar willow, narrowleaf willow, or coyote willow; syn. S. argophylla, S. hindsiana, S. interior, S. linearifolia, S. luteosericea, S. malacophylla, S. nevadensis, and S. parishiana) is a species of willow native to most of North America except for the southeast and far north, occurring from Alaska east to New Brunswick, and ...
Salix exigua - US Forest Service
The scientific name of narrowleaf willow is Salix exigua Nutt. (Salicaceae) [24,24,48,70,74,89,90,102,105,113,182,190,191]. Narrowleaf willow and sandbar willow (S. interior) are closely related, varying mainly by leaf margin …
Salix exigua Nutt., sandbar willow, is a common native suckering shrub 3 to 20 feet high found throughout the Northern Great Plains and the Northeast US. It quickly forms thickets on sand or gravel deposits along streams, roadside ditches, sloughs, and other places frequent to flooding. Branchlets are reddish brown, smooth or nearly so.
Salix exigua Nutt. - Calflora
Salix exigua is a tree or shrub that is native to California, and also found elsewhere in western North America.
Salix exigua - USDA Plants Database
Salix exigua Nutt. Salicaceae Mirb. - Willow family P.
Salix exigua — sandbar willow - Go Botany
Salix exigua is a distinctive and relatively rare willow that is primarily found on the shorelines of major rivers in New England. Anthropogenic (man-made or disturbed habitats), floodplain (river or stream floodplains), shores of rivers or lakes. Non-native: introduced (intentionally or unintentionally); has become naturalized.
Sandbar Willow - Calscape
Salix exigua (Sandbar Willow) is a deciduous shrub reaching 13 to 23 feet in height. The leaves are narrow, green, to grayish with silky white hairs when young. The flowers emerge as yellow or white catkins in late spring, after the leaves appear.
Salix exigua – Purdue Arboretum Explorer - Purdue University
Salix exigua is frost tolerant and dioecious. Spreads by small seeds through the wind or water and has an extensive root system caused by abundant suckering. It is great in moist soils or stream bottoms to help prevent soil erosion.