Black willow (Salix nigra) flowers and fruit. Right: a female catkin in which all of the seed pods/ovaries and split and released the contained seeds. Note that both the stipule (center right) and the leaf (background left) show labyrinthine venation. Left: a female catkin in the process of releasing the seeds with their tufts of cottony fluff. Note the leaf with strong marginal teeth in the background.
Black willow is dioecious — the plants produce either all male or all female inflorescences (catkins) on one-year-old branches; the catkins emerge with the leaves. Male catkins are 1-3″ long, cylindrical, yellow to greenish-white, and usually curved. Female catkins are greenish, 1-3″ long, elongating as they mature. Both male and female florets are numerous and arranged in pseudo whorls around the axis of their respective catkins; neither has either sepals or petals. Individual male florets have 3-6 stamens with yellow, globose anthers and a pale yellow, oval basal bract shorter than the stamens. Individual female florets also have a pale yellow, oval basal bract; a hairless, flask-shaped pistil 3-5 mm long is elevated above the bract on a 0.5-1.5 mm long (short!) pedicel and has a single style and a pair of stigmas at its tip. After fertilization, a capsule enlarges, finally splitting longitudinally to release the seeds with their attached cottony hairs.
Black willow (Salix nigra) stems and leaves. (1) A single black willow leaf showing the upper surface of the leaf (1a) and the underside of the same leaf (1b). (2) A branch with a series of alternating leaves and the stipules that flank their insertions on the stem. The labyrinthine venation is visible both in the leaves (3) and the stipules (4). (5) The trunk of a black willow sapling.
Black willow is a native species that can be a very large tree (30-90 feet tall), often with multiple trunks, but you are more likely to encounter younger specimens. The bark on old plants is gray to nearly black and sculpted with deep furrows; on younger trees, the trunk bark is grayish-brown with shallow furrows where the tops of the ridges are flattened; branches often have bark peeling in plates. Twigs are pale brown and smooth; shoots are light green and hairy. The leaves are alternate, 3-5″ long, 6-16 mm wide, lance-shaped, widest below the middle of the leaf, with very short (less than 1/4″), light green petioles; the margins bear serrated teeth with rounded tips. Note the distinctive “labryinth” leaf venation on black willow. The upper surface of the leaves is medium to dark green; the underside is only slightly paler. A pair of stipules, oval with ear-like lobes, flank the insertion of the petiole on the stem.
A thicket of black willow (Salix nigra) stems on the southwest shore of West Lagoon (just visible in the background).
Black willow is a native species that can be a very large tree (30-90 feet tall), often with multiple trunks, but you are more likely to encounter younger specimens. The bark on old plants is gray to nearly black and sculpted with deep furrows; on younger trees, the trunk bark is grayish-brown with shallow furrows where the tops of the ridges are flattened; branches often have bark peeling in plates. Twigs are pale brown and smooth; shoots are light green and hairy. The leaves are alternate, 3-5″ long, 6-16 mm wide, lance-shaped, widest below the middle of the leaf, with very short (less than 1/4″), light green petioles; the margins bear serrated teeth with rounded tips. Note the distinctive “labryinth” leaf venation on black willow. The upper surface of the leaves is medium to dark green; the underside is only slightly paler. A pair of stipules, oval with ear-like lobes, flank the insertion of the petiole on the stem. Black willow is dioecious — plants produce either all male or all female inflorescences (catkins) on one-year-old branches; the catkins emerge with the leaves. Male catkins are 1-3″ long, cylindrical, yellow to greenish-white, and usually curved. Female catkins are greenish are 1-3″ long, elongating as they mature. Both male and female florets are numerous and arranged in pseudo whorls around the axis of their respective catkins; neither has either sepals or petals. Individual male florets have 3-6 stamens with yellow, globose anthers and a pale yellow, oval basal bract shorter than the stamens. Individual female florets also have a pale yellow, oval basal bract; a hairless, flask-shaped pistil 3-5 mm long is elevated above the bract on a 0.5-1.5 mm long (short!) pedicel and has a single style and a pair of stigmas at its tip. After fertilization, a capsule enlarges, finally splitting longitudinally to release the seeds with their attached cottony hairs. Black willow also prefers moist to wet soils. The stipules on black willow are similar to those seen on Missouri River willow (Salix eriocephala); compare the two species carefully before settling on a final identification.
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