Prairie willow (Salix humilis) flowers and fruit. Top right: a female catkin in which the flowers have become seed pods. Several of the seed pods/flowers have split open in the center of the catkin to release the seeds and their attached strands of cottony fluff. Top left: another female catkin; here, most of the flowers have split open and the fluff of the contained seeds protrudes. Bottom: a series of female catkins releasing their seeds. The catkin on the left is spent; the ones in the center are releasing huge volumes of seeds. This image gives some idea of the number of seeds produced by an individual willow.
Prairie willow is dioecious — plants produce either all male or all female inflorescences in the form of short catkins produced from one-year-old branches before the leaves emerge; a tiny black or bicolored bract covered in long, dense white hairs is present at the base of both male and female catkins. The florets lack both sepals and petals but both have a basal, hairy bract (regardless of sex). Male catkins are 1/4-1.25″ long, elongating as they mature. Initially the male catkins are silvery (from long hairs) but become yellow or reddish from the numerous anthers. Individual male florets consist of a hairy, basal bract and a pair of stamens with cylindrical anthers initially purple, turning yellow, red, or orange. Female catkins are 1/2-3″ long, also elongating as they mature. Individual female florets consist of the hairy bract and a hairy green ovary 4-8 mm long with an elongate beak densely covered with wooly hairs; a pair of stigmas protrude from the tip. After fertilization, the female florets transform into 1/4-1/2″ long capsules, light brown at maturity, that split in two to release seeds surrounded by long, cottony hairs.
Prairie willow (Salix humilis) stems and leaves. Top right: a stem of prairie willow with a series of alternate leaves. Note the dark green color of the upper side of the leaves. Top left: the tip of a prairie willow stem. This image shows the typical shape of prairie willow leaves especially well — note that the widest part of the leaf is close to the leaf tip. Bottom: a single leaf showing the upper surface of the leaf (on the left) and the underside of the same leaf (on the right). The image on the right clearly shows the margins of the leaf curled inward.
Prairie willow is another native willow that produces 2-8 foot tall shrubs. Young stems are light green and covered with short hairs. Older stems are woody and variably colored (yellowish- tan, brown, or gray). The leaves are alternate, 1.75-4″ long and about a fifth as wide, oblong with the widest region above the middle or near the tip; the margins are smooth and sometimes curled inwards. The upper leaf surface is medium- or greyish-green with short hairs; the underside is also short-hairy, sometimes distinctly whitened. Lance-shaped stipules are sometimes (but not always) present at the base of the petioles.
Prairie willow (Salix humilis) saplings growing on the south end of Wooded Island near Stephen’s Bridge.


