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Willow

Willows, also called sallows and osiers, of the genus Salix, comprise around 350 species (plus numerous hybrids) of typically deciduous trees and shrubs, found primarily on moist soils in cold and temperate regions.

Willow
Temporal range: Eocene–Recent
Salix alba 'Vitellina-Tristis'
Morton Arboretum, Lisle, Illinois
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Plantae
Clade: Tracheophytes
Clade: Angiosperms
Clade: Eudicots
Clade: Rosids
Order: Malpighiales
Family: Salicaceae
Subfamily: Salicoideae
Tribe: Saliceae
Genus: Salix
L., nom. cons.[1]
Type species
Salix alba
Diversity[2]
About 350 species

Most species are known as willow, but some narrow-leaved shrub species are called osier, and some broader-leaved species are referred to as sallow (from Old English sealh, related to the Latin word salix, willow).

Some willows (particularly arctic and alpine species) are low-growing or creeping shrubs; for example, the dwarf willow (Salix herbacea) rarely exceeds 6 centimetres (2+12 in) in height, though it spreads widely across the ground.

Description edit

 
At the base of the petiole a pair of stipules form. These may fall in spring, or last for much of the summer or even for more than one year (marcescence).

Willows all have abundant watery bark sap, which is heavily charged with salicylic acid, soft, usually pliant, tough wood, slender branches, and large, fibrous, often stoloniferous roots. The roots are remarkable for their toughness, size, and tenacity to live, and roots readily sprout from aerial parts of the plant.[3]

Leaves edit

The leaves are typically elongated, but they might also be round to oval, frequently with serrated edges. Most species are deciduous; semi-evergreen willows with coriaceous leaves are rare, e.g. Salix micans and S. australior in the eastern Mediterranean.

All the buds are lateral; no absolutely terminal bud is ever formed. The buds are covered by a single scale. Usually, the bud scale is fused into a cap-like shape, but in some species it wraps around and the edges overlap.[4]

The leaves are simple, feather-veined, and typically linear-lanceolate. Usually they are serrate, rounded at base, acute or acuminate. The leaf petioles are short, the stipules often very conspicuous, resembling tiny, round leaves, and sometimes remaining for half the summer. On some species, however, they are small, inconspicuous, and caducous (soon falling).

In color, the leaves show a great variety of greens, ranging from yellowish to bluish color.

Willows are among the earliest woody plants to leaf out in spring and the last to drop their leaves in autumn. In the northern hemisphere, leafout may occur as early as February depending on the climate and is stimulated by air temperature. If daytime highs reach 10 °C (50 °F) for a few consecutive days, a willow will attempt to put out leaves and flowers.

In the northern hemisphere, leaf drop in autumn occurs when day length shortens to approximately ten hours and 25 minutes, which varies by latitude (as early as the first week of October for boreal species such as S. alaxensis and as late as the third week of December for willows growing in far southern areas).

Flowers edit

 
Young male catkin

With the exception of Salix martiana,[5] willows are dioecious, with male and female flowers appearing as catkins on separate plants; the catkins are produced early in the spring, often before the leaves.

The staminate (male) flowers are without either calyx with corolla; they consist simply of stamens, varying in number from two to 10, accompanied by a nectariferous gland and inserted on the base of a scale which is itself borne on the rachis of a drooping raceme called a catkin, or ament. This scale is square, entire, and very hairy. The anthers are rose-colored in the bud, but orange or purple after the flower opens; they are two-celled and the cells open latitudinally. The filaments are threadlike, usually pale brown, and often bald.

The pistillate (female) flowers are also without calyx or corolla, and consist of a single ovary accompanied by a small, flat nectar gland and inserted on the base of a scale which is likewise borne on the rachis of a catkin. The ovary is one-celled, the style two-lobed, and the ovules numerous.

Taxonomy edit

The scientific use of the genus name Salix originates with Carl Linnaeus in 1753.[1] The modern concept of types did not exist at the time, so types for Linnaeus' genera had to be designated later.[6] The type species, i.e., the species on which the genus name is based, is Salix alba, based on a conserved type.[1]

The generic name Salix comes from Latin and was already used by the Romans for various types of willow.[7] A theory is that the word is ultimately derived from a Celtic language, sal meaning 'near' and lis meaning 'water', alluding to their habitat.[8]

Willows are classified into subgenera though what they should be is in flux.[9] Morphological studies generally divide the species into 3 or 5 subgenera: Salix (though some split off subgenera Longifoliae and Protitae), Chamaetia, and Vetrix. Phylogenetic studies have suggested that Chamaetia and Vetrix be in one clade.[9]

The oldest fossils of the genus are known from the early Eocene of North America, with the earliest occurrences in Europe during the Early Oligocene.[10]

Selected species edit

The genus Salix is made up of around 350 species of deciduous trees and shrubs. They hybridise freely, and over 160 such hybrids have been named.[2]Examples of well-known willows include:[11]

Ecology edit

 
Pollard willow and woodpile in the Bourgoyen-Ossemeersen, Ghent, Belgium
 
Berlin Britzer Garten pollarded willow tree in the spring of March 2018

Willows are shade tolerant and typically short-lived. They require disturbances to outcompete conifers or large deciduous species. The seeds are tiny, plentiful, carried by wind and water, and viable only for a few days; they require warm and moist conditions to take root. The plants can also reproduce vegetatively from decapitated stumps and branches.[12]

Willows produce a modest amount of nectar from which bees can make honey, and are especially valued as a source of early pollen for bees.[13] Various animals browse the foliage[14] or shelter amongst the plants. Beavers use willows to build dams.[12] The trees are used as food by the larvae of some species of Lepidoptera, such as the mourning cloak butterfly.[15] Ants, such as wood ants, are common on willows inhabited by aphids, coming to collect aphid honeydew, as sometimes do wasps.

Pests and diseases edit

Willow species are hosts to more than a hundred aphid species, belonging to Chaitophorus and other genera,[16] forming large colonies to feed on plant juices, on the underside of leaves in particular.[17] Corythucha elegans, the willow lace bug, is a bug species in the family Tingidae found on willows in North America. Rhabdophaga rosaria is a type of gall found on willows.

Rust, caused by fungi of genus Melampsora, is known to damage leaves of willows, covering them with orange spots.[18]

Conservation edit

Some Native Americans allowed wildfires to burn and set fires intentionally, allowing new stands to form.[12]

A small number of willow species were widely planted in Australia, notably as erosion-control measures along watercourses. They are now regarded as invasive weeds which occupy extensive areas across southern Australia and are considered 'Weeds of National Significance'. Many catchment management authorities are removing and replacing them with native trees.[19][20]

Cultivation edit

Almost all willows take root very readily from cuttings or where broken branches lie on the ground. The few exceptions include the goat willow (Salix caprea) and peachleaf willow (Salix amygdaloides). One famous example of such growth from cuttings involves the poet Alexander Pope, who begged a twig from a parcel tied with twigs sent from Spain to Lady Suffolk. This twig was planted and thrived, and legend has it that all of England's weeping willows are descended from this first one.[21][22]

Willows are extensively cultivated around the world.[23] They are used in hedges and landscaping.

Hybrids and cultivars edit

 
Weeping willow, an example of a hybrid between two types of willow

Willows are very cross-compatible, and numerous hybrids occur, both naturally and in cultivation. A well-known ornamental example is the weeping willow (Salix × sepulcralis), which is a hybrid of Peking willow (Salix babylonica) from China and white willow (Salix alba) from Europe. The widely planted Chinese willow Salix matsudana is now considered a synonym of S. babylonica.

Numerous cultivars of Salix have been developed and named over the centuries. New selections of cultivars with superior technical and ornamental characteristics have been chosen deliberately and applied to various purposes. Many cultivars and unmodified species of Salix have gained the Royal Horticultural Society's Award of Garden Merit.[24] Most recently, Salix has become an important source for bioenergy production and for various ecosystem services.[citation needed]

Names of hybrids and cultivars were until recently (2021) compiled[25] by a working party of the UN FAO, the International Cultivar Registration Authority (ICRAs) for the genus Salix (willows) 7 December 2018 at the Wayback Machine, but it is no longer active.

Uses edit

The Quinault people made the bark into a twine which sometimes served as harpoon line. The wood was used by some Native American tribes to start fires by friction, the shoots to weave baskets, and both the branches and stems to build various items including fishing weirs.[12]

Medicinal edit

The leaves and bark of the willow have been mentioned in ancient texts from Assyria, Sumer and Egypt[citation needed] and in Ancient Greece the physician Hippocrates wrote about its medicinal properties in the fifth century BC.[citation needed]

Interpreting Mesopotamian cuneiform texts is a challenge, especially when looking for something as specific as a species of plant being used to treat a recognisable condition. Some 5,000 medical prescriptions have been identified from Babylonian writings of the 7th to 3rd centuries BC, involving 1,300 drugs from 340 different plants. Whether any of these relate to willow is uncertain.[26] The seeds of the Haluppu-tree were recommended in the Sumerian narrative of Gilgameš, Enkidu and the Nether World as treatment for infertility, but the "Haluppu-tree" could have been oak, poplar or willow.[27]

The ancient Egyptian Ebers Papyrus mentions willow (of uncertain species) in three remedies. One, as part of an elaborate recipe for a poultice to "make the met supple," which involved 36 other ingredients including "fruit of the dompalm, beans and amaa grains." The meaning of met is uncertain, but it may be something to do with the nervous system. The second is as part of a treatment for the "Great Debility," when "rush from the green willow tree" is combined with ass's semen, fresh bread, herbs of the field, figs, grapes and wine. Finally, it is used as a stiffening agent in a concoction of "fat flesh, figs, dates, incense, garlic and sweet beer" to put the heart into proper working order and make it take up nourishment.[28]

The Roman author Aulus Cornelius Celsus only mentions willow once: the leaves, pounded and boiled in vinegar, were to be used as treatment for uterine prolapse, but it is unclear what he considered the therapeutic action to be; it is unlikely to have been pain relief, as he recommended cauterization in the following paragraph.[29][30]

Nicholas Culpeper, in The Complete Herbal,[31] gives many uses for willow, including to staunch wounds, to "stay the heat of lust" in man or woman, and to provoke urine ("if stopped"), but he makes no mention of any supposed analgesic properties. His recommendation to use the burnt ashes of willow bark, mixed with vinegar, to "take away warts, corns, and superfluous flesh," seems to correspond with modern uses of salicylic acid. William Turner's account, written about 1597, focuses on the ability of the leaves and bark to "stay the spitting of blood, and all other fluxes of blood", if boiled in wine and drunk, but adds a treatment for fever, saying: "the green boughs with the leaves may very well be brought into chambers and set about the beds of those that be sick of fevers, for they do mightily cool the heat of the air, which thing is a wonderful refreshing to the sick patients."[32]

In 1763, Reverend Edward Stone, of Chipping Norton, Oxfordshire, England, sent a letter to the Royal Society describing his experiments with powdered bark of white willow (Salix alba).[33] He had noticed the willow bark tasted bitter, like 'Peruvian Bark' (cinchona), which was used to treat fevers, and he speculated that the willow would have a similar effect. Over several years he tested it on as many as fifty patients and found it to be highly effective (especially when mixed with cinchona). Whether this was a real effect or not is unknown, but although Stone's remedy was experimented with by others at the time, it was never adopted by medical practitioners.[34] During the American Civil War, Confederate forces also experimented with willow as a cure for malaria, without success.[35]

In his novel The Mysterious Island (1875), the French novelist Jules Verne outlined the state of scientific knowledge concerning medicinal uses of willow when one of his characters, Herbert (Harbert) Brown, was suffering from a fever induced by a bullet wound: "The bark of the willow has, indeed, been justly considered as a succedaneum for Peruvian bark, as has also that of the horse-chestnut tree, the leaf of the holly, the snake-root, etc.", he wrote. In the story, Herbert is treated with powdered willow bark to no effect, and is saved when a supply of quinine is discovered.[36] It is clear in the novel that the causes of fevers were poorly understood, and there is no suggestion at all of any possible analgesic effect from the use of willow.

The first lasting evidence that salicylate, from willow and other plant species, might have real medicinal uses came in 1876, when the Scottish physician Thomas MacLagan experimented with salicin as a treatment for acute rheumatism, with considerable success, as he reported in The Lancet.[37] Meanwhile, German scientists tried salicylic acid in the form of sodium salicylate, a sodium salt, with less success and more severe side effects.[38][39] The treatment of rheumatic fever with salicin gradually gained some acceptance in medical circles.[40]

The discovery of acetanilide, in the 1880s, gave rise to an 'acetylation' craze, where chemists experimented with adding an acetyl group to various aromatic organic compounds.[41] Back in 1853, chemist Charles Frédéric Gerhardt treated the medicine sodium salicylate with acetyl chloride to produce acetylsalicylic acid for the first time.[42] More than 40 years later in 1897, Felix Hoffmann created the same acid (in his case derived from the Spiraea plant),[43] which was found in 1899 to have an analgesic effect. This acid was named "Aspirin" by Hoffmann's employer Bayer AG. The discovery of aspirin is therefore only indirectly connected to willow.

In the late 1990s, Daniel Moerman reported many uses of willow by Native Americans. One modern field guide claims that Native Americans across the Americas relied on the willow as a staple of their medical treatments, using the bark to treat ailments such as sore throat and tuberculosis, and further alleging that "Several references mention chewing willow bark as an analgesic for headache and other pain, apparently presaging the development of aspirin in the late 1800s."[12]

Herbal uses of willow have continued into modern times.[44] In the early 20th century, Maud Grieve described using the bark and the powdered root of white willow (Salix alba) for its tonic, antiperiodic and astringent qualities and recommended its use in treating dyspepsia, worms, chronic diarrhoea and dysentery.[45] Like other herbalists, she makes no mention of it having any analgesic effect, despite widespread awareness of aspirin by this time, and she considered tannin to be the active constituent.

It was long after the invention of aspirin that the idea emerged that willow bark is an effective painkiller.[46][47] It may often be based on the belief that willow actually contains aspirin.[48] Articles asserting that the ancients used willow for this purpose have been published in academic journals such as the British Journal of Haematology.[49] There are now many papers, books and articles repeating the claim that the ancients used willow for pain relief, and numerous willow-based products can be purchased for this purpose.[50] Modern research suggests that only the mildest analgesic effect could be derived from the use of willow extract, and even that may be due to flavonoids and polyphenols as much as salicylic acid.[51]

Manufacturing edit

 
Cricket bats are traditionally made from willow wood.

Some of humans' earliest manufactured items may have been made from willow. A fishing net made from willow dates back to 8300 BC.[52]

Basic crafts, such as baskets, fish traps, wattle fences and wattle and daub house walls, were woven from osiers or withies (rod-like willow shoots, often grown in pollards). One of the forms of Welsh coracle boat traditionally uses willow in the framework.

Thin or split willow rods can be woven into wicker, which has a long history. The relatively pliable willow is less likely to split while being woven than many other woods, and can be bent around sharp corners in basketry.

Willow wood is used in the manufacture of boxes, brooms, cricket bats, cradle boards, chairmans and other furniture, dolls, willow flutes, poles, sweat lodges, toys, turnery, tool handles, wood veneer, wands and whistles. In addition, tannin, fibre, paper, rope and string can be produced from the wood.

Willow is used in the manufacture of double basses for backs, sides and linings, and in making splines and blocks for bass repair.

Horticulture edit

An aqueous extract of willow bark is used as a fungicide in the European Union. The willow bark extract is approved as a 'basic substance' product in the European Union and United Kingdom for the control of scab, leaf peach curl and powdery mildew on grapes, apples and peach crops.[53]

Weeds edit

Willow roots spread widely and are very aggressive in seeking out moisture; for this reason, they can become problematic when planted in residential areas, where the roots are notorious for clogging French drains, drainage systems, weeping tiles, septic systems, storm drains, and sewer systems, particularly older, tile, concrete, or ceramic pipes. Newer, PVC sewer pipes are much less leaky at the joints, and are therefore less susceptible to problems from willow roots; the same is true of water supply piping.[54][55]

Others edit

 
Male catkin of Salix cinerea with bee
 
Willow tree in spring, England
 
Willow tree with woodbine honeysuckle
 
Art installation "Sandworm" in the Wenduine Dunes, Belgium, made entirely out of willow
  • Warfare: Surprisingly, throughout World War II, willows were a British strategic material. Everything dropped by parachutes was dropped in baskets – light and strong: they could be made in any shape, and bounced on impact. British production of willows was about 2000 tonnes per year by some 630 manufacturers employing 7000 basket makers. Lawrence Ogilvie (a plant pathologist who had studied and written his 1920s Cambridge University master's degree thesis about willow diseases) worked at Long Ashton Research Station, near Bristol and was much involved with these willows and their diseases.[56]
  • Art: Willow is used to make charcoal (for drawing)[57] as well as living sculptures, woven from live willow rods into shapes such as domes and tunnels. Willow stems are used to weave baskets and three-dimensional sculptures of animals and other figures. Willow stems are also used to create garden features, such as decorative panels and obelisks.
  • Energy: There have been experiments or mathematical models in using willows for biomass or biofuel, in energy forestry systems, due to its fast growth.[58][59] Programs in other countries are being developed through initiatives such as the Willow Biomass Project in the US, and the Energy Coppice Project in the UK.[60] Willow may also be grown to produce charcoal.
  • Environment: There has been research into possibly using willows for future biofiltration of wastewater (i.e. phytoremediation and land reclamation), although this is not commercially viable.[61][62][63][64] They are used for streambank stabilisation (bioengineering), slope stabilisation, soil erosion control, shelterbelt and windbreak, and wildlife habitat. Willows are often planted on the borders of streams so their interlacing roots may protect the bank against the action of the water. The roots are often larger than the stem which grows from them.
  • Food: Poor people at one time often ate willow catkins that had been cooked to form a mash.[13] The inner bark can be eaten raw or cooked, as can the young leaves and underground shoots.[14]

Culture edit

The willow is one of the four species associated with the Jewish festival of Sukkot, or the Feast of Tabernacles, cited in Leviticus 23:40. Willow branches are also used during the synagogue service on Hoshana Rabbah, the seventh day of Sukkot, or the Feast of Tabernacles.

In Buddhism, a willow branch is one of the chief attributes of Kwan Yin, the bodhisattva of compassion.[citation needed]

Orthodox churches often use willow branches in place of palms in the ceremonies on Palm Sunday.[65]

In China, some people carry willow branches with them on the day of their Tomb Sweeping or Qingming Festival. Willow branches are also put up on gates and/or front doors, which they believe help ward off the evil spirits that wander on Qingming. Legend states that on Qingming Festival, the ruler of the underworld allows the spirits of the dead to return to earth. Since their presence may not always be welcome, willow branches keep them away.[66] In traditional pictures of the Goddess of Mercy Guanyin, she is often shown seated on a rock with a willow branch in a vase of water at her side. The Goddess employs this mysterious water and the branch for putting demons to flight. Taoist witches also use a small carving made from willow wood for communicating with the spirits of the dead. The image is sent to the nether world, where the disembodied spirit is deemed to enter it, and give the desired information to surviving relatives on its return.[67] The willow is a famous subject in many East Asian nations' cultures, particularly in pen and ink paintings from China and Japan.

A gisaeng (Korean courtesan) named Hongrang, who lived in the middle of the Joseon Dynasty, wrote the poem "By the willow in the rain in the evening", which she gave to her parting lover (Choi Gyeong-chang).[68] Hongrang wrote:

... I will be the willow on your bedside.

In Japanese tradition, the willow is associated with ghosts. It is popularly supposed that a ghost will appear where a willow grows. Willow trees are also quite prevalent in folklore and myths.[69][70]

In English folklore, a willow tree is believed to be quite sinister, capable of uprooting itself and stalking travellers.[71] The Viminal Hill, one of the Seven Hills of Rome, derives its name from the Latin word for osier, viminia (pl.).

Hans Christian Andersen wrote a story called "Under the Willow Tree" (1853) in which children ask questions of a tree they call "willow-father", paired with another entity called "elder-mother".[72]

"Green Willow" is a Japanese ghost story in which a young samurai falls in love with a woman called Green Willow who has a close spiritual connection with a willow tree.[73] "The Willow Wife" is another, not dissimilar tale.[74] "Wisdom of the Willow Tree" is an Osage Nation story in which a young man seeks answers from a willow tree, addressing the tree in conversation as 'Grandfather'.[75]

See also edit

Citations edit

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General and cited references edit

  • Keeler, Harriet L. (1990). Our Native Trees and How to Identify Them. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons. Pages 393–395. ISBN 0-87338-838-0.
  • Newsholme, C. (1992). Willows: The Genus Salix. ISBN 0-88192-565-9.
  • Trybush, Sviatlana; Jahodová, Šárka; Macalpine, William; Karp, Angela (March 2008). "A Genetic Study of a Salix Germplasm Resource Reveals New Insights into Relationships Among Subgenera, Sections and Species". BioEnergy Research. 1 (1): 67–79. Bibcode:2008BioER...1...67T. doi:10.1007/s12155-008-9007-9. S2CID 44328231.
  • Warren-Wren, S. C. (1992). The Complete Book of Willows. ISBN 0-498-01262-X.

External links edit

  • International Register of Cultivars of Salix L. (willow)
  • Global Cultivation of Willows:
  • "Willow" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 28 (11th ed.). 1911. pp. 688–689.
  • "Willow" . The New Student's Reference Work . 1914.

willow, other, uses, disambiguation, tree, salix, redirect, here, other, uses, tree, disambiguation, salix, disambiguation, also, called, sallows, osiers, genus, salix, comprise, around, species, plus, numerous, hybrids, typically, deciduous, trees, shrubs, fo. For other uses see Willow disambiguation Willow tree and Salix redirect here For other uses see Willow Tree disambiguation and Salix disambiguation Willows also called sallows and osiers of the genus Salix comprise around 350 species plus numerous hybrids of typically deciduous trees and shrubs found primarily on moist soils in cold and temperate regions WillowTemporal range Eocene Recent PreꞒ Ꞓ O S D C P T J K Pg NSalix alba Vitellina Tristis Morton Arboretum Lisle IllinoisScientific classificationKingdom PlantaeClade TracheophytesClade AngiospermsClade EudicotsClade RosidsOrder MalpighialesFamily SalicaceaeSubfamily SalicoideaeTribe SaliceaeGenus SalixL nom cons 1 Type speciesSalix albaL Diversity 2 About 350 speciesMost species are known as willow but some narrow leaved shrub species are called osier and some broader leaved species are referred to as sallow from Old English sealh related to the Latin word salix willow Some willows particularly arctic and alpine species are low growing or creeping shrubs for example the dwarf willow Salix herbacea rarely exceeds 6 centimetres 2 1 2 in in height though it spreads widely across the ground Contents 1 Description 1 1 Leaves 1 2 Flowers 2 Taxonomy 2 1 Selected species 3 Ecology 3 1 Pests and diseases 3 2 Conservation 4 Cultivation 4 1 Hybrids and cultivars 5 Uses 5 1 Medicinal 5 2 Manufacturing 5 3 Horticulture 5 4 Weeds 5 5 Others 6 Culture 7 See also 8 Citations 9 General and cited references 10 External linksDescription edit nbsp At the base of the petiole a pair of stipules form These may fall in spring or last for much of the summer or even for more than one year marcescence Willows all have abundant watery bark sap which is heavily charged with salicylic acid soft usually pliant tough wood slender branches and large fibrous often stoloniferous roots The roots are remarkable for their toughness size and tenacity to live and roots readily sprout from aerial parts of the plant 3 Leaves edit The leaves are typically elongated but they might also be round to oval frequently with serrated edges Most species are deciduous semi evergreen willows with coriaceous leaves are rare e g Salix micans and S australior in the eastern Mediterranean All the buds are lateral no absolutely terminal bud is ever formed The buds are covered by a single scale Usually the bud scale is fused into a cap like shape but in some species it wraps around and the edges overlap 4 The leaves are simple feather veined and typically linear lanceolate Usually they are serrate rounded at base acute or acuminate The leaf petioles are short the stipules often very conspicuous resembling tiny round leaves and sometimes remaining for half the summer On some species however they are small inconspicuous and caducous soon falling In color the leaves show a great variety of greens ranging from yellowish to bluish color Willows are among the earliest woody plants to leaf out in spring and the last to drop their leaves in autumn In the northern hemisphere leafout may occur as early as February depending on the climate and is stimulated by air temperature If daytime highs reach 10 C 50 F for a few consecutive days a willow will attempt to put out leaves and flowers In the northern hemisphere leaf drop in autumn occurs when day length shortens to approximately ten hours and 25 minutes which varies by latitude as early as the first week of October for boreal species such as S alaxensis and as late as the third week of December for willows growing in far southern areas Flowers edit nbsp Young male catkinWith the exception of Salix martiana 5 willows are dioecious with male and female flowers appearing as catkins on separate plants the catkins are produced early in the spring often before the leaves The staminate male flowers are without either calyx with corolla they consist simply of stamens varying in number from two to 10 accompanied by a nectariferous gland and inserted on the base of a scale which is itself borne on the rachis of a drooping raceme called a catkin or ament This scale is square entire and very hairy The anthers are rose colored in the bud but orange or purple after the flower opens they are two celled and the cells open latitudinally The filaments are threadlike usually pale brown and often bald The pistillate female flowers are also without calyx or corolla and consist of a single ovary accompanied by a small flat nectar gland and inserted on the base of a scale which is likewise borne on the rachis of a catkin The ovary is one celled the style two lobed and the ovules numerous Taxonomy editThe scientific use of the genus name Salix originates with Carl Linnaeus in 1753 1 The modern concept of types did not exist at the time so types for Linnaeus genera had to be designated later 6 The type species i e the species on which the genus name is based is Salix alba based on a conserved type 1 The generic name Salix comes from Latin and was already used by the Romans for various types of willow 7 A theory is that the word is ultimately derived from a Celtic language sal meaning near and lis meaning water alluding to their habitat 8 Willows are classified into subgenera though what they should be is in flux 9 Morphological studies generally divide the species into 3 or 5 subgenera Salix though some split off subgenera Longifoliae and Protitae Chamaetia and Vetrix Phylogenetic studies have suggested that Chamaetia and Vetrix be in one clade 9 The oldest fossils of the genus are known from the early Eocene of North America with the earliest occurrences in Europe during the Early Oligocene 10 Selected species edit Main article List of Salix species The genus Salix is made up of around 350 species of deciduous trees and shrubs They hybridise freely and over 160 such hybrids have been named 2 Examples of well known willows include 11 Salix aegyptiaca L musk willow Salix alba L white willow Salix amygdaloides Andersson peachleaf willow Salix arctica Pall Arctic willow Salix babylonica L Babylon willow Peking willow or weeping willow Salix bebbiana Sarg beaked willow long beaked willow or Bebb s willow Salix caprea L goat willow or pussy willow Salix cinerea L grey willow Salix discolor Muhl American pussy willow or glaucous willow Salix euxina I V Belyaeva eastern crack willow Salix exigua Nutt sandbar willow narrowleaf willow or coyote willow Salix fragilis L common crack willow Salix glauca L gray willow grayleaf willow white willow or glaucous willow Salix gooddingii C R Ball Goodding s black willow Salix herbacea L dwarf willow least willow or snowbed willow Salix humboldtiana Willd Humbolt s willow native to central and South America Salix integra Thunb Salix laevigata Bebb red willow or polished willow Salix lasiolepis Benth arroyo willow Salix microphylla Schltdl amp Cham Salix mucronata Andersson Safsaf willow a species from southern Africa Salix nigra Marshall black willow Salix paradoxa Kunth Salix pierotii Miq Korean willow Salix purpurea L purple willow or purple osier Salix scouleriana Barratt ex Hook Scouler s willow Salix sepulcralis group hybrid willows Salix tetrasperma Roxb Indian willow Salix triandra L almond willow or almond leaved willow Salix viminalis L common osierEcology edit nbsp Pollard willow and woodpile in the Bourgoyen Ossemeersen Ghent Belgium nbsp Berlin Britzer Garten pollarded willow tree in the spring of March 2018Willows are shade tolerant and typically short lived They require disturbances to outcompete conifers or large deciduous species The seeds are tiny plentiful carried by wind and water and viable only for a few days they require warm and moist conditions to take root The plants can also reproduce vegetatively from decapitated stumps and branches 12 Willows produce a modest amount of nectar from which bees can make honey and are especially valued as a source of early pollen for bees 13 Various animals browse the foliage 14 or shelter amongst the plants Beavers use willows to build dams 12 The trees are used as food by the larvae of some species of Lepidoptera such as the mourning cloak butterfly 15 Ants such as wood ants are common on willows inhabited by aphids coming to collect aphid honeydew as sometimes do wasps Pests and diseases edit Willow species are hosts to more than a hundred aphid species belonging to Chaitophorus and other genera 16 forming large colonies to feed on plant juices on the underside of leaves in particular 17 Corythucha elegans the willow lace bug is a bug species in the family Tingidae found on willows in North America Rhabdophaga rosaria is a type of gall found on willows Rust caused by fungi of genus Melampsora is known to damage leaves of willows covering them with orange spots 18 Conservation edit Some Native Americans allowed wildfires to burn and set fires intentionally allowing new stands to form 12 A small number of willow species were widely planted in Australia notably as erosion control measures along watercourses They are now regarded as invasive weeds which occupy extensive areas across southern Australia and are considered Weeds of National Significance Many catchment management authorities are removing and replacing them with native trees 19 20 Cultivation editAlmost all willows take root very readily from cuttings or where broken branches lie on the ground The few exceptions include the goat willow Salix caprea and peachleaf willow Salix amygdaloides One famous example of such growth from cuttings involves the poet Alexander Pope who begged a twig from a parcel tied with twigs sent from Spain to Lady Suffolk This twig was planted and thrived and legend has it that all of England s weeping willows are descended from this first one 21 22 Willows are extensively cultivated around the world 23 They are used in hedges and landscaping Hybrids and cultivars edit nbsp Weeping willow an example of a hybrid between two types of willowWillows are very cross compatible and numerous hybrids occur both naturally and in cultivation A well known ornamental example is the weeping willow Salix sepulcralis which is a hybrid of Peking willow Salix babylonica from China and white willow Salix alba from Europe The widely planted Chinese willow Salix matsudana is now considered a synonym of S babylonica Numerous cultivars of Salix have been developed and named over the centuries New selections of cultivars with superior technical and ornamental characteristics have been chosen deliberately and applied to various purposes Many cultivars and unmodified species of Salix have gained the Royal Horticultural Society s Award of Garden Merit 24 Most recently Salix has become an important source for bioenergy production and for various ecosystem services citation needed Names of hybrids and cultivars were until recently 2021 compiled 25 by a working party of the UN FAO the International Cultivar Registration Authority ICRAs for the genus Salix willows Archived 7 December 2018 at the Wayback Machine but it is no longer active Uses editThe Quinault people made the bark into a twine which sometimes served as harpoon line The wood was used by some Native American tribes to start fires by friction the shoots to weave baskets and both the branches and stems to build various items including fishing weirs 12 Medicinal edit The leaves and bark of the willow have been mentioned in ancient texts from Assyria Sumer and Egypt citation needed and in Ancient Greece the physician Hippocrates wrote about its medicinal properties in the fifth century BC citation needed Interpreting Mesopotamian cuneiform texts is a challenge especially when looking for something as specific as a species of plant being used to treat a recognisable condition Some 5 000 medical prescriptions have been identified from Babylonian writings of the 7th to 3rd centuries BC involving 1 300 drugs from 340 different plants Whether any of these relate to willow is uncertain 26 The seeds of the Haluppu tree were recommended in the Sumerian narrative of Gilgames Enkidu and the Nether World as treatment for infertility but the Haluppu tree could have been oak poplar or willow 27 The ancient Egyptian Ebers Papyrus mentions willow of uncertain species in three remedies One as part of an elaborate recipe for a poultice to make the met supple which involved 36 other ingredients including fruit of the dompalm beans and amaa grains The meaning of met is uncertain but it may be something to do with the nervous system The second is as part of a treatment for the Great Debility when rush from the green willow tree is combined with ass s semen fresh bread herbs of the field figs grapes and wine Finally it is used as a stiffening agent in a concoction of fat flesh figs dates incense garlic and sweet beer to put the heart into proper working order and make it take up nourishment 28 The Roman author Aulus Cornelius Celsus only mentions willow once the leaves pounded and boiled in vinegar were to be used as treatment for uterine prolapse but it is unclear what he considered the therapeutic action to be it is unlikely to have been pain relief as he recommended cauterization in the following paragraph 29 30 Nicholas Culpeper in The Complete Herbal 31 gives many uses for willow including to staunch wounds to stay the heat of lust in man or woman and to provoke urine if stopped but he makes no mention of any supposed analgesic properties His recommendation to use the burnt ashes of willow bark mixed with vinegar to take away warts corns and superfluous flesh seems to correspond with modern uses of salicylic acid William Turner s account written about 1597 focuses on the ability of the leaves and bark to stay the spitting of blood and all other fluxes of blood if boiled in wine and drunk but adds a treatment for fever saying the green boughs with the leaves may very well be brought into chambers and set about the beds of those that be sick of fevers for they do mightily cool the heat of the air which thing is a wonderful refreshing to the sick patients 32 In 1763 Reverend Edward Stone of Chipping Norton Oxfordshire England sent a letter to the Royal Society describing his experiments with powdered bark of white willow Salix alba 33 He had noticed the willow bark tasted bitter like Peruvian Bark cinchona which was used to treat fevers and he speculated that the willow would have a similar effect Over several years he tested it on as many as fifty patients and found it to be highly effective especially when mixed with cinchona Whether this was a real effect or not is unknown but although Stone s remedy was experimented with by others at the time it was never adopted by medical practitioners 34 During the American Civil War Confederate forces also experimented with willow as a cure for malaria without success 35 In his novel The Mysterious Island 1875 the French novelist Jules Verne outlined the state of scientific knowledge concerning medicinal uses of willow when one of his characters Herbert Harbert Brown was suffering from a fever induced by a bullet wound The bark of the willow has indeed been justly considered as a succedaneum for Peruvian bark as has also that of the horse chestnut tree the leaf of the holly the snake root etc he wrote In the story Herbert is treated with powdered willow bark to no effect and is saved when a supply of quinine is discovered 36 It is clear in the novel that the causes of fevers were poorly understood and there is no suggestion at all of any possible analgesic effect from the use of willow The first lasting evidence that salicylate from willow and other plant species might have real medicinal uses came in 1876 when the Scottish physician Thomas MacLagan experimented with salicin as a treatment for acute rheumatism with considerable success as he reported in The Lancet 37 Meanwhile German scientists tried salicylic acid in the form of sodium salicylate a sodium salt with less success and more severe side effects 38 39 The treatment of rheumatic fever with salicin gradually gained some acceptance in medical circles 40 The discovery of acetanilide in the 1880s gave rise to an acetylation craze where chemists experimented with adding an acetyl group to various aromatic organic compounds 41 Back in 1853 chemist Charles Frederic Gerhardt treated the medicine sodium salicylate with acetyl chloride to produce acetylsalicylic acid for the first time 42 More than 40 years later in 1897 Felix Hoffmann created the same acid in his case derived from the Spiraea plant 43 which was found in 1899 to have an analgesic effect This acid was named Aspirin by Hoffmann s employer Bayer AG The discovery of aspirin is therefore only indirectly connected to willow In the late 1990s Daniel Moerman reported many uses of willow by Native Americans One modern field guide claims that Native Americans across the Americas relied on the willow as a staple of their medical treatments using the bark to treat ailments such as sore throat and tuberculosis and further alleging that Several references mention chewing willow bark as an analgesic for headache and other pain apparently presaging the development of aspirin in the late 1800s 12 Herbal uses of willow have continued into modern times 44 In the early 20th century Maud Grieve described using the bark and the powdered root of white willow Salix alba for its tonic antiperiodic and astringent qualities and recommended its use in treating dyspepsia worms chronic diarrhoea and dysentery 45 Like other herbalists she makes no mention of it having any analgesic effect despite widespread awareness of aspirin by this time and she considered tannin to be the active constituent It was long after the invention of aspirin that the idea emerged that willow bark is an effective painkiller 46 47 It may often be based on the belief that willow actually contains aspirin 48 Articles asserting that the ancients used willow for this purpose have been published in academic journals such as the British Journal of Haematology 49 There are now many papers books and articles repeating the claim that the ancients used willow for pain relief and numerous willow based products can be purchased for this purpose 50 Modern research suggests that only the mildest analgesic effect could be derived from the use of willow extract and even that may be due to flavonoids and polyphenols as much as salicylic acid 51 Manufacturing edit This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Willow news newspapers books scholar JSTOR October 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message nbsp Cricket bats are traditionally made from willow wood Some of humans earliest manufactured items may have been made from willow A fishing net made from willow dates back to 8300 BC 52 Basic crafts such as baskets fish traps wattle fences and wattle and daub house walls were woven from osiers or withies rod like willow shoots often grown in pollards One of the forms of Welsh coracle boat traditionally uses willow in the framework Thin or split willow rods can be woven into wicker which has a long history The relatively pliable willow is less likely to split while being woven than many other woods and can be bent around sharp corners in basketry Willow wood is used in the manufacture of boxes brooms cricket bats cradle boards chairmans and other furniture dolls willow flutes poles sweat lodges toys turnery tool handles wood veneer wands and whistles In addition tannin fibre paper rope and string can be produced from the wood Willow is used in the manufacture of double basses for backs sides and linings and in making splines and blocks for bass repair Horticulture edit An aqueous extract of willow bark is used as a fungicide in the European Union The willow bark extract is approved as a basic substance product in the European Union and United Kingdom for the control of scab leaf peach curl and powdery mildew on grapes apples and peach crops 53 Weeds edit Willow roots spread widely and are very aggressive in seeking out moisture for this reason they can become problematic when planted in residential areas where the roots are notorious for clogging French drains drainage systems weeping tiles septic systems storm drains and sewer systems particularly older tile concrete or ceramic pipes Newer PVC sewer pipes are much less leaky at the joints and are therefore less susceptible to problems from willow roots the same is true of water supply piping 54 55 Others edit nbsp Male catkin of Salix cinerea with bee nbsp Willow tree in spring England nbsp Willow tree with woodbine honeysuckle nbsp Art installation Sandworm in the Wenduine Dunes Belgium made entirely out of willowWarfare Surprisingly throughout World War II willows were a British strategic material Everything dropped by parachutes was dropped in baskets light and strong they could be made in any shape and bounced on impact British production of willows was about 2000 tonnes per year by some 630 manufacturers employing 7000 basket makers Lawrence Ogilvie a plant pathologist who had studied and written his 1920s Cambridge University master s degree thesis about willow diseases worked at Long Ashton Research Station near Bristol and was much involved with these willows and their diseases 56 Art Willow is used to make charcoal for drawing 57 as well as living sculptures woven from live willow rods into shapes such as domes and tunnels Willow stems are used to weave baskets and three dimensional sculptures of animals and other figures Willow stems are also used to create garden features such as decorative panels and obelisks Energy There have been experiments or mathematical models in using willows for biomass or biofuel in energy forestry systems due to its fast growth 58 59 Programs in other countries are being developed through initiatives such as the Willow Biomass Project in the US and the Energy Coppice Project in the UK 60 Willow may also be grown to produce charcoal Environment There has been research into possibly using willows for future biofiltration of wastewater i e phytoremediation and land reclamation although this is not commercially viable 61 62 63 64 They are used for streambank stabilisation bioengineering slope stabilisation soil erosion control shelterbelt and windbreak and wildlife habitat Willows are often planted on the borders of streams so their interlacing roots may protect the bank against the action of the water The roots are often larger than the stem which grows from them Food Poor people at one time often ate willow catkins that had been cooked to form a mash 13 The inner bark can be eaten raw or cooked as can the young leaves and underground shoots 14 Culture editThe willow is one of the four species associated with the Jewish festival of Sukkot or the Feast of Tabernacles cited in Leviticus 23 40 Willow branches are also used during the synagogue service on Hoshana Rabbah the seventh day of Sukkot or the Feast of Tabernacles In Buddhism a willow branch is one of the chief attributes of Kwan Yin the bodhisattva of compassion citation needed Orthodox churches often use willow branches in place of palms in the ceremonies on Palm Sunday 65 In China some people carry willow branches with them on the day of their Tomb Sweeping or Qingming Festival Willow branches are also put up on gates and or front doors which they believe help ward off the evil spirits that wander on Qingming Legend states that on Qingming Festival the ruler of the underworld allows the spirits of the dead to return to earth Since their presence may not always be welcome willow branches keep them away 66 In traditional pictures of the Goddess of Mercy Guanyin she is often shown seated on a rock with a willow branch in a vase of water at her side The Goddess employs this mysterious water and the branch for putting demons to flight Taoist witches also use a small carving made from willow wood for communicating with the spirits of the dead The image is sent to the nether world where the disembodied spirit is deemed to enter it and give the desired information to surviving relatives on its return 67 The willow is a famous subject in many East Asian nations cultures particularly in pen and ink paintings from China and Japan A gisaeng Korean courtesan named Hongrang who lived in the middle of the Joseon Dynasty wrote the poem By the willow in the rain in the evening which she gave to her parting lover Choi Gyeong chang 68 Hongrang wrote I will be the willow on your bedside In Japanese tradition the willow is associated with ghosts It is popularly supposed that a ghost will appear where a willow grows Willow trees are also quite prevalent in folklore and myths 69 70 In English folklore a willow tree is believed to be quite sinister capable of uprooting itself and stalking travellers 71 The Viminal Hill one of the Seven Hills of Rome derives its name from the Latin word for osier viminia pl Hans Christian Andersen wrote a story called Under the Willow Tree 1853 in which children ask questions of a tree they call willow father paired with another entity called elder mother 72 Green Willow is a Japanese ghost story in which a young samurai falls in love with a woman called Green Willow who has a close spiritual connection with a willow tree 73 The Willow Wife is another not dissimilar tale 74 Wisdom of the Willow Tree is an Osage Nation story in which a young man seeks answers from a willow tree addressing the tree in conversation as Grandfather 75 See also editAravah the Hebrew name of the willow for its ritual use during the Jewish Feast of Tabernacles Withy Pollarding technique of severe pruning or knotting of trees Sail Ogham letter meaning willow Willow water using the rooting hormone indolebutyric acid from willow branches to stimulate root growth in new cuttingsCitations edit a b c Salix L The International Plant Names Index Retrieved 6 May 2021 a b Salix L Plants of the World Online Royal Botanic Gardens Kew Retrieved 28 December 2022 Dickmann D I Kuzovkina J 2014 Poplars and willows of the world with emphasis on silviculturally important species Poplars and willows Trees for society and the environment Centre for Agriculture Bioscience International CABI pp 8 91 doi 10 1079 9781780641089 0008 ISBN 9781780641089 George W Argus 1986 The Genus Salix Salicaceae in the Southeastern United States Systematic Botany Monographs American Society of Plant Taxonomists 9 1 170 doi 10 2307 25027618 ISSN 0737 8211 JSTOR 25027618 Rohwer Jens Kubitzki Klaus 1984 Salix martiana a regularly hermaphrodite willow Plant Systematics and Evolution 144 2 99 101 Bibcode 1984PSyEv 144 99R doi 10 1007 BF00986668 S2CID 35590381 Introduction and Historical Perspective The Linnaean Plant Name Typification Project The Natural History Museum 24 October 2022 doi 10 5519 qwv6u7j5 Retrieved 6 May 2021 Helmut Genaust Etymologisches Worterbuch der botanischen Pflanzennamen German 3rd ed completely revised and expanded Nikol Hamburg 2005 ISBN 3 937872 16 7 reprint from 1996 pg 552 Nazarov M I 1970 1936 Komarov Vladimir Leontyevich ed Flora of the U S S R Vol 5 Translated by Landau N Jerusalem Israel Program for Scientific Translations p 21 a b Wagner Natascha D Volf Martin Horandl Elvira 3 September 2021 Highly Diverse Shrub Willows Salix L Share Highly Similar Plastomes Frontiers in Plant Science 12 662715 doi 10 3389 fpls 2021 662715 ISSN 1664 462X PMC 8448165 PMID 34539686 Collinson Margaret E 1992 The early fossil history of Salicaceae a brief review Proceedings of the Royal Society of Edinburgh Section B Biological Sciences 98 155 167 doi 10 1017 S0269727000007521 ISSN 0269 7270 Mabberley D J 1997 The Plant Book Cambridge University Press 2 Cambridge a b c d e Arno Stephen F Hammerly Ramona P 2020 1977 Northwest Trees Identifying amp Understanding the Region s Native Trees field guide ed Seattle Mountaineers Books pp 193 196 ISBN 978 1 68051 329 5 OCLC 1141235469 a b Hageneder Fred 2001 The Heritage of Trees Edinburgh Floris ISBN 0 86315 359 3 p 172 a b Angier Bradford 1974 Field Guide to Edible Wild Plants Harrisburg PA Stackpole Books p 248 ISBN 0 8117 0616 8 OCLC 799792 Mourning Cloak Study of Northern Virginia Ecology Fairfax County Public Schools Blackman R L Eastop V F 1994 Aphids on the World s Trees CABI ISBN 9780851988771 permanent dead link David V Alford 2012 Pests of Ornamental Trees Shrubs and Flowers Manson Publishing Limited p 78 ISBN 9781840761627 Archived from the original on 4 June 2013 Kenaley Shawn C et al 2010 Leaf Rust PDF Archived PDF from the original on 9 October 2022 Albury Wodonga Willow Management Working Group December 1998 Willows along watercourses managing removing and replacing Department of Primary Industries State Government of Victoria Cremer Kurt W 2003 Introduced willows can become invasive pests in Australia PDF Archived PDF from the original on 9 October 2022 Leland John 2005 Aliens in the Backyard Plant and Animal Imports Into America University of South Carolina Press p 70 ISBN 978 1 57003 582 1 Laird Mark 1999 The Flowering of the Landscape Garden English Pleasure Grounds 1720 1800 University of Pennsylvania Press p 403 ISBN 978 0 8122 3457 2 Kuzovkina Yulia A Weih Martin Romero Marta Abalos Charles John Hust Sarah McIvor Ian Karp Angelas Trybush Sviatlana Labrecque Michel 15 April 2008 Salix Botany and Global Horticulture Horticultural Reviews John Wiley amp Sons Inc pp 447 489 doi 10 1002 9780470380147 ch8 ISBN 9780470380147 AGM Plants March 2020 PDF rhs org The Royal Horticultural Society March 2020 Archived PDF from the original on 9 October 2022 Retrieved 9 September 2020 Kuzovkina Yulia A 2015 Compilation of the Checklist for Cultivars of Salix L Willow HortScience 50 11 1608 1609 doi 10 21273 HORTSCI 50 11 1608 S2CID 86246413 Boeck Barbara 28 October 2020 Investigating the healing arts of Ancient Mesopotamia Research Outreach Retrieved 20 February 2022 Boeck Barbara Proverbs 30 18 19 in the Light of Ancient Mesopotamian Cuneiform Texts PDF Archived PDF from the original on 9 October 2022 Retrieved 20 February 2022 Bryan Cyril 1974 Ancient Egyptian Medicine the Papyrus Ebers Chicago Ares Publishing Inc De Medicina book VI p 287 chapter 18 section 10 Celsus Aurus Cornelius De Medicina Retrieved 4 January 2022 Culpeper Nicholas 1653 The Complete Herbal London Turner William The Herball or Generall Historie of Plantes Retrieved 8 January 2022 Stone Edward An Account of the Success of the Bark of the Willow in the Cure of Agues The Royal Society doi 10 1098 rstl 1763 0033 Retrieved 5 January 2022 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Jeffreys Diarmuid 2004 Aspirin the story of a wonder drug London Bloomsbury Hasegawa Guy R 2007 Quinine Substitutes in the Confederate Army Military Medicine 172 6 650 655 doi 10 7205 MILMED 172 6 650 PMID 17615851 Verne Jules 2010 The Mysterious Island Ware Wordsworth Editions Ltd p 430 ISBN 978 1 84022 624 9 MacLagan T 28 October 1876 The treatment of acute rheumatism by salicin The Lancet 108 2774 383 doi 10 1016 S0140 6736 02 49509 8 MacLagan T 1900 The treatment of acute rheumatism The Lancet 155 3998 1904 doi 10 1016 S0140 6736 01 70583 1 S2CID 58103130 Buchanan W W 2002 The Treatment of Acute Rheumatism by Salicin by T J Maclagan The Lancet 1876 The Journal of Rheumatology 29 6 1321 1323 PMID 12064852 Reid James 1948 Does sodium salicylate cure rheumatic fever QJM New Series 66 139 151 Furstenwerth Hauke 2011 Letter by Furstenwerth Regarding Article Aspirin A Historical and Contemporary Therapeutic Overview Circulation 124 12 e332 author reply e333 doi 10 1161 CIRCULATIONAHA 111 038133 PMID 21931098 Jeffreys Diarmuid 2008 Aspirin the remarkable story of a wonder drug Bloomsbury Publishing USA pp 46 48 ISBN 978 1 59691 816 0 Archived from the original on 8 September 2017 Bayer AG All About Aspirin and its History European Medicines Agency 31 January 2017 Assessment report on Salix various species including S purpurea L S daphnoides Vill S fragilis L cortex Final Grieve Maud 1931 A Modern Herbal Dorset Press ISBN 9780880299213 Martyr Phillippa 18 October 2020 Hippocrates and willow bark What you know about the history of aspirin is probably wrong Retrieved 10 January 2022 Propatier Stephen The Mythology of Aspirin Retrieved 10 January 2022 Bartram Thomas 1998 The Encyclopedia of Herbal Medicine Desborough M J R 2017 The aspirin story from willow to wonder drug British Journal of Haematology 177 5 674 683 doi 10 1111 bjh 14520 PMID 28106908 S2CID 46794541 Mount Sinai Health System Willow bark Retrieved 10 April 2022 Vlachojannis J Magora F Chrubasik S 2011 Willow species and aspirin different mechanism of actions Phytotherapy Research 27 7 1102 1104 doi 10 1002 ptr 3386 PMID 21226125 S2CID 33413861 The palaeoenvironment of the Antrea Net Find The Department of Geography University of Helsinki European Commission Review report for the basic substance Salix spp cortex finalised in the Standing Committee on Plants Animals Food and Feed at its meeting on 29 May 2015 in view of the approval of Salix spp cortex as basic substance in accordance with Regulation EC No 1107 2009 PDF Archived PDF from the original on 9 October 2022 Salix spp UFL edu Weeping Willow Fact Sheet ST 576 Edward F Gilman and Dennis G Watson United States Forest Service Rooting Around Tree Roots Archived 19 April 2012 at the Wayback Machine Dave Hanson Yard amp Garden Line News Volume 5 Number 15 University of Minnesota Extension 1 October 2003 History of Willows at Long Ashton Research Station Bristol Wringtonsomerset org uk Retrieved 1 June 2022 The Best Vine and Willow Charcoal for New Effects on the Page artnews com Art News 7 May 2021 Retrieved 13 June 2023 Aylott Matthew J Casella E Tubby I Street NR Smith P Taylor G 2008 Yield and spatial supply of bioenergy poplar and willow short rotation coppice in the UK New Phytologist 178 2 358 370 doi 10 1111 j 1469 8137 2008 02396 x PMID 18331429 S2CID 35494995 Mola Yudego Blas Aronsson Par 2008 Yield models for commercial willow biomass plantations in Sweden Biomass and Bioenergy 32 9 829 837 doi 10 1016 j biombioe 2008 01 002 Forestresearch gov uk Forestresearch gov uk Archived from the original on 8 March 2009 Retrieved 18 December 2011 Guidi Nissim W Jerbi A Lafleur B Fluet R Labrecque M 2015 Willows for the treatment of municipal wastewater long term performance under different irrigation rates Ecological Engineering 81 395 404 doi 10 1016 j ecoleng 2015 04 067 Guidi Nissim W Voicu A Labrecque M 2014 Willow short rotation coppice for treatment of polluted groundwater Ecological Engineering 62 102 114 doi 10 1016 j ecoleng 2013 10 005 Guidi W Kadri H Labrecque L 2012 Establishment techniques to using willow for phytoremediation on a former oil refinery in southern Quebec achievements and constraints Chemistry and Ecology 28 1 49 64 doi 10 1080 02757540 2011 627857 Guidi Nissim W Palm E Mancuso S Azzarello E 2018 Trace element phytoextraction from contaminated soil a case study under Mediterranean climate Environmental Science and Pollution Research accepted doi 10 1007 s11356 018 1197 x ChurchYear net ChurchYear net Retrieved 18 December 2011 Doolittle Justus 2002 1876 Social Life of the Chinese Routledge ISBN 978 0 7103 0753 8 Dore Henri 1914 Researches into Chinese Superstitions Vol I Translated by Kennelly M Tusewei Press Shanghai p 2 The Forest of Willows in Our Minds Arirang TV 20 August 2007 Archived from the original on 14 October 2007 Retrieved 10 September 2007 In Worship of Trees by George Knowles Willow Archived from the original on 10 February 2008 Retrieved 14 February 2008 Mythology and Folklore of the Willow Archived from the original on 15 February 2008 Retrieved 14 February 2008 Ashton J W Briggs K M April 1968 The Fairies in Tradition and Literature The Journal of American Folklore 81 320 164 doi 10 2307 537668 ISSN 0021 8715 JSTOR 537668 Under The Willow Tree Hca gilead org il 13 December 2007 Retrieved 18 December 2011 Green Willow Spiritoftrees org Retrieved 18 December 2011 The Willow Wife Archived from the original on 18 May 2008 Wisdom of the Willow Tree Tweedsblues net Archived from the original on 29 September 2011 Retrieved 18 December 2011 General and cited references editKeeler Harriet L 1990 Our Native Trees and How to Identify Them New York Charles Scribner s Sons Pages 393 395 ISBN 0 87338 838 0 Newsholme C 1992 Willows The Genus Salix ISBN 0 88192 565 9 Trybush Sviatlana Jahodova Sarka Macalpine William Karp Angela March 2008 A Genetic Study of a Salix Germplasm Resource Reveals New Insights into Relationships Among Subgenera Sections and Species BioEnergy Research 1 1 67 79 Bibcode 2008BioER 1 67T doi 10 1007 s12155 008 9007 9 S2CID 44328231 Warren Wren S C 1992 The Complete Book of Willows ISBN 0 498 01262 X External links edit nbsp Look up willow sallow withy or osier in Wiktionary the free dictionary nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Salix International Register of Cultivars of Salix L willow Global Cultivation of Willows Willow Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 28 11th ed 1911 pp 688 689 Willow The New Student s Reference Work 1914 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Willow amp oldid 1192403240, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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