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You are here >1Up Info > Wildlife, Animals, and Plants > Plant Species > Tree > Species: Salix amygdaloides | Peachleaf Willow
 

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BOTANICAL AND ECOLOGICAL CHARACTERISTICS

SPECIES: Salix amygdaloides | Peachleaf Willow
GENERAL BOTANICAL CHARACTERISTICS : Peachleaf willow is a rapidly growing, short-lived, small- to medium-sized deciduous tree with one to several trunks that is typically from 20 to 40 feet (6-12 m) tall [12,16,20,42,44] but occasionally reaches 65 to 80 feet (20-24 m) [3,37]. Trunk diameters are typically 8 to 20 inches (20-50 cm) [44]. The bark is thick, yellowish brown to dark brown, irregular, fissured, and has broad flat ridges [14,37]. The leaves are alternate, simple, pinnately veined, lanceolate to ovate-lanceolate, with finely serrate margins which have 15 to 17 teeth per inch (6-7/cm) [16,20,12,37]. Leaves are 1 to 4 inches (2.5-10 cm) long and 0.4 to 1.2 inches (1-3 cm) wide [16,20,36,45]. Male and female flowers occur on separate trees as catkins. Pistillate catkins are 1 to 3 inches (3-8 cm) long, and staminate catkins are 1 to 2 inches (3-5 cm) long [14,16]. Due to their morphological similarities, peachleaf willow may be mistaken or confused with Pacific willow (Salix lasiandra), but they can be distinguished by differences in their bud scales [12] Peachleaf willow has bud scales with free overlapping margins and are pointed at the tip, while Pacific willow has bud scales without free overlapping margins and are rounded at the tip. RAUNKIAER LIFE FORM : Undisturbed State: Phanerophyte (mesophanerophyte) Undisturbed State: Phanerophyte (microphanerophyte) Undisturbed State: Phanerophyte (nanophanerophyte) Burned State: Hemicryptophyte REGENERATION PROCESSES : Peachleaf willow's regenerates primarily through the dispersal of thousands of small seeds. It is unable to produce suckers from lateral roots but will resprout from its root crown or stem base following fire or cutting [2,18,19]. Peachleaf willos It relies heavily on insect pollination, especially from bees [30]. After fertilization, a capsule develops which eventually splits open during spring or summer, dispersing the numerous tiny seeds (about 2,600,000 per pound [6,420,000/kg] [8]). Producing large quantities of seeds ensures that some will fall on favorable sites [3]. Seeds have a cottony down which allows them to float long distances in wind or on water. Seeds are non-dormant remaining viable for only a few days. They germinate rapidly, usually within 12 to 24 hours of dispersal if a moist seedbed is reached [8]. The seeds contain significant amounts of chlorophyll, and photosynthesis generally occurs as soon as the seed is moistened. Regeneration may also occur through broken pieces of stems or roots, which are transported and deposited by floodwaters, and later sprout [47]. SITE CHARACTERISTICS : Peachleaf willow is found along stream and river banks, pond and lake borders, moist ravines and ditches, oxbows, roadside gullies, and prairie sloughs [12,14,16,19,37]. It is shade intolerant and requires canopy openings to survive [42,44]. It is tolerant of poor drainage and prolonged flooding [19] but extended immersion in water for a year or longer will cause most plants to die [17]. Soils: Peachleaf willow occurs on a wide variety of soil textures but is most commonly found on sandy or silty alluvium [14,19,44]. It can tolerate weakly saline or alkaline soils [19]. Its growth on gravel or dense clay is poor, on clay is fair, and on sand, sandy-loam, loam, clay-loam is good [10]. Associates: Peachleaf willow is often found bordering water in riparian or floodplain forests that contain eastern cottonwood (Populus deltoides), green ash (Fraxinus pennsylvanica), boxelder (Acer negundo), American elm (Ulmus americana), Woods rose (Rosa woodsii), chokecherry (Prunus virginia), hackberry (Celtis occidentalis), and sandbar willow (Salix exigua) [4,19,33,39]. Elevation: Peachleaf willow is typically found along low elevation streams, rivers, and ponds in the Rocky Mountains [12,19]; along streambanks in the foothills and plains of dryland regions of the Pacific Northwest [20]; and along lowland floodplain forest of the Great Plains [35,37]. Elevational ranges for several western states are as follows [1,10,45]: from 3,500 to 9,500 feet (1,067-2,896 m) in CO from 3,500 to 5,600 feet (1,067-1,707 m) in UT from 3,500 to 7,000 feet (1,067-2,134 m) in WY SUCCESSIONAL STATUS : Peachleaf willow is an early successional species which pioneers floodplain alluvium [4,44]. In Kansas, it occurrs only as a pioneer on newly deposited alluvium; stands maintain themselves for about 30 years, until other riparian forest trees shade them out [4]. It is shade intolerant and can therefore persist along a river's edge, where repeated flooding prevents other species from becoming established. SEASONAL DEVELOPMENT : Peachleaf willow is a deciduous tree. Its catkins emerge with the leaves in the spring [16]. After fruits ripen, seeds are dispersed from spring to early summer [8]. The flowering times for several states are presented below [8,10]: State Flowering Begins Flowering Ends CO April June MN May June ND April May UT May June WY June July

Related categories for Species: Salix amygdaloides | Peachleaf Willow

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Information Courtesy: U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, Rocky Mountain Research Station, Fire Sciences Laboratory. Fire Effects Information System

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