Group: Spermatophytina (Spermatophytes)
Family: Salicaceae (Willow family)
Genus: Salix (Willow)
Salix pentandra L. - Bay Willow
Salix euxina I. V. Belyaeva - Crack Willow
Salix alba L. - White Willow
Salix babylonica L. - Babylon Willow
Salix triandra L. - Almond Willow
Salix reticulata L. - Net-Leaved Willow
Salix herbacea L. - Dwarf Willow
Salix retusa L. - Blunt-Leaved Willow
Salix serpillifolia Scop. - Thyme-Leaved Willow
Salix caesia Vill. - Blue-Leaved Willow
Salix myrsinites L.
Salix alpina Scop. - Alpine Willow
Salix breviserrata Flod. - Finely Toothed Willow
Salix bicolor Willd. - Tea-Leaved Willow
Salix myrsinifolia Salisb. - Dark-Leaved Willow
Salix cinerea L. - Grey Willow
Salix caprea L. - Goat Willow
Salix aurita L. - Eared Willow
Salix appendiculata Vill. - Balkan Willow
Salix starkeana Willd. - Bebb Willow
Salix myrtilloides L. - Swamp Willow
Salix repens L. - Creeping Willow
Salix waldsteiniana Willd. - Waldstein's Willow
Salix foetida Schleich.
Salix hastata L. - Halberd Willow
Salix glabra Scop. - Alpine Willow
Salix viminalis L. - Osier
Salix daphnoides Vill. - European Violet-Willow
Salix eleagnos Scop. - Olive Willow
Salix purpurea L. - Purple Willow
<ba><b>Dwarf shrub</b></ba>, 20–100 cm tall. <span class="v1">spikelet-stalks:</span> foliated. <span class="v1">♂‑spikelets:</span> <ba>stalked</ba>, maximal 35 mm long. <span class="v1">supporting-leaves of the flowers:</span> <ba>1...
Natural, established occurences | Artificial occurences |
perennial herbaceous vegetation, forests, shrubbery, bogs, sedge-lands, extensively used or natural grassland, dwarf shrub heaths
in acidic, (periodically) wet habitats