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Weeping Willow Salix x sepulcralis (Salix babylonica x Salix alba)

   

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Weeping Willow
© Joanne Pavia

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Family: Salicaceae, Willow view all from this family

Description A handsome, naturalized tree with short trunk and broad, open, irregular crown of drooping branches.
Height: 30-40' (9-12 m).
Diameter: 2' (0.6 m), sometimes much larger.
Leaves: 2 1/2-5" (6-13 cm) long, 1/4-1/2" (6-12 mm) wide. Narrowly lance-shaped; with long-pointed tips; finely saw-toothed. Dark green above, whitish or gray beneath. Hanging from short leafstalks.
Bark: gray; rough, thick; deeply furrowed in long, branching ridges.
Twigs: yellowish-green to brownish; very slender, unbranched, drooping vertically.
Flowers: catkins 3/8-1" (1-2.5 cm) long; greenish; at end of short leafy twigs; in early spring; plants mostly female.
Fruit: 1/16" (1.5 mm) long; light brown capsules; maturing in late spring or early summer.

Habitat Parks, gardens, and cemeteries, especially near water.

Range Native of China. Naturalized locally from extreme S. Quebec and S. Ontario south to Georgia and west to Missouri. Also planted in western states.

Discussion This willow is well known for its distinctive weeping foliage. It is among the first willows to bear leaves in spring and among the last to shed them in autumn.

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