Salix caroliniana: taxon details and analytics
- Domain
- Kingdom
- Plantae
- Phylum
- Tracheophyta
- Class
- Magnoliopsida
- Order
- Malpighiales
- Family
- Salicaceae
- Genus
- Salix
- Species
- Salix caroliniana
- Scientific Name
- Salix caroliniana
Summary description from Wikipedia:
Salix caroliniana
Salix caroliniana, commonly known as the coastal plain willow, is a shrub or small tree native to the southeastern United States, Mexico and parts of Central America and the Caribbean. It is an obligate wetland species and grows as an emergent species in the Everglades. In the absence of fire, S. caroliniana can convert herbaceous wetlands to forested wetlands.
Salix caroliniana flowers in the early spring, either before or together with the emergence of leaves. In Alachua County, Florida in 1982, flowering was recorded during February and March.
The species was first described by French naturalist André Michaux in 1803 in his Flora Boreali-Americana.
The male flowers provide pring pollen for bees. It is a larval host to the black-waved flannel moth, the blinded sphinx, the cecropia moth, the elm sphinx, the imperial moth, the Io moth, the modest sphinx, the mourning cloak, the polyphemus moth, the promethea moth, the red-spotted purple, and the viceroy.
...Salix caroliniana in languages:
- Chinese
- 濱原柳
- English
- Carolina willow
- English
- Coastalplain Willow
- English
- coastal plain willow
- English
- Dwarf Prairie Willow
- Russian
- Ива каролинская
Images from inaturalist.org observations:
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