60 results for family: Salicaceae.
Family | Scientific Name | Common Name | Habitat | Distribution | Image |
Salicaceae | Casearia | Casearia | | | |
Salicaceae | Casearia nitida | Honeytree, Smooth Casearia | Disturbed areas, from horticultural use. | Native of the West Indies. | 
|
Salicaceae | Flacourtia | | | | |
Salicaceae | Flacourtia indica | Governor’s-plum, Indian-plum, Madagascar-plum | Hammocks, pine rocklands, disturbed upland areas. | Native of s. Asia, Africa, and Malesia. | 
|
Salicaceae | Oncoba | | | | |
Salicaceae | Oncoba spinosa | Fried-Egg Tree | Disturbed areas, from horticultural use. | Native of tropical Africa. | 
|
Salicaceae | Populus | Poplar, Aspen, Cottonwood | | | 
|
Salicaceae | Populus ×canadensis | Hybrid Black Poplar, 'Carolina Poplar' | Disturbed areas. | A hybrid of a New World species and an Old World species. | |
Salicaceae | Populus ×canescens | Gray Poplar | Roadsides, disturbed areas. | Native of Europe. Occurs at scattered locations in TN, n. GA (Jones & Coile 1988), se. PA (Rhoads & Block 2007), and NC, SC, and VA (Kartesz 1999). See Poindexter (2006). | 
|
Salicaceae | Populus ×jackii | Balm-of-Gilead | Bottomlands, riverbanks, streambanks, spread from cultivation. | P. ×jackii is locally abundant along the New River in Watauga, Ashe, and Alleghany counties, NC and downstream into VA. | 
|
Salicaceae | Populus ×smithii | | {habitat}. | South to MD and WV | |
Salicaceae | Populus alba | Silver Poplar, White Poplar | Disturbed areas, roadsides, forest edges, suburban woodlands. | Native of Europe. | 
|
Salicaceae | Populus balsamifera | Balsam Poplar, Hackmatack, Tacamahac | Floodplains, disturbed areas. Occurring further north in a variety of habitats such as depressions, drainages, river bottoms, spruce-aspen forests, or on well-drained sites atop glacial deposits. | NL (Labrador) and AK south to PA, WV, OH, IN, IL, IA, SD, CO, ID, and OR; scattered farther south by introduction. Ranges south to s. PA (Rhoads & Block 2007), e. and c. KY (Clark et al. 2005), and to VA (according to Kartesz 1999). Also reported for n. GA (Jones & Coile 1988) and provisionally for SC (Kartesz 1999), but apparently based on a specimen from cultivation. Many of the attributions of this species to states in our area are based on misidentifications. | 
|
Salicaceae | Populus deltoides ssp. deltoides | Eastern Cottonwood | Riverbanks, bottomland forests (not found along blackwater streams), river bars, rarely weedy in upland situations. | QC west to MN, south to n. peninsular FL, Panhandle FL, and TX. | 
|
Salicaceae | Populus deltoides ssp. monilifera | Plains Cottonwood, Texas Cottonwood | Bottomland forests, swamps, marshes, moist disturbed areas. | QC west to BC, south to PA, OH, IN, IL, MO, nc. TX, NM, ID, and OR. | 
|
Salicaceae | Populus grandidentata | Bigtooth Aspen | Dry, rocky, upland forests, old fields, forest edges, mesic forests. | NS west to MN, south to w. NC, ne. GA, sc. TN, and n. MO. | 
|
Salicaceae | Populus heterophylla | Swamp Cottonwood | Blackwater and brownwater swamp forests, tidal swamp forests, depression ponds, interdune ponds. | CT west to MI, south to Panhandle FL and LA, scattered and irregular in distribution, absent from the Appalachians. | 
|
Salicaceae | Populus nigra | Black Poplar, Lombardy Poplar | Disturbed suburban areas. | Native of s. Europe. Cultivated in various forms, especially the columnar ‘Lombardy Poplar’; short-lived and weakly spreading to disturbed areas in the vicinity of plantings, especially by root sprouts (Diamond 2013). | 
|
Salicaceae | Populus tomentosa | Chinese White Poplar | | Native of China; reported for ne. LA (Kartesz 2022). | |
Salicaceae | Populus tremuloides | Quaking Aspen | Heath balds, rocky woodlands, exposed rock outcrops, clearings, floodplains. | NL (Labrador) west to AK, south to NJ, n. VA, nw. NC (where perhaps not native), WV, MO, and (in the Rockies) to TX and s. Mexico. | 
|
Salicaceae | Salicaceae | Willow Family | | | 
|
Salicaceae | Salix | Willow | | | 
|
Salicaceae | Salix ×pendulina | Weeping Willow | Disturbed areas. | A hybrid introduced from Europe. | |
Salicaceae | Salix ×rubens | Crack Willow, Brittle Willow | Low areas. | Hybrid of S. alba × fragilis, both native of the Old World. Reported as naturalizing in n. VA (Arlington County and City of Alexandria) by Simmons et al. (2020). | |
Salicaceae | Salix ×sepulcralis | Weeping Willow | Disturbed areas | A hybrid introduced from Europe. | |
Salicaceae | Salix alba | European White Willow | Disturbed bottomlands, other moist to wet disturbed areas. | Native of Eurasia. | 
|
Salicaceae | Salix amygdaloides | Peachleaf Willow | Floodplains and other wet places. | QC west to BC, south to PA, n. WV, w. KY, MO, TX, NM, NV, AZ, and OR. | 
|
Salicaceae | Salix atrocinerea | Common Sallow, Olive-leaf Willow, Large Gray Willow | Disturbed areas. | Native of w. Europe. Also reported as naturalized in KY (Clark et al. 2005) and PA (Kartesz 1999). | 
|
Salicaceae | Salix aurita | Eared Willow | Wet thickets, swamps. | Native of Europe. | 
|
Salicaceae | Salix babylonica | Weeping Willow | Disturbed bottomlands, streambanks, roadsides, impoundments, other disturbed areas. | Native of Asia. Note that many trees identified as S. babylonica may actually be one of two commonly cultivated hybrids, S. × pendulina and S. ×sepulchralis, with S. babylonica as one parent. | 
|
Salicaceae | Salix bebbiana | Long-beaked Willow, Gray Willow | Upland and wetland thickets, bogs. | NL west to AK, south to NJ, PA, OH, IN, IL, IA, w. NE, NM, AZ, and n. CA; ne. Asia. Widespread and rather common in PA (Rhoads & Klein 1993; Rhoads & Block 2007) and also occurs in MD (Argus 1986) and NJ. | 
|
Salicaceae | Salix candida | Sage Willow, Hoary Willow | Fens, wet meadows, over calcareous substrates. | NL west to AK, south to n. NJ, n. PA, c. OH, c. IN, c. IL, ne. IA, SD, CO, ID, and WA. | 
|
Salicaceae | Salix caprea | Goat Willow, Great Sallow | Bogs, streambanks, disturbed areas. | Native of Eurasia. | 
|
Salicaceae | Salix caroliniana | Carolina Willow, Coastal Plain Willow | Riverbanks, sandbars, interdune ponds, canal banks, other wet sites. | Widespread in the Southeast, S. caroliniana has a peculiar range, with three main centers of distribution, the Coastal Plain from VA south to s. FL and west to s. AL and the FL Panhandle, the Interior Low Plateau of KY, TN, and n. AL, and an area of MO, AR, e. KS, and e. OK centered on the Ozark-Ouachita Highlands. | 
|
Salicaceae | Salix cinerea | Gray Willow | Streambanks, floodplains, bogs, other wet disturbed areas. | Native of Eurasia. | 
|
Salicaceae | Salix cordata | Sand-Dune Willow | Dunes and shores. | Great Lakes shores: NY, nw. PA, n. OH, MI, ON, nw. IN, ne. IL, WI. | 
|
Salicaceae | Salix discolor | Pussy Willow | Calcareous wetlands, disturbed areas. | NL (Newfoundland) and AB south to DE, w. VA, WV, KY, MO, SD, and MT. | 
|
Salicaceae | Salix elaeagnos | Hoary Willow, Rosemary Willow, Diamond Willow | Disturbed areas. | Reported for SC (Kartesz 1999, 2015), apparently in error (K. Bradley, pers.comm., 2020). | |
Salicaceae | Salix eriocephala | Heart-leaved Willow, Diamond Willow, Missouri Willow | Streambanks, riverbanks, calcareous fens and marshes, river-scour prairies, impoundments, and other disturbed wet areas. | NL (Newfoundland) west to SK, south to w. FL, AR, s. KS, and ne. CO. | 
|
Salicaceae | Salix exigua var. exigua | Narrowleaf Willow, Coyote Willow | Streambanks. | AB and BC south to se. TX, NM, AZ, CA, and Mexico. | |
Salicaceae | Salix famelica | Hungry Willow | Streambanks. | MB to AB south to n. MO (Schuyler and Adair counties), KS, and ne. CO. We defer to Argus (2005), who only lists this species as an upper Great Plains taxon. Counties listed in Kartesz (2015) need substantiation, and may more likely represent another member of section Cordatae, especially considering the apparent rare status of S. famelica in the southern portions of adjacent Kansas. | |
Salicaceae | Salix floridana | Florida Willow | Sphagnous seepages and along spring runs. | C. GA and s. AL (north to Butler County) (Diamond 2013) south to c. peninsular and Panhandle FL. | 
|
Salicaceae | Salix humilis | Upland Willow, Prairie Willow | Upland areas, often in open or semi-open sites, in barrens, fens, rocky woodlands, and grassy balds over mafic rocks (such as amphibolite) up to at least 1800m elevation, also in powerline rights-of-way, woodland borders, and other miscellaneous habitats. | NL (Newfoundland) and MB, south to Panhandle FL and ne. TX. | 
|
Salicaceae | Salix interior | Sandbar Willow | Sandbars, riverbanks, creekbanks, flood scours. | NB west to BC and AK, south to n. DE, n. VA, TN, MS, LA, TX, and NM. | 
|
Salicaceae | Salix lucida | Shining Willow | Seepages, low areas. | NL west to SK, south to NJ, VA, OH, IN, IL, IA, and SD. Uncertainly indigenous to the one known VA population in Roanoke County. | 
|
Salicaceae | Salix myricoides | Bayberry Willow, Broadleaved Willow, Blueleaf Willow | Stream banks and swamps. | NB west to ON, south to PA, OH, IN, and IL. | 
|
Salicaceae | Salix nigra | Black Willow | Riverbanks, sandbars, bottomland forests, floodplain pools, tidal swamps, impoundments, ditches, other moist areas. | NB, MN, NE, and CO, south to ne. FL, Panhandle FL, LA, TX, and Mexico. | 
|
Salicaceae | Salix occidentalis | Dwarf Upland Willow, Dwarf Prairie Willow | Barrens, glades, rocky or hardpan woodlands, prairies, powerline rights-of-way, rarely in depression ponds, especially over mafic (such as amphibolite), ultramafic (such as olivine), or calcareous rocks. | This species is less widespread than the related S. humilis, with a distribution centered in the central Appalachians: ME to ND, south to GA, LA, and OK. | 
|
Salicaceae | Salix pedicellaris | Bog Willow | Bogs and fens. | NL west to YT, south to n. NJ, ne. and nw. PA, sc. OH, s. IN, nc. IL, n. IA, ND, ID, and OR. | 
|
Salicaceae | Salix petiolaris | Meadow Willow, Skeletonleaf Willow | Streambanks, low prairies, marshes. | NS and QC west to NT and BC, south to NJ, PA, OH, IN, IL, MO, NE, and CO. | 
|
Salicaceae | Salix purpurea | Basket Willow, Purple Willow, Purple Osier | Floodplain forests, streambanks, wet, disturbed areas. | Native of Europe. | 
|
Salicaceae | Salix sericea | Silky Willow | Bogs, fens, seeps, seepage swamps, peaty swamps, banks of small streams. | NL, QC, MI, WI, and se. MN, south to w. NC, ne. GA, e. TN, sc. TN, n. AL, and n. AR. | 
|
Salicaceae | Salix serissima | Autumn Willow | Rich fens and wet meadows on calcareous substrates. | NL west to NT, south to n. NJ, s. PA, n. OH, n. IN, n. IL, s. MN, w. SD, s. CO, and BC. | 
|
Salicaceae | Salix thurberi | Thurber's Willow | Sandy or silty floodplains. | S. TX south to e. Mexico. | |
Salicaceae | Salix triandra | Almond-leaf Willow | Disturbed areas, stream banks. | Native of Eurasia. | 
|
Salicaceae | Salix viminalis | Basket Willow | Rivershores, lake margins, roadsides. | Native of Europe. | 
|
Salicaceae | Xylosma | | | | 
|
Salicaceae | Xylosma buxifolia | Mucha-gente | Pine rocklands. | S. FL; West Indies. See Sadle (2010) for information on the discovery of this species in the United States. | 
|
Salicaceae | Xylosma congesta | | Disturbed hammocks, spread from horticultural planting. | Native of e. Asia. | 
|
Salicaceae | Xylosma flexuosa | Brush-holly, Coronilla, Mexican Xylosma | Brushland, palm groves. | S. TX, Mexico, Central America to n. South America (Venezuela); West Indies (Curaçao). | 
|