black willow Salicaceae Salix nigra Marsh. Listen to the Latin   symbol: SANI
Other Fact Sheets
Leaf: Alternate, simple, pinnately veined, lanceolate in shape, 3 to 6 inches long, with a finely serrate margin. Leaves are dark and shiny above, light green below.
Flower: Dioecious; flowers are tiny, green, borne on catkins, 1 to 3 inches long, early summer.

Fruit: Cone-shaped capsules that contain many small, cottony seeds, borne on catkins; capsules split at maturity, mid summer.

Twig: Slender, orange-brown in color, with a bitter aspirin taste; buds are small and appressed, covered by one bud scale, the terminal bud absent; stipules/scars are obvious.

Bark: Brown to gray-black, with thick, somewhat scaly ridges and deep furrows.

Form: A small to medium sized tree that can develop a massive trunk with a spreading, irregular crown. Black willows are often affected by crown gall, and witches brooms and trunk sprouting are common.
 
USDAFS Silvics of North America - USDAFS Additional Silvics - Landowner Factsheet - USDA Plants Database
Salix nigra is native to North America. Range may be expanded by planting. See states reporting black willow (opens a new window).

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