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Salix × fragilis is a medium-sized to large deciduous tree, which grows rapidly to 10–20 m (33–66 ft) (rarely to 29 m (95 ft)) tall, with a trunk up to 1 m (3.3 ft) diameter, often multi-trunked, and an irregular, often leaning crown.
Salix fragilis is a scientific name that has historically been used for two different willows: Salix euxina , a non-hybrid species Salix × fragilis , the hybrid between Salix euxina and Salix alba
The Malpighiales comprise one of the largest orders of flowering plants, containing about 36 families and more than 16,000 species, about 7.8% of the eudicots. [1] [2] The order is very diverse, containing plants as different as the willow, violet, poinsettia, manchineel, rafflesia and coca plant, and are hard to recognize except with molecular phylogenetic evidence.
Salix alatavica Kar. ex Stschegl. Salix alaxensis (Andersson) Coville – Alaska willow; Salix alba L. – white willow; Salix alexii-skvortzovii A.P.Khokhr. Salix alpina Scop. – alpine willow; Salix amplexicaulis Bory & Chaub. Salix amygdaloides Andersson – peachleaf willow; Salix anatolica Ziel. & D.Tomasz. Salix annulifera C.Marquand ...
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From at least the 1920s, botanists applied Linnaeus's name "Salix fragilis" both to a pure species and to its hybrid with Salix alba. [4] In 2009, the Nomenclature Committee for Vascular Plants decided to conserve the name "Salix fragilis" for the hybrid, [5] and Irina V. Belyaeva then described the previously unnamed parent species as Salix ...
S. fragilis may refer to: Salinator fragilis, an air-breathing land snail species; Salix euxina, a non-hybrid species; Salix × fragilis, the hybrid between Salix euxina and Salix alba; Sinocoelurus fragilis, a theropod dinosaur species from the Upper Jurassic; Skania fragilis, a fossil arthropod species from the Cambrian
In the Cronquist system, the Salicaceae were assigned to their own order, Salicales, and contained three genera, Salix, Populus, and Chosenia (now a synonym of Salix). Recognized to be closely related to the Violaceae and Passifloraceae, the family is placed by the APG in the order Malpighiales.