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Fragilis: Answers
to key questions in Conifers & Catkin-Bearing Trees and Shrubs of
Saskatchewan, Fascicle 5, Flora of Saskatchewan by Anna Leighton leading
to this species. The answers are in the order you would normally work
through the key.
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Catkins
usually flowering as leaves emerge, sometimes just before leaves emerge
or throughout the season, subtended by small green leaves of the
flowering branchlet that supports them; NOT [Catkins usually flowering
before leaves emerge, borne directly on bare branches (sessile) and
subtended by 1 - 3 short, greenish or brownish, caducous bract-like
leaves] |
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Low to
tall shrubs or trees; not confined to subarctic regions; NOT
[Dwarf shrubs <= 0.15 m (15 cm) tall; subarctic regions] |
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Trees,
with a single trunk, or with several trunks of tree stature; ovaries
glabrous; NOT [Shrubs, usually with several stems; ovaries glabrous or
hairy] |
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Bud scale
margins fused on the side facing the stem, forming a blunt-tipped
hood-like cap over the bud; stipes 0.2 – 2 (4) mm; NOT [Bud scale
margins free and overlapping on the side of the bud facing the stem,
forming a +/- pointed covering around the bud; stipes 1.6 – 3.2 mm] |
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Leaf
blades 3 - 11 times longer than wide, lower surfaces glabrous or
hairy, usually glaucous, and upper surfaces various; lower surfaces of
juvenile leaf blades glabrous, long-silky or villous; plants native or
introduced; NOT [Leaf blades 2.2 – 3.4 times longer than wide, lower
surfaces glabrous, pale but not glaucous, and upper surfaces glabrous,
highly glossy; lower surfaces of juvenile leaf blades glabrous; plants
introduced] |
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Flowering
branchlets 3 – 15 mm; juvenile leaves lower surface hairs white; leaf
blade lower surfaces glabrous or with white hairs, upper surfaces dull
or shiny, apices usually acuminate; plants introduced; NOT [Flowering
branchlets 6 - 56 mm; juvenile leaves lower surface hairs white or some
ferruginous; leaf blade lower surfaces glabrous or with white or some
ferruginous hairs, upper surfaces shiny or highly glossy, apices caudate
or acuminate; plants native] |
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Catkins 30
– 96 mm; juvenile leaf blades hairy but soon becoming glabrous;
petioles deeply grooved, pilose or villous; branches highly brittle at
base; plants cultivated and widely naturalized, spreading readily by
stem fragmentation; NOT [Catkins 24 - 60 mm; juvenile leaf blades
conspicuously hairy and remaining densely hairy after unfolding;
petioles shallowly grooved, long-silky; branches flexible or somewhat
brittle at base; plants cultivated and occasionally naturalized (near
Mistatim)]
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Salix: Answers
to key questions in Conifers & Catkin-Bearing Trees and Shrubs of
Saskatchewan, Fascicle 5, Flora of Saskatchewan by Anna Leighton leading
to this genus.
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shrubs or trees; NOT [trees] |
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buds covered by 1 scale; NOT [buds
covered by 3-10 scales] |
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buds scale not resinous; NOT [bud scale
usually resinous] |
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catkins sessile or terminating flowering
branchlets; NOT [catkins sessile] |
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catkins erect, spreading, or +/-
pendulous; NOT [catkins pendulous] |
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floral bracts entire, erose, bifid, or
irregularly toothed; NOT [floral bracts deeply cut] |
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perianth reduced to an adaxial nectary
(rarely also an abaxial nectary, then the 2 nectaries distinct or
connate into a shallow cup); NOT [perianth reduced to a
non-nectariferous, cup-shaped or shallow saucer-shaped floral disc] |
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stamens 1, 2, or 3 – 10; NOT [stamens 6
– 60 (70)] |
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capsules obclavate to ovoid or ellipsoid;
NOT [capsules narrowly ovoid to spherical, with the floral disc
persistent at base] |
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capsules 2-valved; NOT [capsules 2 - 4
valved] |
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