Salix babylonica#Horticultural selections and related hybrids

{{Short description|Species of tree}}

{{Speciesbox

|image = Château de Chenonceau - jardin Russell-Page (01).jpg

|image_caption = | status = DD

| status_system = IUCN3.1

| status_ref = {{cite iucn |author= Barstow |date=2021 |title=Salix babylonica |volume=2021 |page=e.T61960227A61960237 |doi=10.2305/IUCN.UK.2021-3.RLTS.T61960227A61960237.en |access-date=16 October 2022}}

|genus = Salix

|species = babylonica

|authority = L.

|synonyms_ref={{cite web |url=https://powo.science.kew.org/taxon/urn:lsid:ipni.org:names:777133-1 |title=Salix babylonica L. |author= |date=2017 |website=Plants of the World Online |publisher=Board of Trustees of the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew |access-date=8 September 2020 }}

|synonyms={{Collapsible list|

  • Ficus salix H.Lév. & Vaniot
  • Salix babylonica var. glandulipilosa P.I.Mao & W.Z.Li
  • Salix cantoniensis Hance
  • Salix capitata Y.L.Chou & Skvortsov
  • Salix chinensis Burm.f.
  • Salix dependens Nakai
  • Salix jeholensis Nakai
  • Salix jishiensis C.F.Fang & J.Q.Wang
  • Salix lasiogyne Seemen
  • Salix lenta Fr.
  • Salix matsudana Koidz.
  • Salix matsudana var. anshanensis C.Wang & J.Z.Yan
  • Salix matsudana var. pseudomatsudana (Y.L.Chou & Skvortsov) Y.L.Chou
  • Salix napoleonis F.W.Schultz
  • Salix neolasiogyne Nakai
  • Salix ohsidare Kimura
  • Salix pingliensis Y.L.Chou
  • Salix pseudogilgiana H.Lév.
  • Salix pseudolasiogyne H.Lév.
  • Salix pseudomatsudana Y.L.Chou & Skvortsov
  • Salix subfragilis Andersson
  • Salix yuhkii Kimura

}}}}

Salix babylonica (Babylon willow or weeping willow; {{zh|c=垂柳|p=chuí liǔ}}) is a species of willow native to dry areas of northern China, Korea, Mongolia, Japan, and Siberia but cultivated for millennia elsewhere in Asia, being traded along the Silk Road to southwest Asia and Europe.Flora of China: [http://www.efloras.org/florataxon.aspx?flora_id=2&taxon_id=200005760 Salix babylonica]{{GRIN | access-date = 15 December 2017}}

Description

Salix babylonica is a medium- to large-sized deciduous tree, growing up to {{convert|20|-|25|m|ft|abbr=on}} tall. It grows rapidly, but has a short lifespan, between 40 and 75 years. The shoots are Yellowish-brown, with small buds. The leaves are alternate and spirally arranged, narrow, light green, {{Convert|4–16|cm|abbr=on}} long and {{Convert|0.5–2|cm|4=1|abbr=on}} broad, with finely serrate margins and long acuminate tips; they turn a gold-yellow in autumn. The flowers are arranged in catkins produced early in the spring; it is dioecious, with the male and female catkins on separate trees.Huxley, A., ed. (1992). New RHS Dictionary of Gardening. Macmillan {{ISBN|0-333-47494-5}}.

File:Saule pleureur chaton.jpg|Male flowers of Salix babylonica

Image:Willow Salix babylonica.jpg|Pendulous branchlets of Salix babylonica

File:Salix babylonica2.jpg|Bark of Salix babylonica

File:SalixBabylonicaLeaf.jpg|Leaves of Salix babylonica

Taxonomy

Salix babylonica was described and named scientifically by Carl Linnaeus in 1736, who knew the species as the pendulous-branched ("weeping") variant then recently introduced into the Clifford garden in Hartekamp in The Netherlands.

=Relation to ''Salix matsudana''=

A similar willow species also native to northern China, Salix matsudana (Chinese willow), is now included in Salix babylonica as a synonym by many botanists, including the Russian willow expert Alexey Skvortsov. The only reported difference between the two species is S. matsudana has two nectaries in each female flower, whereas S. babylonica has only one; however, this character is variable in many willows (for example, crack willow, Salix × fragilis, can have either one or two), so even this difference may not be taxonomically significant.Bean, W. J. (1980). Trees and Shrubs Hardy in the British Isles 8th ed., vol. 6. John Murray {{ISBN|0-7195-2428-8}}.

A horticultural variant with twisted twigs and trunk, the corkscrew willow (S. matsudana var. tortuosa), is widely planted.{{cn|date=September 2020}}

Cultivation

File:Claude Monet, Weeping Willow.JPG, by Claude Monet (1918)]]

Salix babylonica, especially its pendulous-branched ("weeping") form, has been introduced into many other areas, including Europe and the southeastern United States, but beyond China, it has not generally been as successfully cultivated as some of its hybrid derivatives, being sensitive to late-spring frosts. In the more humid climates of much of Europe and eastern North America, it is susceptible to a canker disease, willow anthracnose (Marssonina salicicola), which makes infected trees very short-lived and unsightly.Meikle, R. D. (1984). Willows and Poplars of Great Britain and Ireland. BSBI Handbook No. 4. {{ISBN|0-901158-07-0}}.

= Cultivars =

Salix babylonica (Babylon willow) has many cultivars, including:

  • 'Babylon' (synonym: 'Napoleon') is the most widely grown cultivar of S. babylonica, with its typical weeping branches.Santamour, F.S. & McArdle, A.J. (1988). Cultivars of Salix babylonica and other Weeping

Willows. Journal of Arboriculture 14: 180-184

  • 'Crispa' (synonym: 'Annularis') is a mutant of 'Babylon', with spirally curled leaves.

Various cultivars of Salix matsudana (Chinese willow) are now often included within Salix babylonica, treated more broadly, including:

  • 'Pendula' is one of the best weeping trees, with a silvery shine, hardier, and more disease resistant.
  • 'Tortuosa' is an upright tree with twisted and contorted branches, marketed as corkscrew willow.

Yet other weeping willow cultivars are derived from interspecific Salix hybrids, including S. babylonica in their parentage. The most widely grown weeping willow cultivar is Salix × sepulcralis 'Chrysocoma', with bright yellowish branchlets.

Uses

Peking willow is a popular ornamental tree in northern China, and is also grown for wood production and shelterbelts there, being particularly important around the oases of the Gobi Desert, protecting agricultural land from desert winds.{{Citation needed|date=July 2011}}

Origin

The epithet babylonica in this Chinese species' scientific name (S. babylonica), as well as the related common names "Babylon willow" or "Babylon weeping willow", derive from a misunderstanding by Linnaeus that this willow was the tree described in the Bible in the opening of Psalm 137 (here in Latin and English translations):

::

Super flumina Babylonis illic sedimus et flevimus, cum recordaremur Sion.

:::In salicibus in medio ejus suspendimus organa nostra....

:Here, "salicibus" is the dative plural of the Latin noun salix, the willows, used by Linnaeus as the name for the willow genus Salix.


::

By the rivers of Babylon, there we sat down, yea, we wept, when we remembered Zion.

:::We hanged our harps upon the willows in the midst thereof.

::

By the waters of Babylon, there we sat down and wept, when we remembered Zion

:::On the willows there we hung up our lyres....

Despite these Biblical references to "willows", whether in Latin or English, the trees growing in Babylon along the Euphrates River in ancient Mesopotamia (modern Iraq) and named gharab in early Hebrew, are not willows (Salix) in either the modern or the classical sense, but the Euphrates poplar (Populus euphratica), with willow-like leaves on long, drooping shoots, in the related genus Populus.{{cite book|author=Barnes, Burton V.|author2= W.H. Wagner Jr.|author2-link=Warren H. Wagner|name-list-style=amp|title=Michigan Trees: A guide to the trees of the Great Lakes region (revised and updated)|url=https://archive.org/details/michigantreesgui0000barn|url-access=registration|year=2004|publisher=The University of Michigan Press|location=Ann Arbor, Michigan|isbn=978-0-472-08921-5|pages=x + 448 pp}} Both Populus and Salix are in the plant family Salicaceae, the willow family.

These Babylonian trees are correctly called poplars, not willows, in the New International Version of the Bible (English, 1978):

::

By the rivers of Babylon we sat and wept when we remembered Zion

:::There on the poplars we hung our harps.

Explanatory notes

{{Reflist|group=note}}

References

{{Reflist}}

Further reading

  • Flora of China: {{Citation

| last = eFloras

| title = Salix babylonica

| volume = 4

| page = 186

| url = http://www.efloras.org/florataxon.aspx?flora_id=2&taxon_id=200005760

}}

  • {{PFAF|Salix babylonica}}
  • {{PFAF|Salix matsudana}}