| Home › Range Plants of Utah › Coyote | ||
| [Graphic Version] | ||
Coyote Willow
Coyote Willow Scientific Name:Salix exigua Nutt. Scientific Name Synonyms:None known Symbol:SAEX Description:Life Span: Perennial Origin: Native Season: Deciduous Growth Characteristics: Coyote Willow usually forms a thicket with its long, slender stems, seldom exceeding 15 feet in height, but has been known to reach heights of 26 feet. It reproduces by seed and rhizomes (forming clones). Regeneration may also occur through broken pieces of stems and roots that are transported and deposited by floodwaters that later sprout. Flowers/Inflorescence: Inflorescences are caterpillar-like catkins, which are long spikes containing many small flowers. Fruits/Seeds: Seeds are very small, enclosed in a dense tuft of silky white hairs. Leaves: Long, narrow, and tapered at both ends, with short petioles or no petioles. Margins are usually entire or with a few teeth. Stems: Twigs are hairy and greenish in color. The twigs are also slender and round with bark that loosens easily. Bark is gray-green to brown, smooth on young stems and roughens into scales or shallow furrows and ridges with age. The wood is light, soft, and weak. It is quite susceptible to decay. Buds are located on twigs above leaf petioles. Ecological Adaptations:Coyote willow is found almost exclusively in riparian habitats, occupying banks of major rivers and smaller streams, lakes and ponds, marshy areas, alluvial terraces, and ditches, at elevations from 2,700 to 8,500 feet. It characteristically forms zones immediately adjacent to the water's edge. Coyote willow may also occur on moist, well-drained benches and bottomlands. It normally does not exist in the understory due to its shade intolerance, and is generally replaced by cottonwoods. It is the dominant willow species at low elevations. Soils: Coyote willow occurs on a wide range of soil textures, but usually occurs on soils derived from alluvial or fluvial parent material of mixed geologic origin. Associated Species: Sedges, rushes, cottonwoods, water birch. Uses and Management:Coyote willow is an important food source for many wildlife species. In the Great Basin it has been reported as a favorite food of beaver. Willows (Salix spp.) in general are a preferred food of moose, and coyote willow occurs in riparian and flood plain habitats that these animals frequent. It also is browsed heavily by elk but is of only slight importance as browse for mule deer. Dense stands provide hiding cover for wildlife but at the same time limit access for livestock. |
||