64 New York State Museum 



Salix pedicellaris Pursh. Bog Willow 



A bog species, found in this region only in the 

 "Balsam swamp" in the lower part of Red House 

 valley. 



Salix Bebbiana Sarg., 5*. ro strata Richards. Beaked 

 Willow 

 In springy or wet places, in open situations or in 

 thin woods, chiefly in poor or sterile soil. Common. 

 Occasional in various situations on better soils. 

 Salix cordata Muhl. Heart-leaved Willow 



Frequent or locally common in wet, usually alluvial 

 soil along most of the larger streams of the park 

 area. 

 Salix sericea Marsh. Silky Willow 



Frequent in swampy places, along most of the 

 streams of the park and in wet alluvial soil on the 

 bottomlands of the Allegheny and Tunungwant 

 valleys. Often large but scarcely treelike. 

 Salix discolor Muhl. Pussy Willow, Glaucous Willow 

 Frequent or common in wet places along the 

 streams, the bottomlands of the larger valleys and 

 in and about swamps and marshes. 

 Salix humilis Marsh. Prairie Willow 



In sterile or acid soil of open woods, thickets and 

 banks. Locally abundant. Slopes east of Cold 

 Spring, Huckleberry hill, Elko mountain, upper 

 Stoddard brook, and on the conglomerate soil of 

 many of the higher ridges. 

 Salix tristis Ait. Dwarf Gray Willow, Sage Willow 

 In sterile or dry sandy or gravelly soil. Infre- 

 quent. Huckleberry hill, upper Quaker run etc. 



