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Winter twig


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The
leaves are in opposite
pairs, up to 8 cm long, shiny above and paler below. They
are hairless, almost parallel-sided, and narrow abruptly
into a short point with a very finely toothed margin. The
short leaf-stalks are less than 10 mm long.
ID
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Purple
Willow is a deciduous
shrub up to 5 m in height, with shining, hairless, often
purplish twigs and a greyish bark. It is found on river
banks, in fens, marshes and other wet places.
Male
and female flowers are in catkins,
which appear before the leaves on separate shrubs (dioecious)
in March and April.
The catkins
are 15-30 mm long, erect or curved with no stalk. The
hairy males have red or purple anthers
but the females are green and more slender.
It is
the only native willow with opposite
or almost opposite
leaves.
Facts
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It
is commonly planted for ornament because of its
colourful stems.
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Cultivated
in some parts of Britain as an osier, and frequently
cut for basket-making.
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The
male catkins
may be attacked by a gall-midge,
which causes a downy, greyish-white mass to grow at
the tip
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