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Willow

\n{| border="1" cellspacing="0" align="right" cellpadding="2"\n!bgcolor="lightgreen"|Willows\n|-\n|align="center"|
Weeping Willow\n|-\n!bgcolor=lightgreen|\n|-\n|\n{| align="center"\n|-\n|:||Plantae\n|-\n|:||Magnoliophyta\n|-\n|:||Magnoliopsida\n|-\n|:||Malpighiales\n|-\n|:||Salicaceae\n|-\n|:||Salix\n|} |-\n!bgcolor="lightgreen"|Species\n|-\n|About 350, including:
\nSalix alba - White Willow
\nSalix amygdaloides - Peachleaf Willow
\nSalix arbuscula - Mountain Willow
\nSalix aurita - Eared Willow
\nSalix babylonica - Peking Willow
\nSalix caprea- Goat Willow
\nSalix caroliniana - Coastal Plain Willow
\nSalix cinerea - Grey Sallow
\nSalix fragilis - Crack Willow
\nSalix herbacea - Dwarf Willow
\nSalix lanata - Woolly Willow
\nSalix lasiandra - Pacific Willow
\nSalix nigra - Black Willow
\nSalix pentandra - Bay Willow
\nSalix purpurea - Purple Willow
\nSalix repens - Creeping Willow
\nSalix triandra - Almond Willow
\nSalix viminalis - Common Osier\n|} The willows are deciduous trees and shrubs in the genus Salix, in the willow family Salicaceae. There are about 350 species in this genus worldwide, found primarily in cooler zones in the northern hemisphere. These plants are dioecious with male and female floweres appearing as catkins on different plants. The deciduous leaves are often elongate and serrate. The White Willow (Salix alba) is a widespread European species, which has become naturalised on many other parts of the world; it is a tree up to 30 m tall. A variety of it, var. caerulea, selected for fast, straight growth, is grown in southern England, the wood being used for the manufacture of cricket bats. The Weeping Willow, very widely planted as an ornamental tree, is a cultivar, Salix 'Tristis', derived from a hybrid between the Chinese S. babylonica and S. alba. Some willows, particularly arctic and alpine species, are very small; the Dwarf Willow (Salix herbacea) rarely exceeds 6 cm in height, though spreading widely across the ground. Almost all willows take root very readily from cuttings or where broken branches lie on the ground.

Medicinal properties

\nThe bark of the willow tree has been mentioned in ancient texts from
Assyria, Sumeria and Egypt as a remedy for aches and fever, and the Greek physician Hippocrates wrote about its medicinal properties in the 5th century BC. Native Americans across the American continent relied on it as a staple of their medical treatments. The active extract of the bark, called salicin, was isolated to its crystaline form in 1828 by Henri Leroux, a French pharmacist, and Raffaele Piria, an Italian chemist, who then succeeded in separating out the acid in its pure state. Salicin is acidic when in a saturated solution in water (pH = 2.4), and is called salicylic acid for that reason. In 1897 Felix Hoffmann created a synthetically altered version of salicin (in his case derived from the Spiraea plant), which caused less digestive upset than pure salicylic acid. The new drug, formally Acetylsalicylic acid, was named aspirin by Hoffmann's employer Bayer AG. This gave rise to the hugely important class of drugs known as non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs).

External links

\nSalix alba\n*
Salix alba image from 'Flora von Deutschland Österreich und der Schweiz'\n*Salix alba at plants for a future Salix purpurea\n*Image of Salix purpurea from 'Flora von Deutschland Österreich und der Schweiz'\n*Salix purpurea at plants for a future

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