Salix nigricans var. crassifolia (Schleich. ex J.Forbes) Wimm.
Salix nigricans var. firma Ser.
Salix nigricans var. lancifolia Wimm.
Salix nigricans var. parvifolia Ser.
Salix nigricans var. rupestris (Donn ex Sm.) Wimm.
Salix nigricans var. sericea Wimm.
Salix ovata Spreng.
Salix parietariifolia Host
Salix petraea G.Anderson ex J.Forbes
Salix proteifolia J.Forbes
Salix ramifusca J.Forbes
Salix rivalis Host
Salix rivularis J.Forbes
Salix rotundata J.Forbes
Salix rupestris Donn ex Sm.
Salix schleicheriana J.Forbes
Salix sordida J.Forbes
Salix stylaris Ser.
Salix tiliifolia Schleich. ex Spreng.
Salix vaudensis J.Forbes
Salix willdenoviana J.Forbes
Sokolofia rupestris (Donn ex Sm.) Raf.
Urnectis hirta (Sm.) Raf.
Vimen andersoniana (Sm.) Raf.
Vimen cotinifolia (Sm.) Raf.
Vimen forsteriana (Sm.) Raf.
Salix myrsinifolia, known as the dark-leaved willow[3] or myrsine-leaved willow,[4] is a species of
willow native to
Europe and Western
Siberia. It forms a 2–5 m (6.6–16.4 ft) high shrub. In the north it often becomes a tree up to 8 m (26 ft) tall.[5]
^USDA, NRCS (n.d.).
"Salix myrsinifolia". The PLANTS Database (plants.usda.gov). Greensboro, North Carolina: National Plant Data Team. Retrieved 27 October 2015.
^Väre H., Kiuru H., Suomen puut ja pensaat (Trees and shrubs of Finland), Metsäkustannus Oy, 2006.