Salix japonica
Thunb.
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Summary
Source: WikipediaSalix japonica (Japanese: シバヤナギ, romanized: Shibayanagi) is a species of willow native to hills and mountains of central Honshū, Japan. It is a deciduous shrub, reaching a height of 2 m.
Description
A deciduous shrub not frost tender. Dioecious species requiring both male and female plants for seed production. Adapts to light sandy, medium loamy, and heavy clay soils in mildly acidic to neutral pH. Requires full sun and prefers moist or wet conditions.
Edible Uses
The inner bark can be eaten raw or cooked, or dried and ground into a powder to blend with cereal flour for bread-making. It has a very bitter flavour and is regarded as a famine food, used only when all else fails. Young shoots and flower buds can be cooked, though they are not very palatable.
Traditional Uses
The young spring leaves are cooked and eaten.
This uses section is brief — help expand it
Medicinal Uses
The fresh bark contains salicin, which probably decomposes into salicylic acid (closely related to aspirin) in the human body. This gives it anodyne and febrifuge properties.
Distribution
It is a temperate plant.
Where It Grows
Asia, Japan,
Cultivation
Succeeds in most soils, including wet, ill-drained or intermittently flooded soils, but prefers a damp, heavy soil in a sunny position. Rarely thrives on chalk. Hybridizes freely with other members of this genus. Although the flowers are produced in catkins early in the year, they are pollinated by bees and other insects rather than by the wind. Plants in this genus are notably susceptible to honey fungus. Dioecious. Male and female plants must be grown if seed is required.
Propagation
Seed must be surface sown as soon as it is ripe in late spring, as viability is very short — perhaps only a few days. Cuttings of mature wood from the current year's growth can be taken November to February and rooted in a sheltered outdoor bed or planted directly into their permanent position with a weed-suppressing mulch; success is very easy. Plant out into permanent positions in autumn. Half-ripe cuttings can be taken June to August and rooted in a frame, also very easily.
Other Uses
None known Special Uses
Notes
There are about 300 Salix species.
References (3)
- Fl. jap. 24. 1784
- Plants for a Future database, The Field, Penpol, Lostwithiel, Cornwall, PL22 0NG, UK. http://www.scs.leeds.ac.uk/pfaf/
- Romanowski, N., 2007, Edible Water Gardens. Hyland House. p 114