Matches in DBpedia 2015-10 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Salix_arbusculoides> ?p ?o }
- Salix_arbusculoides abstract "Salix arbusculoides is a species of flowering plant in the willow family known by the common names littletree willow and peachleaf willow. It is native to northern North America, where its distribution extends across Alaska and most of Canada.This willow is a shrub or tree growing up to 9 meters tall. It has many branches with smooth gray or reddish brown bark. The leaves are up to 7.5 centimeters long and often have a thin coat of hairs on the undersides. Immature leaves have thicker coats of hair and are paler and yellowish in color. The leaves have toothed edges that are studded with glands that function as resin glands as well as hydathodes. This species is dioecious, with male and female catkins borne on separate individuals. The flowers are pollinated by insects, especially bees.This plant grows in forests and open meadows. It dominates or codominates willow communities, particularly in interior Alaska and parts of the Northwest Territories. It can grow on tundra above the timberline. It is often found near rivers and streams and on floodplains, forming dense thickets near water. It can be found in spruce woodlands and muskegs. Associated species include black spruce (Picea mariana), white spruce (Picea glauca), paper birch (Betula papyrifera), resin birch (Betula glandulosa), mountain alder (Alnus viridis crispa), thinleaf alder (Alnus incana tenuifolia), Scouler willow (Salix scouleriana), Bebb willow (Salix bebbiana), bluejoint reedgrass (Calamagrostis canadensis), cladonia lichens, sedges, and mosses.This is an early seral species which colonizes freshly disturbed habitat, such as floodplains recently scoured by floodwaters. The seeds germinate immediately when they are deposited upon moist substrate, and the plant grows best on wet alluvium. It also commonly sprouts up in recently burned areas. It can grow on other types of disturbed habitat, such as roadsides and mine sites. It does not tolerate shade and will be shaded out as the habitat transitions to forest when other trees begin to grow.This plant provides food for many animals, such as moose, deer, caribou, snowshoe hares, beavers, and small mammals and birds. It is especially palatable to moose, and it is nutritious. The plant also provides cover when it forms dense thickets. When it grows along waterways it provides overhangs for fish to hide under.".
- Salix_arbusculoides class Eudicots.
- Salix_arbusculoides conservationStatus "G5".
- Salix_arbusculoides conservationStatusSystem "TNC".
- Salix_arbusculoides division Flowering_plant.
- Salix_arbusculoides family Salicaceae.
- Salix_arbusculoides genus Willow.
- Salix_arbusculoides kingdom Plant.
- Salix_arbusculoides order Malpighiales.
- Salix_arbusculoides order Rosids.
- Salix_arbusculoides thumbnail Salix_arbusculoides_range_map_2.png?width=300.
- Salix_arbusculoides wikiPageExternalLink WillowsFinal.pdf.
- Salix_arbusculoides wikiPageExternalLink profile?symbol=SAAR3.
- Salix_arbusculoides wikiPageExternalLink NatureServe?searchName=Salix+arbusculoides.
- Salix_arbusculoides wikiPageID "34484653".
- Salix_arbusculoides wikiPageLength "4857".
- Salix_arbusculoides wikiPageOutDegree "49".
- Salix_arbusculoides wikiPageRevisionID "584630969".
- Salix_arbusculoides wikiPageWikiLink Alaska.
- Salix_arbusculoides wikiPageWikiLink Alluvium.
- Salix_arbusculoides wikiPageWikiLink Alnus_incana.
- Salix_arbusculoides wikiPageWikiLink Alnus_viridis.
- Salix_arbusculoides wikiPageWikiLink Angiosperms.
- Salix_arbusculoides wikiPageWikiLink Beaver.
- Salix_arbusculoides wikiPageWikiLink Bee.
- Salix_arbusculoides wikiPageWikiLink Betula_glandulosa.
- Salix_arbusculoides wikiPageWikiLink Betula_papyrifera.
- Salix_arbusculoides wikiPageWikiLink Calamagrostis_canadensis.
- Salix_arbusculoides wikiPageWikiLink Canada.
- Salix_arbusculoides wikiPageWikiLink Carex.
- Salix_arbusculoides wikiPageWikiLink Caribou.
- Salix_arbusculoides wikiPageWikiLink Category:Salix.
- Salix_arbusculoides wikiPageWikiLink Catkin.
- Salix_arbusculoides wikiPageWikiLink Cladonia.
- Salix_arbusculoides wikiPageWikiLink Deer.
- Salix_arbusculoides wikiPageWikiLink Diamond_willow.
- Salix_arbusculoides wikiPageWikiLink Dominance_(ecology).
- Salix_arbusculoides wikiPageWikiLink Ecological_succession.
- Salix_arbusculoides wikiPageWikiLink Eskimo.
- Salix_arbusculoides wikiPageWikiLink Eudicots.
- Salix_arbusculoides wikiPageWikiLink Floodplain.
- Salix_arbusculoides wikiPageWikiLink Flowering_plant.
- Salix_arbusculoides wikiPageWikiLink Hydathode.
- Salix_arbusculoides wikiPageWikiLink Malpighiales.
- Salix_arbusculoides wikiPageWikiLink Moose.
- Salix_arbusculoides wikiPageWikiLink Muskeg.
- Salix_arbusculoides wikiPageWikiLink Native_Americans_in_the_United_States.
- Salix_arbusculoides wikiPageWikiLink Northwest_Territories.
- Salix_arbusculoides wikiPageWikiLink Picea_glauca.
- Salix_arbusculoides wikiPageWikiLink Picea_mariana.
- Salix_arbusculoides wikiPageWikiLink Plant.
- Salix_arbusculoides wikiPageWikiLink Plant_reproductive_morphology.
- Salix_arbusculoides wikiPageWikiLink Plant_sexuality.
- Salix_arbusculoides wikiPageWikiLink Pollination.
- Salix_arbusculoides wikiPageWikiLink Polytrichum.
- Salix_arbusculoides wikiPageWikiLink Rosids.
- Salix_arbusculoides wikiPageWikiLink Salicaceae.
- Salix_arbusculoides wikiPageWikiLink Salix_bebbiana.
- Salix_arbusculoides wikiPageWikiLink Salix_scouleriana.
- Salix_arbusculoides wikiPageWikiLink Shrub.
- Salix_arbusculoides wikiPageWikiLink Snowshoe_hare.
- Salix_arbusculoides wikiPageWikiLink Thicket.
- Salix_arbusculoides wikiPageWikiLink Tree.
- Salix_arbusculoides wikiPageWikiLink Tree_line.
- Salix_arbusculoides wikiPageWikiLink Tundra.
- Salix_arbusculoides wikiPageWikiLink Willow.
- Salix_arbusculoides wikiPageWikiLink Woodworking.
- Salix_arbusculoides wikiPageWikiLinkText "S. arbusculoides".
- Salix_arbusculoides wikiPageWikiLinkText "Salix arbusculoides".
- Salix_arbusculoides wikiPageWikiLinkText "littletree willow".
- Salix_arbusculoides binomial "Salix arbusculoides".
- Salix_arbusculoides binomialAuthority "Andersson".
- Salix_arbusculoides familia Salicaceae.
- Salix_arbusculoides genus "Salix".
- Salix_arbusculoides hasPhotoCollection Salix_arbusculoides.
- Salix_arbusculoides ordo Malpighiales.
- Salix_arbusculoides rangeMap "Salix arbusculoides range map 2.png".
- Salix_arbusculoides rangeMapCaption "Natural range of Salix arbusculoides".
- Salix_arbusculoides rangeMapWidth "225".
- Salix_arbusculoides regnum "Plantae".
- Salix_arbusculoides species "S. arbusculoides".
- Salix_arbusculoides status "G5".
- Salix_arbusculoides statusSystem "TNC".
- Salix_arbusculoides unrankedClassis Eudicots.
- Salix_arbusculoides unrankedDivisio Angiosperms.
- Salix_arbusculoides unrankedDivisio Flowering_plant.
- Salix_arbusculoides unrankedOrdo Rosids.
- Salix_arbusculoides wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Commons_category.
- Salix_arbusculoides wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Salix_arbusculoides wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Taxobox.
- Salix_arbusculoides subject Category:Salix.
- Salix_arbusculoides hypernym Plant.
- Salix_arbusculoides type Article.
- Salix_arbusculoides type Eukaryote.
- Salix_arbusculoides type Plant.
- Salix_arbusculoides type Species.
- Salix_arbusculoides type Article.
- Salix_arbusculoides type Thing.
- Salix_arbusculoides type Q19088.
- Salix_arbusculoides type Q756.