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Salix glaucophylla var. angustifolia Bebb ex C.F.Wheeler & E.F.Sm.
Salix glaucophylla var. brevifolia Bebb ex C.F.Wheeler & E.F.Sm.
Salix glaucophylla var. integra Zabel
Salix glaucophylla var. latifolia Bebb ex C.F.Wheeler & E.F.Sm.
Salix glaucophylla var. latifolia Zabel
Salix glaucophylloides f. lasioclada Fernald
Salix glaucophylloides Fernald
Salix glaucophylloides var. albovestita (C.R.Ball) Fernald
Salix glaucophylloides var. brevifolia (Bebb ex C.F.Wheeler & E.F.Sm.) C.R.Ball ex E.G.Voss
Salix glaucophylloides var. glaucophylla C.K.Schneid.
Salix myricoides var. albovestita (C.R.Ball) Dorn
Salix myricoides var. angustifolia (Bebb ex C.F.Wheeler & E.F.Sm.) G.Wilh. & Rericha
Salix × laurentiana f. glaucophylla (Bebb) B.Boivin
Vimen myricoides (Muhl.) Raf.
Salix myricoides, the bayberry willow or blue-leaf willow, is a species of flowering plant in the family Salicaceae, native to the Great Lakes region of the Midwestern United States, and to eastern Canada. It is typically found on beaches and dunes of the Lakes, and occasionally along inland streams and in fens, if calcareous. For example, in Maine it is found only on the ice-scoured shore of the St. John River.
^ Reznicek, A. A.; Voss, E. G.; Walters, B. S. (February 2011). "Salix myricoides Muhl". Michigan Flora Online. University of Michigan. Retrieved 23 September 2022.