Picea glauca - Wikipedia Picea glauca, the white spruce, [4] is a species of spruce native to the northern temperate and boreal forests in Canada and United States, North America
Picea glauca - Plant Finder - Missouri Botanical Garden Picea glauca, commonly called white spruce, is an extremely hardy evergreen conifer that is native to upland areas and lake stream margins stretching from Alaska across the boreal forest of Canada to Newfoundland, dipping south to Montana, Minnesota, Wisconsin, Michigan and New York
White spruce (Picea glauca) | Minnesota DNR Extensively found in northern Minnesota forests, extending south to the St Croix Valley White spruce thrives on dry soils with pine, on moist soils and in swamps with balsam fir and tamarack, and with mixed hardwoods It is moderately shade tolerant The wood is light, strong, soft, straight-grained, and yellowish white
White Spruce (Picea glauca) Tree Facts, Habitat, Uses, Pictures White spruce naturally hybridizes with the Engelmann spruce, Sitka spruce and black spruce It is the state tree of South Dakota and provincial tree of Manitoba Published on February 3rd 2017 by Sudipto Chakrabarti under Spruce Article was last reviewed on 26th June 2023
WHITE SPRUCE - PICEA GLAUCA | The UFOR Nursery Lab It has pale bluish needles when young, dark bluish-green when mature on small woody pegs that have sharp tips The needles are pungently aromatic when crushed Needles have a glaucous, white waxy coating, hence the specific epithet and common name Its fruits are slender cones that are 2" in length
White spruce | Picea glauca | The Morton Arboretum White spruce is a large, pyramidal evergreen with aromatic foliage and a uniform habit This popular garden conifer is native to Canada and the northwestern United States When sited properly, white spruce can be a long-lived attractive addition to any landscape
Picea glauca (Moench) Voss - US Forest Service Research and Development White spruce (Picea glauca), also known as Canadian spruce, skunk spruce, cat spruce, Black Hills spruce, western white spruce, Alberta white spruce, and Porsild spruce, is adapted to a wide range of edaphic and climatic conditions of the Northern Coniferous Forest
Picea glauca Conica glauca translates as "glaucous", referring to the lighter color of its green needles as compared to most evergreens 'Conica' refers to the tight, conical or pyramidal shape of the common cultivar, which broadens considerably at the base and apex with advanced maturity
Picea glauca | Landscape Plants | Oregon State University Conifer, evergreen tree, to 80 ft (24 m), tall and narrow in age Needles straight, stiff, 15-22 mm long, green to bluish-green, quadrangular in cross-section, 2-5 stomatal bands on each surface; unpleasant odor when crushed Cones cylindrical, slender, 3-6 cm long Sun, but tolerates some shade