Picea canadensis (Mill.) Britton, Sterns & Poggenb.

Scientific Name: Picea canadensis (Mill.) Britton, Sterns & Poggenb.


Classification: Plantae/ Tracheobionta / Spermatophyta / Coniferophyta / Pinopsida / / Pinales / Pinaceae / Picea A. Dietr./ Picea canadensis (Mill.) Britton, Sterns & Poggenb.

<i>Picea canadensis</i> (Mill.) Britton, Sterns & Poggenb.
General Information
Usda SymbolPICA10
GroupGymnosperm
Life CyclePerennial
Growth HabitsTree
Native LocationsPICA10

Plant Guide

Alternate Names

Canada spruce, skunk spruce, cat spruce, single spruce, western white spruce (var, albertiana, Canadian Rocky Mts,), Porsild spruce (var, porsildii, Alaska), Black Hills spruce (var, densata, South Dakota); synonyms: Picea alba (Aiton) Link; Picea canadensis (Miller) B, Use soil moisture sensors to measure the soil moisture of Picea canadensis (Mill.) Britton, Sterns & Poggenb..,S,P,

Uses

The wood of white spruce is used primarily for pulpwood and lumber for various construction, prefab houses, mobile homes, furniture, boxes and crates, and pallets. It also is used for house logs, musical instruments, and paddles. Because of its wide geographic range and abundance, it is (de facto) highly significant for food and cover of many wildlife species, for soil stability, watershed value, and recreation. It was historically important for food, shelter, medicine, fuel, and other uses by American Indians. White spruce is the provincial tree of Manitoba and the state tree of South Dakota. White spruce is much used in some areas for Christmas trees and is a good ornamental and shade tree.

Status

Please consult the PLANTS Web site and your State Department of Natural Resources for this plant’s current status, such as, state noxious status and wetland indicator values.

Description

General: Pine Family (Pinaceae). Native trees grows to 25 (-50) meters tall, the crown broadly conic to spire-like, or the plants sometimes shrub-like near treeline; branches slightly drooping; twigs not pendent, slender, pinkish-brown, without hairs. Bark is gray-brown, thin scaly. Needles are evergreen, borne singly from all sides of the twig but often crowded on the upper side, (0.8-) 1.5-2 (-2.5) cm long, blue-green, 4-angled, often inwardly curved, stiff, sharp-pointed. Seed cones are light brown at maturity, 2.5-6 (-8) cm long, ellipsoid, pendent; cone scales fan-shaped, soft and flexible, the tip smooth-edged and extending 0.5-3 mm beyond seed-wing impression. The common name is derived from the white waxy layer on the foliage. © Naturhistoriska riksmuseet @ Den Virtuella Floran Variation within the species: White spruce is highly variable over its range and several varieties (apart from the typical) have sometimes been recognized. P. glauca var. albertiana (S. Brown) Sargent – Canadian Rocky Mountains P. glauca var. densata Bailey – Black Hills of South Dakota and adjacent Wyoming P. glauca var. porsildii Raup – Alaska The diagnostic characteristics of these variants are not well correlated and occur rather sporadically – some of the features may reflect interspecific hybridization and some may be phenotypic modifications. More study is needed, but recent taxonomic treatments do not formally recognize variants within white spruce. Most of the variation follows gradients of latitude and altitude. Where they occur together, white spruce and Engelmann spruce regularly hybridize and intergrade completely, the hybrids occurring in intermediate elevation. Such trees are largely the basis for the description of P. glauca var. albertiana. White spruce also forms natural hybrids with Sitka spruce and black spruce.

Distribution

Widespread across northern North America, from Alaska, Yukon, and British Columbia continuously eastward to Nova Scotia, Newfoundland, New Brunswick, and Québec, in the northeastern United States and sporadically in the northern tier of states (Montana, Wyoming, South Dakota, Minnesota, Wisconsin, Michigan). For current distribution, please consult the Plant Profile page for this species on the PLANTS Web site.

Establishment

Adaptation: In muskegs, bogs, and river banks, to montane slopes; at 0-1000 (-2100) meters elevation. White spruce is a dominant tree of interior forests in Canada and Alaska and often an early colonizer in succession. White spruce co-occurs with black spruce (Picea mariana) over a wide range – the two species have evolved a complex competitive relationship (habitat partitioning) involving contrasts in water tolerance, vegetative reproduction, flowering times, and rate of early growth. Picea glauca grows best on well-drained mineral soils with deep or no permafrost, while P. mariana is more tolerant of sites with flooding, permafrost, and high soil acidity. Planting: Cone crops have been reported for trees as young as 4 years, but seed production in quantity begins at age 30 or older for most natural stands. Good years of seed production may be 2-12 years apart. Germination under established or mature stands commonly occurs on a variety of seedbeds – particularly on rotted logs and moss beds, but exposed mineral soil after windthrow and floods is the best seedbed. Large numbers of white spruce may become established immediately following disturbance. Seedling growth is greatest at full light intensity, but white spruce is capable of reproducing under mature stands of spruce and early succession tree species. Because seedling and juvenile growth of white spruce is slower than its early successional associates, it remains in the understory for 50 to 70 years. Trees 100-250 years old are common on good sites; older trees (250 to 300 years) are frequently found in areas protected from fire and in relatively wet upland situations. As in other species, maximum age appears to occur on stress sites at latitudinal or elevational treeline. Trees 500-1000 years old are known from such sites.

Management

White spruce trees from very young to 200 or more years may show good growth after release resulting from natural causes or silvicultural treatment. Mature forests with white spruce are easily destroyed because of their high susceptibility to fire. The probability of elimination of this species increases with latitude because good seed years become infrequent and seed quality poorer. At relatively short fire intervals (less than 40-50 years), the source of white spruce seed can be eliminated. Delivery of seeds to seedbeds for germination may limit regeneration. Squirrels may harvest as much as 90 percent of the cone crop in Alaska. Seed predation by insects and small mammals such as deer mice, red-backed and meadow voles, chipmunks, and shrews also can result in significant seed loss. Slow initial root growth makes young seedlings and transplants particularly susceptible to frost heaving. The severity of damage generally is greatest on fine-textured and wet soils where water is adequate for ice crystal formation in the surface soil. Defoliation by the spruce budworm and the western spruce budworm can cause mortality if defoliation continues for 2 or more years. Cultivars, Improved and Selected Materials (and area of origin) These plant materials are readily available from commercial sources. The cultivar ‘Conica’ (dwarf Alberta spruce, or dwarf white spruce) “is probably the best-known and most widely sold dwarf conifer in the United States (Dirr 1997).” Contact your local Natural Resources

Conservation

Service (formerly Soil Conservation Service) office for more information. Look in the phone book under ”United States Government.” The Natural Resources Conservation Service will be listed under the subheading “Department of Agriculture.”

References

Daubenmire, R. 1974. Taxonomic and ecologic relationships between Picea glauca and Picea engelmannii. Canad. J. Bot. 52:1545-1560. Dirr, M.A. 1997. Dirr's hardy trees and shrubs: An illustrated encyclopedia. Timber Press, Portland, Oregon. LaRoi, G.H. & J.R. Dugle 1968. A systematic and genecological study of Picea glauca and P. engelmannii, using paper chromatography of needle extracts. Canad. J. Bot. 46:649-687. Little, E.L., Jr. & S.S. Pauley 1958. A natural hybrid between black and white spruce in Minnesota. Amer. Midl. Naturalist 60:202-211. Naturhistoriska riksmuseet 1999. Picea glauca. IN: Den viruella floren. Stockholm, Sweden. <http://linnaeus.nrm.se/flora/barr/pina/picea/picegla.html> Nienstaedt, H. & J.C. Zasada 1990. Picea glauca. Pp. 204-226, IN R.M. Burns and B.H. Honkala. Silvics of North America. Volume 1. Conifers. USDA Forest Service Agric. Handbook 654, Washington, D.C. <http://willow.ncfes.umn.edu/silvics_manual/Table_of_contents.htm> Taylor, R.J. 1993. Picea. Pp. 369-373, IN: Flora of North America, north of Mexico. Vol. 2, Pteridophytes and gymnosperms. Oxford Univ. Press, New York. <http://hua.huh.harvard.edu/cgi-bin/Flora/flora.pl?FLORA_ID=12395>

Plant Traits

Growth Requirements

Temperature, Minimum (°F)-65
Adapted to Coarse Textured SoilsYes
Adapted to Fine Textured SoilsYes
Adapted to Medium Textured SoilsYes
Anaerobic ToleranceNone
CaCO3 ToleranceLow
Cold Stratification RequiredYes
Drought ToleranceHigh
Fertility RequirementHigh
Fire ToleranceLow
Frost Free Days, Minimum60
Hedge ToleranceLow
Moisture UseMedium
pH, Maximum8.2
pH, Minimum4.0
Planting Density per Acre, Maxim700
Planting Density per Acre, Minim300
Precipitation, Maximum50
Precipitation, Minimum7
Root Depth, Minimum (inches)30
Salinity ToleranceMedium
Shade ToleranceIntermediate


Morphology/Physiology

BloatNone
ToxicityNone
Resprout AbilityNo
Shape and OrientationConical
Active Growth PeriodSummer
C:N RatioHigh
Coppice PotentialNo
Fall ConspicuousNo
Fire ResistantNo
Flower ColorYellow
Flower ConspicuousNo
Foliage ColorGreen
Foliage Porosity SummerDense
Foliage Porosity WinterDense
Foliage TextureMedium
Fruit/Seed ConspicuousNo
Nitrogen FixationNone
Low Growing GrassNo
LifespanModerate
Leaf RetentionYes
Known AllelopathNo
Height, Mature (feet)100.0
Height at 20 Years, Maximum (fee30
Growth RateSlow
Growth FormSingle Stem
Fruit/Seed ColorBrown


Reproduction

Vegetative Spread RateSlow
Small GrainNo
Seedling VigorLow
Seed Spread RateSlow
Fruit/Seed Period EndSummer
Seed per Pound186400
Propagated by TubersNo
Propagated by SprigsNo
Propagated by SodNo
Propagated by SeedYes
Propagated by CormNo
Propagated by ContainerYes
Propagated by BulbNo
Propagated by Bare RootYes
Fruit/Seed PersistenceNo
Fruit/Seed Period BeginSummer
Fruit/Seed AbundanceLow
Commercial AvailabilityRoutinely Available
Bloom PeriodLate Spring
Propagated by CuttingsYes


Suitability/Use

Veneer ProductNo
Pulpwood ProductYes
Post ProductNo
Palatable HumanNo
Palatable Browse AnimalLow
Nursery Stock ProductNo
Naval Store ProductNo
Lumber ProductYes
Fuelwood ProductMedium
Fodder ProductNo
Christmas Tree ProductNo
Berry/Nut/Seed ProductNo

<i>Picea canadensis</i> (Mill.) Britton, Sterns & Poggenb.

<i>Picea canadensis</i> (Mill.) Britton, Sterns & Poggenb.

<i>Picea canadensis</i> (Mill.) Britton, Sterns & Poggenb.

<i>Picea canadensis</i> (Mill.) Britton, Sterns & Poggenb.

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