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Colorado Blue Spruce
Picea pungens
Engelm.
Description:
Colorado blue spruce, or blue spruce, is an attractive tree
often used for Christmas trees or as ornamentals, particularly in the eastern
United States and Europe. It is the official state tree of both Colorado and
Utah. The species generally reaches a height of 65-115 feet at maturity with a
diameter of 2-3 feet. It has a narrow, pyramidal shape and cone-shaped crown.
As trees become older, they often take on a more irregular appearance. While
blue spruce grows relatively slowly, it is long-lived and may reach ages of
600-800 years.
Leaves (needles) are 1-1 1/2 inches long on lower branches
but somewhat shorter on upper branches. They are 4-sided and have a very sharp
point on the end. It is this point which gives the species its name "pungens",
from the Latin word for sharp as in puncture wound. Needles are generally dull
bluish-gray to silvery blue and emit a resinous odor when crushed. Some trees
have a more distinct bluish-white or silvery-white foliage. The cultivated
variety 'glauca' is noted for this type of coloration. Nursery managers also
select for "shiners" which demonstrate this very desirable characteristic.
Needles occur on small peg-like structures on the twig called sterigmata. The
sterigmata persist on the twigs after needles have fallen, which is usually
after the third or fourth year.
Both male and female flowers (strobili) occur in the same
tree, although in different locations. Pollination occurs in late spring and
cones mature in one season. In the fall, cones are 2-4 inches long and turn
chestnut brown with stiff, flattened scales. Cones generally persist on the
tree for one to two years after seed fall.
The bark is thin becoming moderately thick with age. It is
somewhat pale gray in small flattened scales when young, then turns reddish
brown and furrowed with age.
Blue spruce is moderately shade tolerant and grows best in
deep, rich, gravely soils, often along stream banks and other sites with high
moisture levels. It usually does not occur in large stands but is found in
small groves or in association with Douglas-fir, lodgepole pine, Engelmann
spruce or ponderosa pine. A deep penetrating root system makes the species
resistant to being blown over.
Major pests include the western spruce dwarf mistletoe,
spruce bark beetle, and spruce budworm. Trees infected with mistletoe typically
develop abnormal masses of branches called "witches brooms". With severe
infestations, trees may be killed.
Blue spruce is finding increasing popularity as a Christmas
tree as a result of its symmetrical form and attractive blue foliage. The
species has an excellent natural shape and requires little shearing.
Additionally, needle retention is among the best for the spruces. Its
popularity as an ornamental leads many consumers to use blue spruce as a living
Christmas tree, to be planted after the holiday season.
Range:
Blue spruce occurs naturally from western Wyoming and
eastern Idaho southward through central Colorado and Central Utah. The southern
limits are New Mexico and Arizona. It occurs at elevations of 6,000 to 11,000
feet; generally at higher elevations in the more southern areas.
Propagation:
Most propagation is by seed but blue spruce can be grafted
or grown from rooted cuttings. Vegetative propagation is more often used to
perpetuate the rarer, more desirable forms of the species. Picea abies
or Picea pungens are preferred rootstock for grafting.
Over 70 cultivated varieties have been named.
Uses:
The wood is light to pale brown in color and is lightweight,
soft, and brittle. The lack of natural pruning leads to boards often being full
of knots. Blue spruce grows in relatively inaccessible locations leading to its
not being commercially important as a timber species. The wood is suitable,
however, for posts, poles, and fuel.
Blue spruce has limited value to wildlife but does provide
cover and seeds for squirrels, rodents and some birds.
In the western United States, the species has found some use
in shelterbelts.
Prepared by Dr. Craig R. McKinley,
North Carolina State University |