Picea rubens – Red Spruce – American Red Spruce – Spruce –

Description

Picea – Spruce – There are 30-45 species of monoecious, evergreen, coniferous trees in the Pinaceae family, in this genus.  They are stiff, narrow, conical, sometimes columnar trees.  They occur in forest in cool temperate regions of the Northern Hemisphere.  They have horizontal to upward pointing branches covered in needle like leaves set singly around the shoots, and varies from bright green, glaucous, blue, silver and gray.  The woody, oval to oblong-cylindrical female cones, held terminal on main shoots and side shoots, are erect at flowering, later pendent, they ripen in a season from green or red when young to purple or brown when mature.  Ovoid, yellow to red purple male cones, 3/4-1 1/4″ long, are borne in spring on previous years shoots.  Spruces are useful for shelter planting or as specimen trees, many cultivars are dwarf or slow growing.  There are prostrate cultivars that make excellent ground covers. Grow in any deep, moist but well drained, ideally neutral to acidic soil in full sun.  It will not withstand polluted environments. Prone to gall insects, aphids, caterpillars, sawfly, red spider mites, lesion nematode, scale insects, butt rot, heart rot, witches broom, mistletoe, rust, gall adelgids, and needle cast P. rubens – Red Spruce – American Red Spruce – This narrow conical to pyramidal tree from Northern North America grows 70-100′ feet tall and 30-40′ feet wide. It has scaly, purple brown bark, changing to red brown, and curved branches, upturned at the tips, with buff colored shoots. It produces glossy, 4 sided, grass green leaves, ½-3/4″ long, become darker and are overlapping on the upper part of the stems and are spreading below.  It bears cylindrical, shiny, red brown female cones are 3/4-2″ long, with broadly blunt, convex, finely toothed scales. Zones 2-5