Olds College LHAP ELAEAGNACEAE_ PINACEAE
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ELAEAGNACEAE_ PINACEAE

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Slide 1 ELAEAGNACEAE FAMILY Slide 2 ELAEAGNACEAE Oleaster Family Family characteristics Small trees and shrubs Often thorny Leaves - simple covered with either silvery brown or golden hairs Flowers No petals - 2 to 8 fused sepals making a tube Fruit - achene or drupe Slide 3 ELAEAGNACEAE Elaeagnus commutata Slide 4 Elaeagnus commutata Wolf Willow/Silverberry Origin: Native to Alberta Hardiness Zone: 0b Exposure: Full sun Soil Conditions: Widely adapted Significant Features... Slide 5 Slide 6 Elaeagnus commutata Wolf Willow/Silverberry Form Height and Spread - 2m x 2m Coarse textured Foliage - Silvery. Alternate attachment. Leaf simple with entire margin. Slide 7 Elaeagnus commutata Wolf Willow Buds/Bark Bark - brown, scruffy scales on young stems Roots - rhizomes Slide 8 Elaeagnus commutata Wolf Willow/Silverberry Flower/Fruit: Flower - yellow, scentedTubular Bloom time - spring Fruit - silver dry drupe Slide 9 Slide 10 Elaeagnus commutata Wolf Willow/Silverberry Landscape Use: Native Sites Erosion control Colour contrast Winter interest Slide 11 Elaeagnus commutata Wolf Willow/Silverberry Maintenance Will spread Deer do not browse it N2 fixing Slide 12 MJasso Slide 13 ELAEAGNACEAE Elaeagnus angustifolia Slide 14 Elaeagnus angustifolia Russian Olive Origin: Russia Hardiness Zone: 3 Exposure: Full sun Soil Conditions: Widely adapted, salt, heat and drought tolerant Significant Features... Slide 15 Slide 16 Elaeagnus angustifolia Russian Olive Form Height and Spread - 8m x 9mFine textured, generally shaggy Foliage - silverlong narrow, margins entire Slide 17 Elaeagnus angustifolia Russian Olive Buds/Bark Old bark - rough/grey exfoliating. New bark - smooth, brown Other - THORNS! Slide 18 Elaeagnus angustifolia Russian Olive Flower/Fruit: Flower - yellow Bloom time - spring Fruit - Silver coloured berry Slide 19 Elaeagnus angustifolia Russian Olive Landscape Use: Small sites Boulevards Pollution Slide 20 Elaeagnus angustifolia Russian Olive Maintenance Prune out dead wood in spring Beware of thorns! Slide 21 ELAEAGNACEAE Shepherdia argentea Slide 22 Shepherdia argentea Silver Buffaloberry Origin: Native to Alberta Hardiness Zone: 2 Exposure: Full Sun Soil Conditions: Light Soil Significant Features... Slide 23 Shepherdia argentea - Silver Buffaloberry Slide 24 Shepherdia argentea Silver Buffaloberry Form Height and Spread - 4m x 3m Shape - Bushy, twisting. Thorns! Foliage silver, elliptic, margins entire JANDREASON Slide 25 . PFAIRBROTHER JANDREASON Slide 26 Shepherdia argentea Silver Buffaloberry Buds/Bark: Buds - Clusters of tiny silver buds Bark Texture - Flaky brown - silver Slide 27 Shepherdia argentea Silver Buffaloberry Flower & Fruit: Flower - dioecious, inconspicuous, yellow Bloom in May Fruit - pea size, fleshy, and reddish in colour Slide 28 . ASCHILL JANDREASON Slide 29 Shepherdia argentea Silver Buffaloberry Landscape Use: Contrast colour Specimen or hedge Native Planting Wildlife food/shelter Erosion Control Slide 30 Shepherdia argentea Silver Buffaloberry Maintenance Beware of suckering Thorns Slide 31 ELAEAGNACEAE Shepherdia canadensis Slide 32 Shepherdia canadensis - Canada Buffaloberry Origin: native to Alberta Hardiness Zone: 2 ( to tree line) Exposure: full sun, part shade Soil Conditions: requires good drainage tolerates poor soils: sand, gravel, calcareous, alkaline ( not salt tolerant) http://theconversation.com/alberta-grizzly-bears-will-feel-the-effects-of-climate-change-113001 Slide 33 Shepherdia canadensis - Canada Buffaloberry Form Medium shrub Mounding Height: 1.5 mSpread: 1.5m Medium textured Slow to medium growth rate Significant Features….. Slide 34 Shepherdia canadensis - Canada Buffaloberry Foliage: underside of leaves covered with hairs and rust coloured dotsTop dark green, glossy Buds - opposite, adpressed against the stemsReddish brown Branches opposite Scaly brownish felt covers new twigs Schill Slide 35 Shepherdia canadensis - Canada Buffaloberry Wikipedia (2024) Hydroquebec (n.d.) Slide 36 Shepherdia canadensis - Canada Buffaloberry Flowers - inconspicuous, Yellowish-greenFemale - Funnel shaped Produced as leaves start to openDioecious Fruit - red or orange translucent Oval 1 seeded Slide 37 Shepherdia canadensis - Canada Buffaloberry Landscape Use Neat, dense habitGlossy green foliage Mass plantingSpecimenNaturalization No specific maintenance or problems Slide 38 Hippophae rhamnoides Sea Buckthorn Slide 39 Hippophae rhamnoides Sea Buckthorn Origin: cold temperate regions of Europe and Asia Hardiness Zone: 2 Exposure: full sun Soil Conditions: requires good drainage tolerates poor soils: sand, gravel, Drought, calcareous, alkaline, salt Slide 40 Hippophae rhamnoides Sea Buckthorn Form Large shrubHeight: 3m Spread: 2 - 2.5 mFine texture Mounding Significant Features….. Slide 41 Slide 42 Hippophae rhamnoides Sea Buckthorn Foliage: narrow, lanceolate, silver green on top, slightly pubescent Buds - alternate, large, reddish brown Branches Scaly brownish rough Rhizomatous deep roots Slide 43 Hippophae rhamnoides Sea Buckthorn Flowers - DioeciousInconspicuousApetalous Wind pollinated Flowers after 3 years + Fruit - orange translucent , fleshy Oval 1 seeded Edible By Karunakar Rayker from India - No Pain No Gain Uploaded by Ekabhishek, CC BY-SA 2.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=6907950 Slide 44 Hippophae rhamnoides Sea Buckthorn Landscape Use: neat, dense habitFine textured Mass planting - formal hedgeSpecimenWindbreak *suckers** Slide 45 PINACEAE Pine Family Slide 46 Pine Family Trees or shrubs, resinous evergreen; leaves needle-shaped, linear, spirally arranged, single or in groups Plants monoecious, reproductive structures produced in cones (strobili) of 2 kinds Male cones small formed singly or in dense clusters, scales flattened, sporangia 2 per scale on the lower surface Seed cones relatively large and woody at maturity, producing seed at the base of the scales, usually 2 seeds on a scale, seeds winged Pine, Tsuga, Abies, Pseudotsuga, Pinus, Larix. Slide 47 PINACEAEPicea glauca Slide 48 Picea glauca - White Spruce Origin: Native across America Hardiness zone: 0a ( to approx 30 km of the Arctic Circle) Exposure: half shade full sun Soil Conditions: wide but prefers moisture and a pH of 5-7.5. Not tolerant of saline soils. Will tolerate compacted and heavy soils in Urban areas. Slide 49 Picea glauca - White Spruce Form: narrow, pyramidal crown, openly branched. Branchlets sometimes pendant. Height 15m spread 5m Slide 50 Picea glauca - White Spruce Foliage: needlesSingle on a peg like projection1.2-2.0 cm long4 angled, blunt pointedDull to dark green with a white “bloom” Slide 51 Picea glauca - White Spruce Fruit Cones, pendant, 5-7 cm longScales entire, roundedSeeds mature in one year and cones drop each year after seed is shed. Slide 52 Picea glauca Landscape Use shelterbelt / windbreakspecimen / small group Primary problems:Spruce gall adelgidSpruce sawflySpruce budwormSpider miteRabbits ( on young trees) Shallow rooted, roots spread 2x ht of tree. Compete with turf Slide 53 PINACEAEPicea pungens Slide 54 Picea pungens - Colorado Spruce Native to US rockies ( not into Alberta) Hardiness Zone: 2 Exposure: full sun, part shade, generally prefers cooler climates Soil Conditions: wide, prefers rich moist soils but “can withstand drought better than any other spruce” 1 https://frarborists.com/colorado-state-tree/ Slide 55 Burns, Russell M. and Honkala, Barbara H. (1990) “Its range extends from latitude 33° 50' to 48° 54' N. and from longitude 104° 45' to 114° 00' W.; the Rocky Mountain region in high mountains…” Slide 56 Picea pungens - Colorado Spruce Form: PyramidalBranches stiff, in older trees may archCompact root system A small percentage of the species has the blue colour, in varying degrees of intensity when propagated by seed. Height 12m, spread 5m Slide 57 Picea pungens - Colorado Spruce Foliage: 2-3cm long 4 sidedSHARP POINTED (pungens)Held for 4-5 yearsGreen to blue with a glaucous bloom (wax) Winter buds: Orange brown and prominent Bark: gray brownDeeply furrowed Slide 58 Slide 59 Picea pungens - Colorado Spruce Fruit: Cones drooping to 10 cm long.Long flexible scales have jagged edgesBlonde brown in color Found at the top of the tree Slide 60 1. ‘Fastigiata’ Columnar Blue Spruce ‘Blue Totem’ - columnar spruce 2. ‘Montgomery’- compact, dwarf 3. ‘Hoopsii’ narrow upright, bluest 4. Fat Albert - dense 2. 3. 4. Slide 61 Picea pungens Landscape Use: shelterbelt/ windbreakShady sightsSpecimen, small groupsDry sites Maintenance: give lots of space Problems:Spidermite, white pine weevil ( in some years) Slide 62 PINACEAEPicea abies Slide 63 Picea abies Norway Spruce Origin: Eurasia Hardiness Zone: 2 Exposure: Full sun to part shade(Can get sunscald) Soil Conditions: must be moist and well drained Significant Features... Slide 64 Picea abies Norway Spruce Slide 65 Picea abies Norway Spruce Form : Height and Spread - SPECIES: 15m x 8m. Shape - pyramidal with graceful drooping branchelets. Juvenile Norway Spruce Slide 66 Picea abies - Norway Spruce Foliage Texture - fine (compared to other spruce) Colour - Evergreen. Identifier - ALL PICEA have 4 sided needles. Slide 67 Picea abies - Norway Spruce Buds & Bark: Buds slender, conical, acute, light brown, not resinous, rosette shaped Bark: red brown - grey, exfoliating in thin scales Flower & Fruit: Cones distinctly spiralled and stiff Cones showy - beige in colour Slide 68 Slide 69 Copyright - Olds College Slide 70 Picea abies -Norway Spruce Landscape Use: Winter interest Specimen or small grouping Slide 71 Picea abies Norway Spruce Juvenile vs mature Slide 72 Picea abies Norway Spruce Maintenance May sunscald All spruce insects: Spider mite, spruce gall adelgid, spruce budworm and borers Transplants readily Slide 73 PINACEAE Picea abies ‘Nidiformis’ and other cultivars Slide 74 Picea abies ‘Nidiformis’ Bird’s Nest Spruce Slide 75 Native to mountainous areas of northern and central EuropeZone ?? Exposure Full sun Environment evenly moist soil, grows best in cooler climates.Can withstand some drought when mature Slide 76 Form A dense rounded shrub with straight to slightly pendulous branches. Very slow growing After 10 years - 60 cm high x 120 cm wide, after 40 year- can get to 2.5m high and 13m wide. Leaves - short, medium to light green Landscape Use - evergreen border, accent plant https://plants.ces.ncsu.edu/plants/picea-abies-nidiformis/ Slide 77 E. Kawahara (2024) Slide 78 Other cultivars and varieties of Norway Spruce (FYI) Slide 79 Picea abies ‘Little Gem’ - Little Gem Spruce Slide 80 Picea abies ‘Cupressina’ Columnar Norway Spruce Picea abies ‘Christina’ Christina Norway Spruce Slide 81 Picea abies - Weeping Spruce

Slide Outline

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Slide 1

ELAEAGNACEAE FAMILY

Slide 2

ELAEAGNACEAE

Oleaster Family

Family characteristics

Small trees and shrubs

Often thorny

Leaves - simple covered with either silvery brown or golden hairs

Flowers No petals - 2 to 8 fused sepals making a tube

Fruit - achene or drupe

image41.jpg

Slide 3

ELAEAGNACEAE

Elaeagnus commutata

Slide 4

Elaeagnus commutata

Wolf Willow/Silverberry

Origin: Native to Alberta

Hardiness Zone: 0b

Exposure: Full sun

Soil Conditions: Widely adapted

Significant Features...

image9.jpg image7.png

Slide 5

image19.jpg image4.jpg image18.jpg

Slide 6

Elaeagnus commutata Wolf Willow/Silverberry

Form

Height and Spread - 2m x 2m Coarse textured

Foliage - Silvery. Alternate attachment. Leaf simple with entire margin.

image8.jpg

Slide 7

Elaeagnus commutata

Wolf Willow

Buds/Bark

Bark - brown, scruffy scales on young stems

Roots - rhizomes

image13.jpg

Slide 8

Elaeagnus commutata

Wolf Willow/Silverberry

Flower/Fruit:

Flower - yellow, scentedTubular

Bloom time - spring

Fruit - silver dry drupe

image3.jpg image15.jpg

Slide 9

image20.jpg image10.jpg image12.jpg

Slide 10

Elaeagnus commutata

Wolf Willow/Silverberry

Landscape Use:

Native Sites

Erosion control

Colour contrast

Winter interest

image1.jpg

Slide 11

Elaeagnus commutata

Wolf Willow/Silverberry

Maintenance

Will spread

Deer do not browse it

N2 fixing

image14.jpg

Slide 12

MJasso

image6.jpg image17.jpg image2.jpg image11.jpg

Slide 13

ELAEAGNACEAE

Elaeagnus angustifolia

Slide 14

Elaeagnus angustifolia Russian Olive

Origin: Russia

Hardiness Zone: 3

Exposure: Full sun

Soil Conditions: Widely adapted,

salt, heat and drought tolerant

Significant Features...

image5.jpg

Slide 15

image21.jpg image16.jpg

Slide 16

Elaeagnus angustifolia

Russian Olive

Form

Height and Spread - 8m x 9mFine textured, generally shaggy

Foliage - silverlong narrow, margins entire

image23.jpg image45.jpg

Slide 17

Elaeagnus angustifolia

Russian Olive

Buds/Bark

Old bark - rough/grey exfoliating.

New bark - smooth, brown

Other - THORNS!

image85.jpg image61.jpg

Slide 18

Elaeagnus angustifolia

Russian Olive

Flower/Fruit:

Flower - yellow

Bloom time - spring

Fruit - Silver coloured berry

image30.jpg image28.jpg

Slide 19

Elaeagnus angustifolia

Russian Olive

Landscape Use:

Small sites

Boulevards

Pollution

image38.jpg

Slide 20

Elaeagnus angustifolia

Russian Olive

Maintenance

Prune out dead wood in spring

Beware of thorns!

image49.jpg

Slide 21

ELAEAGNACEAE

Shepherdia argentea

Slide 22

Shepherdia argentea

Silver Buffaloberry

Origin: Native to Alberta

Hardiness Zone: 2

Exposure: Full Sun

Soil Conditions: Light Soil

Significant Features...

Slide 23

Shepherdia argentea - Silver Buffaloberry

image27.jpg

Slide 24

Shepherdia argentea

Silver Buffaloberry

Form

Height and Spread - 4m x 3m

Shape - Bushy, twisting. Thorns!

Foliage

silver, elliptic, margins entire

JANDREASON

image25.jpg

Slide 25

.

PFAIRBROTHER

JANDREASON

image24.jpg image31.jpg

Slide 26

Shepherdia argentea

Silver Buffaloberry

Buds/Bark:

Buds - Clusters of tiny silver buds

Bark Texture - Flaky brown - silver

image29.jpg image22.jpg

Slide 27

Shepherdia argentea

Silver Buffaloberry

Flower & Fruit:

Flower - dioecious, inconspicuous, yellow Bloom in May

Fruit - pea size, fleshy, and reddish in colour

image26.jpg image32.jpg

Slide 28

.

ASCHILL

JANDREASON

image42.jpg image35.jpg

Slide 29

Shepherdia argentea

Silver Buffaloberry

Landscape Use:

Contrast colour

Specimen or hedge

Native Planting

Wildlife food/shelter

Erosion Control

image50.jpg image34.jpg

Slide 30

Shepherdia argentea

Silver Buffaloberry

Maintenance

Beware of suckering

Thorns

image39.jpg

Slide 31

ELAEAGNACEAE

Shepherdia canadensis

Slide 33

Shepherdia canadensis - Canada Buffaloberry

Form

Medium shrub Mounding Height: 1.5 mSpread: 1.5m

Medium textured Slow to medium growth rate Significant Features…..

image67.jpg

Slide 34

Shepherdia canadensis - Canada Buffaloberry

Foliage: underside of leaves covered with hairs and rust coloured dotsTop dark green, glossy

Buds - opposite, adpressed against the stemsReddish brown

Branches opposite Scaly brownish felt covers new twigs

Schill

image33.jpg

Slide 35

Shepherdia canadensis - Canada Buffaloberry

Wikipedia (2024)

Hydroquebec (n.d.)

image40.png image36.png

Slide 36

Shepherdia canadensis - Canada Buffaloberry

Flowers - inconspicuous, Yellowish-greenFemale - Funnel shaped Produced as leaves start to openDioecious

Fruit - red or orange translucent Oval 1 seeded

image74.jpg

Slide 37

Shepherdia canadensis - Canada Buffaloberry

Landscape Use

Neat, dense habitGlossy green foliage

Mass plantingSpecimenNaturalization

No specific maintenance or problems

image43.jpg

Slide 38

Hippophae rhamnoides

Sea Buckthorn

Slide 39

Hippophae rhamnoides

Sea Buckthorn

Origin: cold temperate regions of Europe and Asia

Hardiness Zone: 2

Exposure: full sun

Soil Conditions: requires good drainage tolerates poor soils: sand, gravel, Drought, calcareous, alkaline, salt

image37.jpg

Slide 40

Hippophae rhamnoides

Sea Buckthorn

Form Large shrubHeight: 3m Spread: 2 - 2.5 mFine texture Mounding

Significant Features…..

image46.jpg

Slide 41

image44.jpg image48.jpg

Slide 42

Hippophae rhamnoides

Sea Buckthorn

Foliage: narrow, lanceolate, silver green on top, slightly pubescent

Buds - alternate, large, reddish brown

Branches Scaly brownish rough

Rhizomatous deep roots

image60.jpg image80.jpg image53.jpg

Slide 43

Hippophae rhamnoides

Sea Buckthorn

Flowers - DioeciousInconspicuousApetalous Wind pollinated Flowers after 3 years +

Fruit - orange translucent , fleshy Oval 1 seeded

Edible

By Karunakar Rayker from India - No Pain No Gain Uploaded by Ekabhishek, CC BY-SA 2.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=6907950

image57.png image55.png

Slide 44

Hippophae rhamnoides

Sea Buckthorn

Landscape Use:

neat, dense habitFine textured

Mass planting - formal hedgeSpecimenWindbreak

*suckers**

image58.jpg image56.jpg

Slide 45

PINACEAE

Pine Family

Slide 46

Pine Family

Trees or shrubs, resinous evergreen; leaves needle-shaped, linear, spirally arranged, single or in groups

Plants monoecious, reproductive structures produced in cones (strobili) of 2 kinds Male cones small formed singly or in dense clusters, scales flattened, sporangia 2 per scale on the lower surface Seed cones relatively large and woody at maturity, producing seed at the base of the scales, usually 2 seeds on a scale, seeds winged

Pine, Tsuga, Abies, Pseudotsuga, Pinus, Larix.

image81.jpg

Slide 47

PINACEAEPicea glauca

Slide 48

Picea glauca - White Spruce

Origin: Native across America Hardiness zone: 0a ( to approx 30 km of the Arctic Circle)

Exposure: half shade full sun

Soil Conditions: wide but prefers moisture and a pH of 5-7.5. Not tolerant of saline soils. Will tolerate compacted and heavy soils in Urban areas.

image70.jpg

Slide 49

Picea glauca - White Spruce

Form: narrow, pyramidal crown, openly branched. Branchlets sometimes pendant.

Height 15m spread 5m

image51.jpg

Slide 50

Picea glauca - White Spruce

Foliage: needlesSingle on a peg like projection1.2-2.0 cm long4 angled, blunt pointedDull to dark green with a white “bloom”

image52.jpg image54.jpg image59.jpg

Slide 51

Picea glauca - White Spruce

Fruit

Cones, pendant, 5-7 cm longScales entire, roundedSeeds mature in one year and cones drop each year after seed is shed.

image64.jpg

Slide 52

Picea glauca

Landscape Use

shelterbelt / windbreakspecimen / small group

Primary problems:Spruce gall adelgidSpruce sawflySpruce budwormSpider miteRabbits ( on young trees)

Shallow rooted, roots spread 2x ht of tree. Compete with turf

image51.jpg image109.jpg

Slide 53

PINACEAEPicea pungens

Slide 54

Picea pungens - Colorado Spruce

Native to US rockies ( not into Alberta)

Hardiness Zone: 2

Exposure: full sun, part shade, generally prefers cooler climates

Soil Conditions: wide, prefers rich moist soils but “can withstand drought better than any other spruce” 1

https://frarborists.com/colorado-state-tree/

image63.png

Slide 55

Burns, Russell M. and Honkala, Barbara H. (1990)

“Its range extends from latitude 33° 50' to 48° 54' N. and from longitude 104° 45' to 114° 00' W.; the Rocky Mountain region in high mountains…”

image62.png

Slide 56

Picea pungens - Colorado Spruce

Form: PyramidalBranches stiff, in older trees may archCompact root system

A small percentage of the species has the blue colour, in varying degrees of intensity when propagated by seed.

Height 12m, spread 5m

image83.jpg

Slide 57

Picea pungens - Colorado Spruce

Foliage: 2-3cm long 4 sidedSHARP POINTED (pungens)Held for 4-5 yearsGreen to blue with a glaucous bloom (wax)

Winter buds: Orange brown and prominent

Bark: gray brownDeeply furrowed

image84.jpg

Slide 58

image78.jpg

Slide 59

Picea pungens - Colorado Spruce

Fruit: Cones drooping to 10 cm long.Long flexible scales have jagged edgesBlonde brown in color

Found at the top of the tree

image93.jpg image107.jpg

Slide 60

1. ‘Fastigiata’ Columnar Blue Spruce ‘Blue Totem’ - columnar spruce 2. ‘Montgomery’- compact, dwarf 3. ‘Hoopsii’ narrow upright, bluest 4. Fat Albert - dense

2.

3.

4.

image66.png image68.png image71.png image69.png

Slide 61

Picea pungens

Landscape Use: shelterbelt/ windbreakShady sightsSpecimen, small groupsDry sites

Maintenance: give lots of space

Problems:Spidermite, white pine weevil ( in some years)

image97.jpg image72.jpg

Slide 62

PINACEAEPicea abies

Slide 63

Picea abies

Norway Spruce

Origin: Eurasia

Hardiness Zone: 2

Exposure: Full sun to part shade(Can get sunscald)

Soil Conditions: must be moist and well drained

Significant Features...

image75.jpg

Slide 64

Picea abies

Norway Spruce

image73.jpg

Slide 65

Picea abies

Norway Spruce

Form :

Height and Spread -

SPECIES: 15m x 8m.

Shape - pyramidal with graceful drooping branchelets.

Juvenile Norway Spruce

image87.jpg image76.jpg

Slide 66

Picea abies - Norway Spruce

Foliage

Texture - fine (compared to other spruce)

Colour - Evergreen.

Identifier - ALL PICEA have 4 sided needles.

image79.jpg

Slide 67

Picea abies - Norway Spruce

Buds & Bark:

Buds slender, conical, acute, light brown, not resinous, rosette shaped

Bark: red brown - grey, exfoliating in thin scales

Flower & Fruit:

Cones distinctly spiralled and stiff

Cones showy - beige in colour

image88.jpg

Slide 68

image111.jpg image94.jpg image102.jpg

Slide 69

Copyright - Olds College

image86.jpg image90.jpg image77.jpg

Slide 70

Picea abies -Norway Spruce

Landscape Use:

Winter interest

Specimen or small grouping

image82.jpg

Slide 71

Picea abies

Norway Spruce

Juvenile vs mature

image100.jpg image76.jpg

Slide 72

Picea abies

Norway Spruce

Maintenance

May sunscald

All spruce insects:

Spider mite, spruce gall adelgid, spruce budworm and borers

Transplants readily

Slide 73

PINACEAE

Picea abies ‘Nidiformis’

and other cultivars

Slide 74

Picea abies ‘Nidiformis’

Bird’s Nest Spruce

image89.jpg image98.jpg image95.jpg

Slide 75

Native to mountainous areas of northern and central EuropeZone ??

Exposure Full sun Environment evenly moist soil, grows best in cooler climates.Can withstand some drought when mature

image91.png

Slide 76

Form

A dense rounded shrub with straight to slightly pendulous branches.

Very slow growing After 10 years - 60 cm high x 120 cm wide, after 40 year- can get to 2.5m high and 13m wide.

Leaves - short, medium to light green

Landscape Use - evergreen border, accent plant

https://plants.ces.ncsu.edu/plants/picea-abies-nidiformis/

image96.png

Slide 77

E. Kawahara (2024)

image112.jpg

Slide 78

Other cultivars and varieties of Norway Spruce (FYI)

Slide 79

Picea abies ‘Little Gem’ - Little Gem Spruce

image92.png image99.png image101.png

Slide 80

Picea abies ‘Cupressina’

Columnar Norway Spruce

Picea abies ‘Christina’

Christina Norway Spruce

image103.png image104.png image105.png

Slide 81

Picea abies - Weeping Spruce

image110.png image106.png image108.jpg

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