General Plant Information (Edit)
Plant Habit: Tree
Life cycle: Perennial
Sun Requirements: Full Sun
Water Preferences: Wet
Wet Mesic
Mesic
Dry Mesic
Dry
Soil pH Preferences: Very strongly acid (4.5 – 5.0)
Strongly acid (5.1 – 5.5)
Moderately acid (5.6 – 6.0)
Slightly acid (6.1 – 6.5)
Neutral (6.6 – 7.3)
Plant Height: 50 to 75 feet
Plant Spread: 20 to 35 feet
Leaves: Evergreen
Needled
Fruit: Other: female cones with papery or thin woody scales
Fruiting Time: Late summer or early fall
Fall
Late fall or early winter
Winter
Flowers: Other: soft male cones
Flower Time: Spring
Uses: Windbreak or Hedge
Provides winter interest
Wildlife Attractant: Birds
Other Beneficial Insects
Resistances: Deer Resistant
Rabbit Resistant
Flood Resistant
Propagation: Seeds: Stratify seeds
Can handle transplanting
Other info: Seeds are inside cones
Pollinators: Wind
Miscellaneous: Tolerates poor soil
Monoecious

Image
Common names
  • Black Spruce
  • Spruce
  • Bog Spruce
  • Swamp Spruce
Botanical names
  • Accepted: Picea mariana
  • Synonym: Picea nigra

Photo Gallery
Location: Morton Arboretum in Conifer Collection in Lisle, IL
Date: 2016-07-23
the foliage
Location: Thomas Darling Preserve near Blakeslee, PA
Date: 2016-09-14
trunks of Black & Red Spruces
Location: Morton Arboretum in Lisle, Illinois
Date: 2018-08-22
full-grown specimen in front of White Pines
Location: Morton Arboretum in Lisle, Illinois
Date: 2018-08-22
summer foliage
Location: Morton Arboretum in Conifer Collection in Lisle, IL
Date: 2016-07-23
a small tree doing alright
Location: Tannersville Cranberry Bog in northeast Pennsylvania
Date: 2018-10-24
upper young tree
Location: Morton Arboretum in Lisle, Illinois
Date: 2018-08-22
top of tree
Location: Morton Arboretum in Lisle, Illinois
Date: 2018-08-22
cones among foliage
Location: Morton Arboretum in Lisle, Illinois
Date: 2018-08-22
trunk and bark
Location: at home in southeast PA on the deck railing
Date: 2016-09-05
three tiny cones from Morton Arboretum in IL
Location: Tannersville Cranberry Bog in northeast Pennsylvania
Date: 2018-10-24
the evergreen trees in bog
Location: Tannersville Cranberry Bog in northeast Pennsylvania
Date: 2018-10-24
tree tops
Location: Downingtown, Pennsylvania
Date: 2021-07-02
young tree about 3 years after planting from pot
Location: Downingtown, Pennsylvania
Date: 2018-07-03
needles and twigs of young plant in pot
Location: Downingtown, Pennsylvania
Date: 2018-06-27
a baby tree bought at a native plant nursery
Comments:
  • Posted by ILPARW (southeast Pennsylvania - Zone 6b) on Nov 19, 2017 6:23 PM concerning plant:
    Black Spruce is mostly found in much of Alaska and most of Canada where it is a major species in bogs, lowlands, swamps, and along watercourses, then also in northern New England, areas in New York, spots in Pennsylvania and Maryland, northern Michigan, Wisconsin, and Minnesota. Its scientific name refers to Maryland. Its short, bluish-green needles are 0,3 to 0.5 inches long and it has tiny, rounded cones about 1/2 to 1 inch long. They often hang on the branches for many years. Mature trees grow into a narrow, upright, pyramidal form. Slow growing of about 2/3 feet/year and lives about 200 years. It needs draining wet or moist, acid soils. There are some cultivars that are of compact or very dwarf forms listed in landscape plant books. I don't know of any conventional nurseries growing this species. I bought one of the regular mother species in a one gallon pot at a native plant nursery in southeast PA in May of 2018 and then planted it in a bigger pot for the back deck where it did well, then I planted it in the ground in 2020 where it is also doing well in the good quality, slightly acid, clay soil of pH 6.7. I think it is good up to around pH 7.0 in landscapes. Its twigs are pale in color and its short needles are bluish-green and somewhat soft; feels good to touch. I've finally seen some wild, mature trees growing in the Tannersville Cranberry Bog that were growing upright and irregular in habit. If I had been able to travel farther into the bog, I probably would have found some better specimens, but much of the floating wooden trail was out on that cloudy, cold day.

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