Uses
Edible uses
Notes
Young male catkins - raw or cooked. Used as a flavouring[3]. Immature female cones - cooked. The central portion, when roasted, is sweet and syrupy[3]. The cones are 6 - 10cm long[4]. Inner bark - raw or cooked[2]. It can be dried, ground into a powder and then used as a thickener in soups etc or added to cereals when making bread[3]. The inner bark was usually harvested in the spring, though it was also sometimes taken in the summer[2]. An emergency food, it is only used when all else fails. Seed - raw[3]. The seed is about 2 - 4mm long[5]. It is rich in fats and has a pleasant slightly resinous flavour but is too small and fiddly to be worthwhile unless you are desperate[172, K]. A refreshing tea, rich in vitamin C, can be made from the young shoot tips[3].
A gum obtained from the bark is hardened in cold water and then used for chewing[1][6][2]. It should be aged for 3 days or more before using it. The best gum is obtained from the southern side of the tree.Flowers
Inner bark
Seed
Seedpod
Material uses
The roots were used by several native North American Indian tribes to make tightly woven baskets that would hold water[8]. The limbs and roots can be pounded, shredded and used to make ropes[7]. A pitch is obtained from the tree and is used for caulking boats, waterproofing boxes etc[1][7]. The rendered pitch has been used as a glue[7]. The pitch can be melted then used as a protective varnish-like coat on wood[7].
Wood - strong according to some reports[9][5], not strong according to others[10][11][12]. The quality of the wood for aircraft construction is unsurpassed, it is remarkably strong yet light and its resistance - weight ratio is among the highest[8]. The wood is elastic, soft, light, straight grained. Equal in quality to P. abies but more quickly produced, the wood is used for shipbuilding, construction, packing cases, doors, posts etc[10][11][12][8]. The wood is also valued for making musical instruments[8] and is widely used in the pulp industry to make paper[9]. The wood is a good fuel, knotted bits of wood would keep the fire burning all night[7].Medicinal uses(Warning!)
The inner bark is laxative[2][7]. It has been chewed in the treatment of throat problems, coughs and colds[7]. A decoction of the branch tips and the bark has been used in the treatment of rheumatism, stomach pains, constipation and gonorrhoea[7]. A decoction of the cones has been taken in the treatment of pain[7]. The cones have also been used in steam baths to treat rheumatism[7]. A decoction of the bark has been used as a steam bath in the treatment of back aches[7]. The resin is antiseptic and diuretic[7]. A decoction has been used in the treatment of gonorrhoea[7]. A poultice of the resin has been used as a rub on rheumatic joints[7]. Combined with Indian Hellebore roots (Veratrum viride), it has been used as a poultice on rheumatic joints[7]. The resin has also been used as a dressing or poultice on cuts, broken skin, boils, wounds, infections and suppurating sores[7]. The resin has been chewed as a breath freshener and as a treatment for TB[7]. The gum from new shoots and small branches has been placed in the eyes as a treatment for snow blindness[7].
A decoction of the roots has been used in the treatment of diarrhoea[7].Unknown part
Ecology
Ecosystem niche/layer
Ecological Functions
Nothing listed.
Forage
Nothing listed.
Shelter
Nothing listed.
Propagation
Cuttings of semi-ripe terminal shoots, 5 - 8cm long, August in a frame. Protect from frost. Forms roots in the spring[14]. Cuttings of mature terminal shoots, 5 - 10cm long, September/October in a cold frame. Takes 12 months[14].
Cuttings of soft to semi-ripe wood, early summer in a frame. Slow but sure.Practical Plants is currently lacking information on propagation instructions of Picea sitchensis. Help us fill in the blanks! Edit this page to add your knowledge.
Cultivation
A long-lived tree, with specimens 700 - 800 years old being recorded[5]. It is slow growing for its first two or three years, though it soon becomes an extremely fast growing tree and is very widely planted for timber in Britain and other temperate areas[11][17]. Even trees 30 metres tall are increasing in height by 1 metre a year[18]. New growth takes place from May to July or August and some very vigorous trees will produce a second flush of growth until September[18]. Although the dormant tree is very cold-hardy, growth can be severely checked if the trees are growing in a frost hollow, because the young shoots are very susceptible to damage by late frosts[19][18]. In Britain the best stands are produced in the sheltered valleys of W. Scotland. Trees are unsurpassed for rapid volume wood production in cool wet mountain sites on blanket peat in W. Britain[15]. In areas with cool wet summers (1200mm of rain per year) it makes a huge specimen tree[15]. Trees should be planted into their permanent positions when they are quite small, between 30 and 90cm[10][15]. Larger trees will check badly and hardly put on any growth for several years. This also badly affects root development and wind resistance[15]. In some upland areas, especially over granitic or other base-poor soils, growth rate and health have been seriously affected by aluminium poisoning induced by acid rain[15]. Plants are strongly outbreeding, self-fertilized seed usually grows poorly[15]. They hybridize freely with other members of this genus[15]. Many trees do not bear female flowers in most years.
Subject to damage by the green spruce aphid[10], trees are also often attacked by a bark beetle and so should be kept away from more valuable plantings[19]. A biological control for the bark beetle is being introduced (1990)[19].Crops
Problems, pests & diseases
Associations & Interactions
There are no interactions listed for Picea sitchensis. Do you know of an interaction that should be listed here? edit this page to add it.
Polycultures & Guilds
There are no polycultures listed which include Picea sitchensis.
Descendants
Cultivars
Varieties
None listed.
Subspecies
None listed.
Full Data
This table shows all the data stored for this plant.
References
- ? 1.01.11.21.31.41.5 Gunther. E. Ethnobotany of Western Washington. University of Washington Press ISBN 0-295-95258-X (1981-00-00)
- ? 2.02.12.22.32.42.52.6 Turner. N. J. Food Plants of Coastal First Peoples UBC Press. Vancouver. ISBN 0-7748-0533-1 (1995-00-00)
- ? 3.03.13.23.33.43.53.6 Schofield. J. J. Discovering Wild Plants - Alaska, W. Canada and the Northwest. ()
- ? 4.04.1 Sargent. C. S. Manual of the Trees of N. America. Dover Publications Inc. New York. ISBN 0-486-20278-X (1965-00-00)
- ? 5.05.15.25.35.45.5 Elias. T. The Complete Trees of N. America. Field Guide and Natural History. Van Nostrand Reinhold Co. ISBN 0442238622 (1980-00-00)
- ? 6.06.1 Kunkel. G. Plants for Human Consumption. Koeltz Scientific Books ISBN 3874292169 (1984-00-00)
- ? 7.007.017.027.037.047.057.067.077.087.097.107.117.127.137.147.157.167.177.187.197.207.217.227.23 Moerman. D. Native American Ethnobotany Timber Press. Oregon. ISBN 0-88192-453-9 (1998-00-00)
- ? 8.08.18.28.38.4 Lauriault. J. Identification Guide to the Trees of Canada Fitzhenry and Whiteside, Ontario. ISBN 0889025649 (1989-00-00)
- ? 9.09.19.2 Hill. A. F. Economic Botany. The Maple Press (1952-00-00)
- ? 10.010.110.210.310.410.5 F. Chittendon. RHS Dictionary of Plants plus Supplement. 1956 Oxford University Press (1951-00-00)
- ? 11.011.111.211.311.411.511.6 Bean. W. Trees and Shrubs Hardy in Great Britain. Vol 1 - 4 and Supplement. Murray (1981-00-00)
- ? 12.012.112.2 Uphof. J. C. Th. Dictionary of Economic Plants. Weinheim (1959-00-00)
- ? 13.013.1 McMillan-Browse. P. Hardy Woody Plants from Seed. Grower Books ISBN 0-901361-21-6 (1985-00-00)
- ? 14.014.114.214.3 Sheat. W. G. Propagation of Trees, Shrubs and Conifers. MacMillan and Co (1948-00-00)
- ? 15.0015.0115.0215.0315.0415.0515.0615.0715.0815.0915.1015.11 Huxley. A. The New RHS Dictionary of Gardening. 1992. MacMillan Press ISBN 0-333-47494-5 (1992-00-00)
- ? 16.016.1 Rushforth. K. Conifers. Christopher Helm ISBN 0-7470-2801-X (1987-00-00)
- ? Clapham, Tootin and Warburg. Flora of the British Isles. Cambridge University Press (1962-00-00)
- ? 18.018.118.2 Mitchell. A. F. Conifers in the British Isles. HMSO ISBN 0-11-710012-9 (1975-00-00)
- ? 19.019.119.2 ? The Plantsman. Vol. 5. 1983 - 1984. Royal Horticultural Society (1983-00-00)
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