Yes. They do grow in forests. I have seen them myself in the forest and I am a tree scientist myself.
vegetation- reeds,grasses of various types, detour trees,white spruce,black spruce,pony trees,birch tamarack and dense forests THIS IS THE VEGETATION FOR THE HUDSON BAY LOWLANDS :D U :P
Aspen and poplar forests or rather, deciduous forests. There's always a transition zone of spruce and deciduous (which include aspen and poplar trees) before going right to straight deciduous/hard-wood forests.
they are big, and found in many places
Richard A. Werner has written: 'The spruce beetle in white spruce forests of Alaska' -- subject(s): Spruce, Diseases and pests 'Dispersal of the spruce beetle, Dendroctonus rufipennis, and the engraver beetle, Ips perturbatus, in Alaska' -- subject(s): Dispersal, Spruce beetle, Bark beetles, Trees, Diseases and pests 'The spruce beetle in Alaska forests' -- subject(s): Spruce bark beetles
The taiga forests consist of mostly coniferous trees and are located in the cold areas coniferous forests consist of pine, fir, and spruce trees.
Spruce trees grow better in the northern hemisphere. This is because they need colder winters and they need snowy weather making it easier to grow in the northern hemisphere.
Pine and spruce are both evergreens, so the answer would be "either one", or "neither". An evergreen forest isn't classified as having one type of tree. Some of them even contain deciduous trees.
they wwere found in forests
as for trees there are the Western hemlock, sitka spruce, and the cedar tree
Trees found in subarctic forests are typically small coniferous and a few broadleaf deciduous types.
American beech trees can be found in the deciduous rain forests.
Blue Spruce trees will eventually produce cones but they will be spruce cones.