Yes, b/c people use Spruce trees for their homes at Christmas time.
Neither, it is a gymnosperm (covered seed, coniferous (cone bearing) plants) . The terms monocot and dicot relate to angiosperms (naked seed, flower bearing plants)
yes the tree is called Raymond
the blue spruce tree is commonly called 'sapin bleu, sapin bleu du Colorado' in French.
MONOCOT
As far as I know there is no tree called the Norwegian Pine. There is however a tree called the Norway Spruce. This is also evergreen and bears some similarities. The Latin name is Picea Abies.
A spruce tree is a coniferous evergreen (pine needles and cones) and most maple trees are deciduous (leaves fall off).
A spruce is an evergreen tree of the family Abies.
No, the spruce tree was not named after Richard Spruce. The name "spruce" is derived from the Old French term "Pruce," which referred to products from Prussia, where the trees were originally imported. Richard Spruce was a 19th-century botanist known for his work on the classification of plants, but he is not the namesake of the spruce tree.
A spruce tree.
A spruce tree lives in areas with moist soils, for example, the slopes of the Rocky Mountains, near streams.
Spruce (Picea) is a genus of around 35 conifers from the Pinaceae family. Conifers are evergreen and their leaves are called needles.