The Engelmann Spruce (Picea engelmannii) typically thrives in subalpine and montane climates, primarily found in the Rocky Mountains of North America. It prefers cooler temperatures and well-drained, moist soils, often growing at elevations between 6,000 and 11,000 feet. This tree species is well-adapted to cold, snowy winters and moderate summers, making it suitable for regions with a significant temperature variation throughout the year.
No
Seed paper contains Engelmann Spruce tree seeds (Picea engelmannii) which may grow 20 feet wide.
Any member of the Spruce family, whether Engelmann, Colorado Blue, Sitka or any other is an evergreen conifer that, though similar in structure to other mamber of the Pine family, is in a family of it's own.
They can occupy different niches within the tree.
they eat tree trunks and live in hot climates
No freaking clue :)
occupy different niches within the tree
A spruce tree is a coniferous evergreen (pine needles and cones) and most maple trees are deciduous (leaves fall off).
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 is an evergreen tree of the family Abies.
A spruce tree.
A spruce tree lives in areas with moist soils, for example, the slopes of the Rocky Mountains, near streams.