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You are here >1Up Info > Wildlife, Animals, and Plants > Plant Species > Tree > Species: Picea sitchensis | Sitka Spruce
 

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VALUE AND USE

SPECIES: Picea sitchensis | Sitka Spruce
WOOD PRODUCTS VALUE : Sitka spruce is the most important timber species in Alaska [5]. The wood, with its high strength to weight ratio, is valuable for use as turbine blades for wind-driven electrical generators, masts for sail boats, ladders, oars [24], boats, and racing sculls [55]. Sitka spruce's high resonant quality makes it valuable in the manufacture of piano sounding boards and guitars. The wood from Sitka spruce is also used in saw timber, high-grade wood pulp, and plywood [30,55]. IMPORTANCE TO LIVESTOCK AND WILDLIFE : Sitka spruce forests in various phases of succession provide habitat, in many cases critical habitat, for a large variety of mammals, game and nongame birds, reptiles, and amphibians [7,19,43]. Its value as a browse species for large ungulates is poor [11], while it has fair to good value for some game birds [42]. PALATABILITY : Sitka spruce is slightly palatable to large ungulates. It is browsed only in the spring, and then only the new growth [5,11]. In Alaska and British Columbia the needles comprise up to 90 percent of the winter diet of blue grouse [42]. NUTRITIONAL VALUE : NO-ENTRY COVER VALUE : Sitka spruce forests provide hiding and thermal cover for a large variety of mammals. Old-growth Stika spruce forests in Alaska and British Columbia are critical winter habitat for the Sitka deer. Old growth provides thermal cover and acts as a snow screen, allowing easier access to browse species [25,51]. Sitka deer require large blocks of old growth from sea level to the alpine and subalpine environments for migrational movements from summer to winter range [51]. Sitka spruce forests also provide habitat for Roosevelt elk, woodland caribou [19], Alaskan brown bear, and mountain goat [42]. Sitka spruce provides good nesting and roosting habitat for avifauna [52,56]. Snags and live trees with broken tops provide nesting habitat for primary and secondary cavity nesters [27]. The bald eagle uses primarily (greater than 90 percent) Sitka spruce for nesting trees on Admiralty Island [42], and also uses them as roosting trees to survey the incoming breakers for food [5]. The peregrine falcon in coastal British Columbia uses Stika spruce for platform nesting and secondary cavity nesting [9]. VALUE FOR REHABILITATION OF DISTURBED SITES : Sitka spruce is a pioneer species which colonizes glacial moraines as the glaciers retreat. On the Juneau Icefield, Sitka spruce has colonized "nunatacks" (rocky peaks) protruding through the icefield [6]. Sitka spruce also acted as an aggressive pioneer on uplifted terrain from the 1964 earthquake [4]. OTHER USES AND VALUES : Native Americans have used Sitka spruce for various purposes. The roots can be woven to produce baskets and rain hats. The pitch was used for calking canoes [5], for chewing, and medicinal purposes [47]. Pioneers split Stika spruce into shakes for roofing and siding [5]. Sitka spruce also has limited food value for humans, for the inner bark and young shoots may be eaten as emergency food. Tea can be made from the young shoots [47]. In the first half of this century Sitka spruce provided most of the wood for stuctural components of World War I and II aircraft [5,55]. More recently it has been used as the nose cones for missiles and space craft [50]. MANAGEMENT CONSIDERATIONS : Sitka spruce, as one of the most important timber species and components of old-growth habitat, has recently been the center of many management concerns. Proposals for changes in timber harvest areas and methods have been explored by Nyberg and others [43] and Schoen and Kirchhoff [51]. They provide in-depth information and management alternatives. Wildlife habitat: Even-aged management of the species results in reduced habitat for the black-tailed deer. Shrub fields created after clearcutting are of limited use to deer in the winter. The depth of snow accumulation is greater, and snow persists longer in the clearcuts, reducing the time available for browsing. The forage in clearcuts is less digestible than that grown in the shade of the preharvest stands. Also, the large amount of slash resulting from clearcutting old-growth Sitka spruce impedes movement of large ungulates, especially during winter migration. Lastly, once the regeneration has reached canopy closure (20 to 30 years), the understory production is greatly reduced for at least the next 100 years, compared to old-growth stands with their various stages of regeneration [19,25]. Alaback [2] studied ways to reduce the negative impact of clearcutting on Sitka deer. Thinning the stands prior to canopy closure (less than 25 years) seems to be the best method for areas already cut. Thinning to 12 x 12 feet (3.5 x 3.5 m) spacing results in the most diverse vegetation. Once canopy closure has occurred (greater than 30 years), uneven-aged management practices can result in the creation of gaps in the canopy, which in turn will allow for a more diverse understory [3]. Damaging agents: Sitka spruce is susceptible to Sitka spruce weevil, or white pine weevil (Pissodes strobi)), spruce aphid (Elatobium abietinum), spruce beetle (Dendroctonus rufipennis), and root rot by Armillaria millea and Heterobasidian annosum [24]. The Sitka spruce weevil has such a detrimental effect on Sitka spruce in the lower portion of its range, from southern British Columbia to northern California, that Sitka spruce is not actively managed for regeneration there. The F1 generation of the hybrid, Lutz spuce, yields a tree 100 percent resistant to weevil attack, but growth rate is sacrificed. Back-crossing the F1 generation with Sitka spruce increases the growth rate, but up to 50 percent of the progeny are susceptible to weevil attack [41]. Also, although Lutz spruce is less susceptible to the Sitka spruce weevil, it is more susceptible than Sitka spruce to the spruce beetle [29]. Sitka spruce is susceptible to wind throw, which can account for up to 80 percent of the mortality within stands. Regeneration from gap phase replacement, however, is rapid [15]. Control: Chemical shrub control is often required to regenerate Sitka spruce successfully following harvest [18,36].

Related categories for Species: Picea sitchensis | Sitka Spruce

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Information Courtesy: U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, Rocky Mountain Research Station, Fire Sciences Laboratory. Fire Effects Information System

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