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Plant Guide

Abies grandis (Dougl. ex D. Don) Lindl.
grand fir
ABGR

Summary

Duration

Perennial

Growth Habit

Tree

U.S. Nativity

Native to U.S.

Federal T/E Status

 

National Wetland Indicator

FACU-*

 

Morphology/Physiology

Active Growth Period

Spring and Summer

After Harvest Regrowth Rate

 

Bloat

 

C:N Ratio

High

Coppice Potential

No

Fall Conspicuous

No

Fire Resistant

Yes

Flower Color

 

Flower Conspicuous

No

Foliage Color

Green

Foliage Porosity Summer

Dense

Foliage Porosity Winter

Dense

Foliage Texture

Medium

Fruit/Seed Color

Brown

Fruit/Seed Conspicuous

No

Growth Form

Single Stem

Growth Rate

Moderate

Height at 20 Years, Maximum (feet)

25

Height, Mature (feet)

200

Known Allelopath

No

Leaf Retention

Yes

Lifespan

Long

Low Growing Grass

No

Nitrogen Fixation

 

Resprout Ability

No

Shape and Orientation

Conical

Toxicity

None

 

Growth Requirements

Adapted to Coarse Textured Soils

Yes

Adapted to Fine Textured Soils

No

Adapted to Medium Textured Soils

Yes

Anaerobic Tolerance

None

CaCO3 Tolerance

Low

Cold Stratification Required

Yes

Drought Tolerance

Low

Fertility Requirement

Medium

Fire Tolerance

High

Frost Free Days, Minimum

60

Hedge Tolerance

Low

Moisture Use

Medium

pH, Minimum

4.5

pH, Maximum

7.5

Planting Density per Acre, Minimum

300

Planting Density per Acre, Maximum

1200

Precipitation, Minimum

11

Precipitation, Maximum

100

Root Depth, Minimum (inches)

40

Salinity Tolerance

None

Shade Tolerance

Tolerant

Temperature, Minimum (°F)

-33

 

Reproduction

Bloom Period

Late Spring

Commercial Availability

Field Collections Only

Fruit/Seed Abundance

Medium

Fruit/Seed Period Begin

Summer

Fruit/Seed Period End

Fall

Fruit/Seed Persistence

No

Propagated by Bare Root

Yes

Propagated by Bulb

No

Propagated by Container

Yes

Propagated by Corm

No

Propagated by Cuttings

No

Propagated by Seed

Yes

Propagated by Sod

No

Propagated by Sprigs

No

Propagated by Tubers

No

Seed per Pound

23200

Seed Spread Rate

Slow

Seedling Vigor

Low

Small Grain

No

Vegetative Spread Rate

None

 

Suitability/Use

Berry/Nut/Seed Product

No

Christmas Tree Product

Yes

Fodder Product

No

Fuelwood Product

Low

Lumber Product

Yes

Naval Store Product

No

Nursery Stock Product

Yes

Palatable Browse Animal

Low

Palatable Graze Animal

 

Palatable Human

No

Post Product

No

Protein Potential

Low

Pulpwood Product

Yes

Veneer Product

Yes

 

Kingdom  Plantae -- Plants

Subkingdom  Tracheobionta -- Vascular plants

Superdivision  Spermatophyta -- Seed plants

Division  Coniferophyta -- Conifers

Class  Pinopsida

Order  Pinales

Family  Pinaceae -- Pine family

Genus  Abies P. Mill. -- fir P

Species  Abies grandis (Dougl. ex D. Don) Lindl. -- grand fir P

 

Alternate common names

Lowland white fir, balsam fir, western balsam fir, yellow fir, California great fir, Oregon white fir, Puget Sound fir, giant fir, grand fir, silver fir, tall silver fir, great silver fir, stinking fir

 

Uses

The soft wood of grand fir is a valued source of pulpwood and is harvested as timber even though it is weaker and more prone to decay than many other species.  It is also used as plywood and has been used for various kinds of rough construction, such as framing, sheathing, subflooring, planking, beams, posts, siding, paneling, millwork, prefabricated buildings and structural members, furniture parts, and boxes and crates.

 

The thick-foliage, symmetry, deep green shiny color, and strong, orangish fragrance make grand fir one of the preferred species of Christmas trees grown in the Northwest.  Most seedlings produced for Christmas tree growers originate from the "Panhandle" area of Idaho.  In most areas, it will produce a marketable tree in 8-10 years.  Grand fir also is valued in plantings in recreation areas and urban sites.  It grows quickly in the moister parts of Britain and is cultivated for timber in western and northern Europe.

 

The aromatic properties of grand fir were important in many of its uses by American Indians.  The needles were boiled to make a medicinal tea for colds.  Boughs were brought inside as an air freshener and burned as incense and to make a purifying smoke to ward off illnesses.  Dried, crushed needles have been used as baby powder.  The pitch of young trees was mixed with oil to be used as a deodorant and rubbed on the scalp to prevent balding.

 

The famous Barlow Road snub-trees on the south side of Mount Hood in Oregon were grand firs.  They were used by early settlers to control the rate of descent of their covered wagons on a particularly steep slope in their trek from east to west.  Some of the rope-burned trees are still standing after 150 years.

 

The majority of pileated woodpecker roost trees in northeastern Oregon were grand fir, both live and dead, where a hollow chamber had been created by decay from Indian paint fungus.  The majority of roosts occurred in old-growth stands of grand fir.

 

Status

Please consult the PLANTS Web site and your State Department of Natural Resources for this plant’s current status, such as, state status and wetland indicator values.

 

Description

General: Pine Family (Pinaceae).  Native evergreen trees growing to 75-100 meters tall, the crown conic, becoming round or straggly with age, branches dropping, twigs mostly opposite.  Bark: smooth, gray, becoming brown and furrowed with age.  Needles are 2-6 cm long, flattened, strongly waxy and silvery-white on the lower surface, green above, mostly 2-ranked, spreading horizontally, not concealing the upper surface of twigs, the needles 1-ranked and spiraled higher on the tree; resin canals marginal, located near the lower epidermis; stomatal rows absent on the upper surface at midleaf, 5-7 stomatal rows on each side of midrib of lower surface.  Seed cones: 6-12 cm long, 2-4 cm wide, dark purple or blue to gray or light green at maturity, erect and on the upper branches.  Native.  The common name refers to the large size of mature trees, one of the tallest of the firs. 

 

Variation within the species: Although Abies grandis is fairly uniform throughout its range, a green coastal form and gray interior form are often recognized, and five fairly distinct climatic forms of grand fir have been identified, differing mainly in physiological and ecological traits.  Abies grandis var. idahoensis Silba was recently described (Silba 1990) as “an inland variety, to 1850 m altitude” from southeast British Columbia to central Idaho, characterized by smaller cones, a distinct forward and vertical spread of the leaves, and more twisted petioles.  In southern Oregon and northern California, grand fir hybridizes and introgresses with A. concolor, which generally grows in higher, drier habitats.  Natural hybrids also are known between grand fir and subalpine fir. 

 

Abies grandis is distinguished from the closely similar A. amabilis by bud scales slightly pubescent or glabrous (vs densely pubescent), upper surface of twigs easily visible (vs concealed by the needles), and variably colored mature seed cones (vs purple).  Compared to subalpine fir, grand fir occurs at lower elevations, has a wider crown, and usually produces broad spreading lower limbs with beautifully even secondary branchlets. 

 

Distribution: Coastal British Columbia, south along the coast to Sonoma County, California.  A disjunct population system in the Northern Rocky Mountains occurs from southern British Columbia and Alberta to Washington, Oregon, Idaho, and western Montana.  For current distribution, please consult the Plant Profile page for this species on the PLANTS Web site.

 

Adaptation

Common in moist forests in stream bottoms, valleys, and Lower Mountain slopes, preferably on N-facing slopes, on a variety of soil types, 0-1500 meters.  Grand fir sometimes grows in pure stands but is much more common in mixed coniferous and hardwood forests.  It is very shade tolerant, especially when young, although growth is slower in dense shade.  It is a dominant climax species in some habitat types and a long-lived seral species in other types. 

 

Establishment

Seed production in grand fir is relatively low.  A good cone crop is considered to be more than 40 cones per tree – the interval between good seed crops is about 2-3 years.  Seed production begins at about 20 years of age.  Germination is best on mineral soil but in open sites the seeds germinate nearly as well on duff as on any other surface.  Primary causes of germination failure are insect infestation and the perishable nature of the seeds.  Grand fir seedlings are relatively resistant to drought on areas exposed to full sun because deep initial root penetration protects them from drying of the surface soil.  On heavily shaded, cool areas, surface dryness from drought is the most important physical cause of seedling mortality because initial root penetration is slow. 

 

Initial survival and growth of grand fir are favored by moderate shade, where growth may be aggressive enough to form a dominant part of the forest.  After 20-30 years, it makes most rapid growth in the open.  Trees 250 years old are common and occasional trees may be more than 300 years old.

 

Management

Susceptibility to heart rot and decay is one of the more important factors in management of grand fir.  Centers of decay are closely related to logging scars, frost cracks, broken tops, and other mechanical injuries.  Grand fir is thin-barked and sensitive to fire – ground fires in moist creek bottoms are highly damaging but trees on dry hillsides are more resistant, largely because of a deeper root system and thicker bark.  Control of fires in the drier southern parts of the Northwest has allowed an increase in range of grand fir over the last 50 years.

 

Well-stored seed can retain viability for up to 5 years, but germination is often poor, usually taking about 6-8 weeks.  If seed are sown in a cold frame immediately after autumn ripening, stratification is said to produce a more even germination.  Seedlings are usually transplanted in a nursery for 1-2 years.  Young trees should be planted into their permanent positions when they are well under one meter tall. 

 

Cultivars, Improved and Selected Plant Materials (and area of origin)

This tree should be available through your local nursery.

 

References

Bull, E.L., R.S. Holthausen, & M.G. Henjum 1992.  Roost trees used by pileated woodpeckers in northeastern Oregon.  J. Wildlife Management 56:786-793. 

 

Foiles, M.W., R.T. Graham, & D.F. Olson, Jr. 1990.  Abies grandis.  Pp. 52-59, IN: R.M. Burns and B.H. Honkala.  Silvics of North America. Volume 1.  Conifers.  USDA, Forest Service Agric. Handbook 654, Washington, D.C.  <https://willow.ncfes.umn.edu/silvics_manual/Table_of_contents.htm>

 

Hunt, R.S. 1993.  Abies.  Pp. 354-362, IN:Flora of North America, North of MexicoVol. 2, Pteridophytes and gymnosperms.  Oxford Univ. Press, New York.  <https://hua.huh.harvard.edu/cgi-bin/Flora/flora.pl?FLORA_ID=12395>

 

Silba, J. 1990.  A supplement to the international census of the Coniferae, II.  Phytologia 68:7-78. 

 

Van Pelt, R. 1996.  Champion trees of Washington State.  University of Washington Press, Seattle, Washington.

 

Xie, C.-Y. & C.C. Ying 1993.  Geographic variation of grand fir (Abies grandis (Dougl.) Lindl.) in the Pacific Coast region - 10 year results from a provenance trail.  Canad. J. For. Res. 23:1065-1072. 

 

Prepared By

Guy Nesom

BONAP, North Carolina Botanical Garden,

University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, North Carolina

 

Species Coordinator

Lincoln Moore

USDA, NRCS, National Plant Data Center, Baton Rouge, Louisiana

Edited: 13nov00 jsp; 25feb03 ahvv; 24may06jsp

 

For more information about this and other plants, please contact your local NRCS field office or Conservation District, and visit the PLANTS Web site<https://plants.usda.gov> or the Plant Materials Program Web site <https://Plant-Materials.nrcs.usda.gov>

 

 

 

 

Attribution:  U.S. Department of Agriculture 

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