College of Agriculture, Health and Natural Resources

Plant Database

Abies concolor

White Fir, Concolor Fir

Pinaceae

White Fir, Concolor FirWhite Fir, Concolor FirWhite Fir, Concolor FirWhite Fir, Concolor FirWhite Fir, Concolor FirWhite Fir, Concolor FirWhite Fir, Concolor FirWhite Fir, Concolor FirWhite Fir, Concolor Fir
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Habitat

  • native to the Rocky Mountains of the western United States; from Canada to California
  • zone 3

Habit and Form

  • evergreen tree
  • 50' to 75' tall by 20' to 30' wide, but can reach over 100' tall
  • pyramidal in shape, holding a dense, formal shape well, even with age
  • medium to coarse texture
  • slow to medium growth rate

Summer Foliage

  • needles are 2" to 3" long
  • needles arranged horizontally on the stem, curving up and out, much like a "rib cage"
  • needles are glaucous on both-sides giving it a blue cast to the upper and underside
  • needles have 2 white stomatal lines on underside
  • buds are resinous

Autumn Foliage

  • no fall color (evergreen)

Flowers

  • no ornamental value
  • monoecious

Fruit

  • brown cones, green when immature
  • cylindrical
  • 4" to 5" long
  • cones shatter when mature
  • cones borne on the upper third of the tree

Bark

  • smooth, except for occasional resin blisters
  • bark has a whitish gray color
  • new stems are yellow-green in color and are somewhat hairy

Culture

  • easily transplanted
  • tolerant of most climates and city conditions
  • prefers a deep, well-drained soil with adequate moisture, but less fussy about soil moisture than other Abies sp.
  • full sun
  • most adaptable of all Abies sp. to cultivation

Landscape Uses

  • specimen tree, has exceptional foliage
  • adds nice color to typical green winter foliage
  • less likely to fail than other true firs under a range of landscape situations

Liabilities

  • formal form and blue color can be imposing in some landscape situations
  • often damaged by deer

ID Features

  • needles are similar in color on top and bottom
  • smooth bark with resin blisters
  • longest needles of commonly seen firs
  • resinous buds
  • circular leaf scars

Propagation

  • by seed, stratification period required for good germination

Cultivars/Varieties

'Candicans' - Notable for its intense silvery-blue needles, perhaps the bluest of all Abies.

'Compacta' - A handsome dwarf form with an irregular habit and blue needles.

'Dwarf Globe' - A dwarf form (to 3' tall) with needles that are borne densely and bluish-green in color.

'Glenmore' - A more compact variety than the species with grey-blue needles that are longer than usual.

'Gable's Weeping' - An unusual, slow-growing form that forms a mound of drooping branches.

'Violacea' - Beautiful form with intense silvery-blue needles. Often grafted on species understock.

© Copyright Mark H. Brand, 1997-2015.

The digital materials (images and text) available from the UConn Plant Database are protected by copyright. Public use via the Internet for non-profit and educational purposes is permitted. Use of the materials for profit is prohibited.

Citation and Acknowledgements: University of Connecticut Plant Database, https://plantdatabase.uconn.edu/, Mark H. Brand, Department of Plant Science and Landscape Architecture, Storrs, CT 06269-4067 USA.