The
bark is thin and scaly, flaking off in small, circular plates across. The inner bark is reddish-brown. The crown is broad conic in young trees, becoming cylindric in older trees; old trees may not have branches lower than . The shoots are very pale buff-brown, almost white, and glabrous (hairless), but with prominent
pulvini. The
leaves are stiff, sharp, and needle-like, 15–25 millimeters long, flattened in cross-section, and broad when closed, opening to broad. They have thin, flexible scales long; the bracts just above the scales are the longest of any spruce, occasionally just exserted and visible on the closed cones. They are green or reddish, maturing pale brown 5–7 months after pollination. The
seeds are black, long, with a slender, long pale brown wing.
Size More than a century of logging has left only a remnant of the spruce forest. The largest trees were cut long before careful measurements could be made. Trees over tall may still be seen in
Pacific Rim National Park and
Carmanah Walbran Provincial Park on
Vancouver Island, British Columbia (the Carmanah Giant, at tall, is the tallest tree in Canada), and in
Olympic National Park,
Washington and
Redwood National Park, California (United States), the latter of which houses the tallest individual measuring at 100.2 meters or 329 feet tall; The Queets Spruce is the largest in the world with a trunk volume of , a height of , and a
dbh. It is located near the
Queets River in
Olympic National Park, about from the Pacific Ocean. Another specimen, from
Klootchy Creek Park, Oregon, was previously recorded to be the largest with a circumference of and height of .
Age Sitka spruce is a long-lived tree, with the oldest known individual just under 600 years old.
Root system Because it grows in extremely wet and poorly-drained soil, the Sitka spruce has a shallow
root system with long lateral roots and few branchings. This also makes it susceptible to wind throw.
Burls In the Olympic National Forest in Washington, Sitka spruce trees near the ocean sometimes develop
burls. According to a guidebook entitled
Olympic Peninsula, "Damage to the tip or the bud of a Sitka spruce causes the growth cells to divide more rapidly than normal to form this swelling or burl. Even though the burls may look menacing, they do not affect the overall tree growth." ==Taxonomy==