European silver fir
Abies alba
A very large montane evergreen conifer of cool, moist European mountain forests, narrowly conical when young and reaching well over 100 feet (often 30 m and more) at maturity. Its signature is the foliage: flat, blunt, comb-arranged needles that are dark glossy green above and marked beneath with two chalky silvery-white bands, giving the 'silver' fir its name. Mature trees carry upright, barrel-shaped cones high in the crown that ripen and shatter on the tree rather than falling whole. Abies alba is native to the mountains of central and southern Europe — the Pyrenees, Alps, Apennines, Carpathians and Balkans (POWO, Kew) — and it carries that origin into the garden: it wants a cool, moist, sheltered climate and deep, well-drained soil, and it struggles with summer heat, drought, atmospheric pollution and late spring frosts. It is slow to establish and then long-lived, a forest-scale specimen for large, cool gardens and uplands rather than hot or urban sites.
Climate fit: narrow (31/100)
Structure
Focal point
Light
Full sun / Part shade
Water
Moderate water
Mature size
960-1800" tall · 480" apart
Hardy in zones
4a-7b
very cold to cold winters
Native in Illinois
No
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Grown as an ornamental and forestry conifer, not a food plant — the foliage, cones, and seeds are not eaten, so treat it as inedible.
Cold hardiness
Future
These values are location-based: this location's current hardiness is the baseline, and the 2050 value is a projected future climate for this same location.
Now
Zone 6b
USDA
Published baseline for this location from 1991-2020.
Source: USDA Plant Hardiness Zone Map 2023 (1991-2020 climatology) via ArcGIS FeatureServer
Well-suited
2050
Zone 7a
Plotwright
Projected zone for this same location in 2050 (2041-2070) using SSP3-7.0 (regional rivalry).
Well-suited
In plain terms: This location is in Zone 6b today. Its hardiness profile is cold winters, and coldest nights are typically around -3°F. By 2050, the projected hardiness zone is Zone 7a based on SSP3-7.0 (regional rivalry). That is a +0.5-zone shift from Zone 6b to Zone 7a by 2050.
✓
Well-suited today and still thriving in 2050.
Heat tolerance
Future
Heat tolerance values are location-based too: heat days today are observed at this site, and the 2050 value projects this same location under a future climate.
Loading AHS heat-zone data for this location...
Where this plant fits
Suitable across 34 ecoregions — 26 climate-resilient through 2070 · 8 suited today. Best matches first.
Appalachian mixed mesophytic forests
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Appalachian-Blue Ridge forests
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Arizona Mountains forests
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Blue Mountains forests
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Canadian Aspen forests and parklands
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Central Tallgrass prairie
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Central-Southern Cascades Forests
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Colorado Rockies forests
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Cross-Timbers savanna-woodland
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Eastern Canadian Forest-Boreal transition
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Sources & citations
Cite this page
For lesson plans, articles, or research that uses this page. To cite a single upstream fact instead, use its specific source listed below.
Plotwright. (2026, May 17). European silver fir (Abies alba). Retrieved 2026, June 15, from https://plotwright.garden/plants/abies-alba
Sources for every fact
Every fact on this page traces to a source. 18 fields cited - 18 source-backed.
Plants of the World Online (POWO)
Botanical research database
Backs 17 fields
Identity
Summary
Plant type
Light
Moisture
Hardiness
Heat zone
Size
Spacing
Habit
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