A tree 40 to 60 ft high in Japan, with a slender trunk and of densely branched, pyramidal habit, with a dark brown or blackish bark peeling off in paper-like flakes; young shoots brown, stronger leading shoots glabrous or slightly glandular, the lateral ones always more or less glandular-bristly; buds conical, light brown or purplish brown, resinous. Leaves 1⁄4 to 5⁄8 in. long, rigid, four-sided, dark green or grey-green, those on the upper side of the shoot pointing forward and upward (i.e., not appressed to the shoot), the under ones pectinately arranged. Cones cylindrical (smaller ones ovoid-cylindrical), 2 to 4 in. long, 11⁄4 to 11⁄2 in. wide, shining pale brown; scales broad and rounded, with slightly jagged margins.
This spruce was discovered in the Shinano province of Central Japan by Koyama, on Yatsugatake, at elevations of 5,000 to 6,000 ft; afterwards found in Korea, where Wilson collected it in 1917. It was introduced by him from Japan in 1914 to the Arnold Arboretum and thence to Kew in the following year; seed from the Korean expedition was distributed in Britain in 1918. According to Wilson, who visited its Japanese habitat in company with its discoverer in 1914, this spruce is only known to exist there in a grove of about one hundred trees. He described it as shapely and decidedly ornamental.
P. koyamae is hardy in Britain but only to be seen in a few collections. Among the largest specimens are: National Pinetum, Bedgebury, Kent, pl. 1928, 57 × 5 ft (1970); Warnham Court, Sussex, 60 × 4 ft (1971); Borde Hill, Sussex, 70 × 41⁄4 ft (1973); Stanage Park, Radnor, 66 × 4 ft (1970). There is a tree measuring 44 × 21⁄2 ft in the Pinetum of the Royal Horticultural Society at Wisley (1969).