General Description:
Bryce Canyon National Park is home to three species of junipers. At the highest elevations you will encounter a shrubby groundcover called Common Juniper, Juniperus communis. The low elevation forests consist of Utah Juniper, Juniperus osteosperma, and Pinyon Pine, Pinus edulis. Because most of Bryce's acreage is in the middle elevation zone, the Rocky Mountain Juniper, Juniperus scopulorum, is the most common species of juniper.
Although the Rocky Mountain Juniper can be found growing in close proximity with Utah Junipers, it prefers sites that are more cool and shady. Usually tall and slender, the Rocky Mountain Juniper grows up to 45 (15 m) feet tall with trunks 18 (.5 m) inches in diameter. They can survive because their leaves, which they retain all year, are reduced to tiny, waxy scales covering their twigs and small branches. Their fruits, fleshy cones which resemble berries but are actually cones, have one or several seeds inside, and are coated with water-retaining wax. The juniper berries are pea-to-marble-sized, usually blue in color, with a powdery coating that can be rubbed off to reveal its greenish-brown flesh. The seeds are mealy and fibrous. The bark is gray-green on the surface but reddish-brown and fibrous underneath.