No, pine trees are not flowering plants.
There are actually two types of seed bearing plants. There are gymnosperms, where the seeds develop on a surface, such as a pine cone. Gymnosperms do not flower. Then there are angiosperms, where the seeds develop within an ovary. Angiosperms are what we commonly call flowering plants.
Pine trees are gymnosperms, so they only produce cones and never flowers. The cones work as the male and female parts of the tree. The long tubular parts are the male cones, and they are covered in pollen. The larger brown pine cone that we are used to seeing have seeds under each little prong of the cone. They are the female cone.
See the related links for more information.
Oaks are angiosperms, denoted by broad leafs. See the related link.
No i don't think so, i am pretty sure it is a gymnosperm.
No, they are gymnosperms. hi
They're gymnosperms.
No, it is a Gymnosperm
No, they are gymnosperms
no, an oak tree is an angiosperm. some examples of gymnosperms are pine trees or brigham trees.
Maple trees and rosebushes are angiosperms, which are flowering plants. Pine trees, which are Gymnosperms, do not flower.
hmmm......i belive its the kettle family ; )
Gymnosperms - Loblolly pine, longleaf pine, ginko tree, cypress tree, lodgepole pine - Anything that's a cycad, conifer, gnetophyte, or the ginko tree.Angiosperms - oak tree, maple tree, apple tree, grass, rose - Any flowering plant
They are classified as gymnosperms. They produce cones instead of flowers. Flowering plants are called angiosperms. Gymnosperms usually have modifed leaves that are needle-like while angiosperms have broad flat leaves.
A pine cone is not the product of an angiosperm. A pine tree is classified as a gymnosperm. The pine cone would be the seed.
Carpel
No, Pine Trees have pine needles, not leaves
While the "conifer" term does not exclusively refer to pine trees, the pine tree is the only member of the conifer family out of the three. The oak (and all of it's subsets) belongs to the "magnoliophyta" phylum, whereas the maple belongs to the "angiosperms" subset.
Gymnosperm. The white pine's ovules are not enclosed within an ovary. The seeds are not produced within a fruit in a gymnosperm unlike angiosperms. Angiosperms like Cannabis Sativa/Indica when pollinated produce seeds within their "fruit" because their ovules are enclosed.
Pine trees of course!
No. They are gymnosperms. Angiosperms are flower producing plants, and have 2 categories: monocotyledon and dicotyledon.