The Sugar Maple is most commonly used to make maple syrup. Other maples that can be used include the Red Maple, Silver Maple, Boxelder and Black Maple. Sugar Maple is generally preferred since its sap has a higher sugar content.
Trick question. No trees "give" maple syrup. While any maple tree can be tapped for sap, typically the sap used most to produce maple syrup is derived from sugar maples.
The sap is then boiled down to make syrup.
Sugar Maples give maple syrup in cooler climates with regular water.
Maple trees. Maple sugar is made from maple syrup.
THE SAP of 50+ year old Canadian Maple trees is boiled down to remove water and bottled with no additives for pure Maple Syrup.
I suppose that you think to maple trees.
maple
Oak trees produce acorns
Syrup is made from the sap of trees.
...They're not the same. Maple trees are like regular trees and pine trees are Christmas trees. Maple trees produce syrup that you can eat. Where-as pine trees make sap but you can't eat that.
sweet gum trees produce gumballs
Trees produce seed which ,given the proper conditions will produce young trees.
About 40 gallons of sap are needed to produce one gallon of syrup!
a forest, it comes from trees
Both maple syrup and natural rubber are made from the sap of trees
coniferouse trees produce softwoods
All trees produce sap but certain kinds produce more. The maple tree produces large quantities of sap. Maple trees store starch to help it survey in the winter. It the turns to sugar and the sap is produced
Cactus, grasses, scrub bushes, small trees, & succulents.