Yes.
Conifers are trees.
Well technically they are called conifers, an example of a conifer is a fir tree.
Typically conifers... cone bearing trees, such as pine trees.
trees
Trees that do not drop their leaves in the autumn are called evergreens. Cone bearing trees are called conifers. All conifers are not evergreen and all evergreens are not conifers.
deciduous trees, and conifers
Conifers are evergreens, pine trees. They are found wherever trees grow in general, but further north (or south) than deciduous trees can grow.
spruce
conifers
Most deciduous trees are angiosperms (flowering plants) and also called "broad leaf" trees, in comparison to the needles on conifers. There are, however, some deciduous conifers, such as the larch and tamarack.
Many species of conifers produce cones, including pine, spruce, fir, cedar, hemlock, and cypress trees. Cones are the reproductive structures of conifers, containing seeds that are dispersed for the continuation of the species.
Conifers and ginkgo trees are both seed-producing plants that reproduce via cones or seeds. They are both gymnosperms, meaning their seeds are not enclosed within an ovary. Additionally, both conifers and ginkgo trees are known for their distinctive and often evergreen foliage.