Conifers.
Cedars, Douglas Firs and Junipers are all evergreens, and more specifically, they are conifers.
Junipers are coniferous as are the Cupressaceae or cypress family to which the White Ceder belongs. Thus the answer is NO but both Junipers and Ceders are conifers, they have a common stock.
Conifers produce seed-bearing cones. Typical examples of conifers are cedars, cypresses, firs, junipers, pines, hemlocks, yews, spruces, and redwoods. There are actually 630 living species of conifers.
Thomas Whittons sexual prowess. Thomas get real they, are all conifers who's cones are not particularly large.
Pines, conifers,spruce,firs,and junipers are all evergreen, so they don't lose their leaves.
pine treesCone bearing plants are called conifers. Some common examples of conifers are cedars, spruces, yews, pines, redwoods, cypresses, firs, and junipers.
conifers: any tree that has thin leaves needles and produces cones. Many types are evergreen. Pines, firs, junipers, larches, spruces, and yews are conifers. deciduous:describes trees and bushes that shed their leaves in the fall.
Conifer trees produce softwood. Examples of conifers include: cypresses, firs, cedars, junipers, pines, redwoods, spruces and more.
Conifers produce cones!There are around 550 species of conifer trees in existence worldwide.Some examples of evergreen conifers include pines, firs, cedars, spruces, junipers, hemlocks, and yews. their cones may be hard and dry, such as with pine and spruce trees, or fleshy like with junipers. Some conifers lose their needles or scaly leaves in winter as in the cases of larches and cypresses. Conifers tend to inhabit colder and drier habitats around the world.Hope that helps!! :D-J.T.Sources:My Biology Book and research project!
Spruce, pine, fir, redwoods and junipers are all cone-bearing. Most conifers will produce cones, which can also be known as gymnosperms.
The Junipers was created in 2000.