Yes.
Blue Spruce trees are one kind there are also Evergreens
Pine and spruce are both evergreens, so the answer would be "either one", or "neither". An evergreen forest isn't classified as having one type of tree. Some of them even contain deciduous trees.
Mostly oak and maple but also a good amount of spruce and pine evergreens. We have a great fall foliage season.
Pines, conifers,spruce,firs,and junipers are all evergreen, so they don't lose their leaves.
Coniferous means cone-bearing, so any kind of pine tree, spruce, fir, cypress and others are coniferous. These trees are also called evergreens.
Evergreens.
Somber evergreens typically refer to varieties of evergreen trees or shrubs with darker green foliage that can create a more subdued or melancholic atmosphere in a landscape. Examples include black spruce, black pine, or dark varieties of juniper.
Evergreen tree. In fact, all coniferous trees keep their leaves (which are in the form of needles) throughout the winter months, and all year around.
No, these trees are evergreens.
Blue Spruce trees will eventually produce cones but they will be spruce cones.
No. Spruce is an evergreen. ------ WRONG!!!!!!! Coniferous trees have small, waxy and usually narrow leaves (needles or flat scales). 'Coniferous' means that it is a cone-bearing tree. The most common conifers are spruces, pines and firs. Alternative names used for coniferous trees are evergreens, softwoods and (appropriately enough) conifers. However, the name evergreen is not really a good synonym. Laurel, acacia and eucalyptus are also evergreens, and although not deciduous, they are not cone-bearing trees (they also definitely have leaves rather than needles). Therefore spruce is not deciduous, it is coniferous
Evergreen trees are trees that are green forever !!