Yes, sycamore trees are deciduous.
Well if it's a forest, of course there are tress in deciduous forests! Deciduous trees are the ones that change each season, and coniferous/fir trees are the ones that never die that you see in the winter.
Sycamore trees are deciduous trees. They shed their leaves each year in the fall and grow them back the next spring.
Main Similarities Coniferous trees and deciduous trees reproduce by means of seed. Both these tress bear leaves.
Deciduous tress do go into dormancy during winter months. Deciduous trees will start to lose their leaves in autumn. This process is called abscission.
A Deciduous tree
A deciduous tree lose its leaves in the fall of the year.
Deciduous trees fall in the Fall. The trees lose their color and lose their leaves. That's why there are many trees that are bare in the Fall.
deciduous trees shed their leaves every winter because there isn't enough light or water for photosynthesis to take its process ~Sydney Lim
Coniferous trees only shed oldest leaves and keep the rest whereas deciduous trees shed leaves seasonally
deciduous
The deciduous forest is one that has trees which shed their leaves in autumn. In the spring those tress come to life with new growth of leaves and branches and sometimes flowers.