Yes, in the Theodore Roosevelt National Park, but only in limited numbers.
The Rocky Mountain Juniper and the Ponderosa Pine are found in the North Dakota Badlands.
The Black Hills Spruce, the Colorado Spruce, the Rocky Mountain Juniper and the Eastern Red-cedar are found in shelter belts around North Dakota.
The Limber Pine is found in a small area near Amidon, North Dakota and along the Montana border.
No. Pine trees are evergreen .
huckleberry
Alabama has forests farmlands prairies and a variety of deciduous and evergreen trees and a bit of mountains up north.
yew
No.
Southwest South Dakota is classified as a semi-arid desert. While there are many evergreen trees and short grasses, the precipitation is quite low.
It is very difficult to give a specific number of evergreen trees anywhere. Rather than keeping a specific count, trees are noted for how many acres they cover.Evergreen trees found in North Dakota are:Cedar, Eastern Red- (Juniperus virginiana)Juniper, Rocky Mountain (Juniperus scopulorum)Pine, Limber (Pinus flexilis)Pine, Ponderosa (Pinus ponderosa)Pine, Scotch (Pinus sylvestris)Spruce, Black Hills White (Picea glauca var. densata)Spruce, Colorado (Picea pungens)
Here are some varieties of evergreen trees:BalsamPineScrub PineWhite PineNorway PineCedar HemlockSpruceRed PineSequoiaEbony (some)Rosewood (some)Mahogany
Evergreen trees can grow at various altitudes because various trees have different altitude limits, not all evergreen trees are equal. The lowest an evergreen tree can grow is 7,500ft while the highest is 13,500ft.
The Boreal Biome is characterised by evergreen trees and mammals.
Because there are evergreen trees in an evergreen forest...
No. Beech trees are deciduous.