No.
pine cones...
A spruce tree is a coniferous evergreen (pine needles and cones) and most maple trees are deciduous (leaves fall off).
No, they do not. Deciduous trees such as Sugar Maple trees have leaves that fall off in winter. Conifers (evergreens) such as the ponderosa pine have needles and reproduce via cones.
Maple syrup can only be made in the spring, when the sap is rising in maple trees.
Coniferous means that trees or shrubs have cones or pointed needles. Deciduous means that trees shed their leaves annually. While some examples of coniferous trees are firs and spruce, deciduous trees are oak and maple.
It takes four trees to make one gallon of syrup; if it takes 100 to make 25, that is four trees per gallon.
Are maple trees annuals or perennials?Maple trees are perennials.
...They're not the same. Maple trees are like regular trees and pine trees are Christmas trees. Maple trees produce syrup that you can eat. Where-as pine trees make sap but you can't eat that.
The rising sap is 'milked' from the tree and used to make Maple syrup.
Cedar trees have cones but they are not pine cones they are cedar cones.
Blue Spruce trees will eventually produce cones but they will be spruce cones.