yes....................................i think!
Yes and no. The big brown pinecones on the ground that most people consider pinecones are actually female pinecones. The male pinecones are the small pollen structures. Each pollen structure has over a hundred sperm cells, and each pinecone has several egg cells inside it. Not all of them will get fertilized, but in a successful instance, wind or gravity will cause a tiny piece of the pollen, one sperm cell, to fall inside of the female pinecone to fertilize it.
You can plant a cone and it will grow a group of trees or break the cone and plant the seeds individually.
Not all evergreen trees are conifers (cone bearing trees). Some trees that are evergreen don't have cones.Not all conifers are pine trees. Fir trees or spruce trees, for example, would not have pinecones on them ... but they would have cones.So, the answer to your question is "No." Not all evergreen trees have cones. Conifer trees, however, do all have cones! To figure out if your tree will have cones, you'll need to figure out if it is a conifer!Megan
NO. All trees with chlorophyll (green pigment) produce oxygen (o2) through photosynthesis.
Many species of conifers produce cones, including pine, spruce, fir, cedar, hemlock, and cypress trees. Cones are the reproductive structures of conifers, containing seeds that are dispersed for the continuation of the species.
Well technically they are called conifers, an example of a conifer is a fir tree.
Yes, all pine trees (conifer species) are evergreens.
All pine trees have flowers but they are insignificant.
The category name for sequoia, redwood, and pine trees is "conifers." These trees are all classified as gymnosperms, which are plants that produce seeds without a protective fruit covering. Conifers are characterized by their needle-like leaves and cone-bearing reproductive structures.
Almost All Of The United States. There Are Many Types Of Pine Trees -Thundercam96
Some pine trees and Pine cones.
All trees (in fact, all photosynthetic plants including algae) absorb atmospheric or dissolved carbon dioxide and put oxygen back. Plants and their ancestors are the reason we're all here - without them, animal life could not exist. (It's possible that you're getting confused by plant respiration, in which plants do indeed produce small quantities of carbon dioxide, but that applies to all plants at night, not pine trees specifically.)