conifers do have xylem vessels and are also evergreens
Yes a conifer is an example of xerophyte
The xerophyte is a plant that can live in very dry climates. The phreatophyte is a plant that can grow by pulling its roots down to get water. The xerophyte and the phreatophyte are plants that live in the desert.
A white birch tree is "leafy."
A conifer is typically an evergreen, it does not drop its' 'leaves' (needles or scales) as do deciduous trees. Blue Spruce, White Pine, and Douglas fir are examples of conifer trees. Think Christmas trees - they are conifers. A conifer is a cone bearing tree. Some conifers are deciduous for example the Larch.
Most conifer roots are fibrous and do not make heavy roots that would cause a problem.
It is a characteristic of xerophyte plant which allows the rolling of the leaves. They are essentially vacuolated mesophyll parenchyma cells.
A cedar tree is a conifer.
YES. it is a type of pine tree.
xerophyte
cedar or conifer or Christmas tree
A conifer tree is a cone bearing tree. An example sentence would be: The pine tree is a conifer tree.
The xerophyte is a plant that can live in very dry climates. The phreatophyte is a plant that can grow by pulling its roots down to get water. The xerophyte and the phreatophyte are plants that live in the desert.
no,conifer is a non-flowering plant.
Xerophyte is a plant that has adapted to living in an area with low rainfall or in dry conditions.
tropophytes
The Ginko (Ginko biloba) the Maidenhair tree is a deciduous conifer so therefore is a seed producing plant.
A pine is a conifer tree in the genus Pinus. They are also gymnosperms and do not produce flowers. Reproduction is by male and female cones on the same tree.
no. a conifer refers to a plant that produces cones. oaks do not produce cones. An oak is a deciduous tree that looses it's leaves in the fall. Most conifer (coniferous) trees do not loose their leaves (needles or scale like leaves) in the fall and are 'evergreen'. Quercus ilex the Holm oak is evergreen.