No they stay green year round, hence the name (ever-green).
The opposite of deciduous is "evergreen." Evergreen trees and plants retain their leaves or needles throughout the year, unlike deciduous trees that shed their leaves annually.
Generally subtropical deciduous trees have wide flat leaves.
Deciduous trees shed their leaves annually in response to seasonal changes, while evergreen trees retain their leaves year-round. Deciduous trees typically have broad, flat leaves, while evergreen trees often have needle-like or scale-like leaves. Deciduous trees are common in temperate regions, while evergreen trees are more prevalent in colder or drier climates.
Leaves on deciduous trees change colour in the Autumn prior to dropping.
Deciduous usually means plants that drop their leaves, such as in the fall. The opposite of deciduous is evergreen. Often people mistake the opposite of deciduous to be coniferous, meaning cone-bearing. There are a few deciduous trees that are also coniferous, such as larch. There are also plants that are evergreen but are not coniferous, such as eucalyptus.
Yes! Sweet Chestnut trees are deciduous because they loose their leaves in the winter. Whereas evergreen trees i.e. pine don't loose their leaves in the winter!
an evergreen but it originally is in the deciduous family
Deciduous trees :)
deciduous means it changes, leaves fall, grow new leaves. evergreen means it stays the same all year round
Gulmohar is a deciduous tree, losing its leaves seasonally.
no it is not , it is evergreen Actually in cooler climates it is not an evergreen and I don't believe it is considered an evergreen anywhere. It is deciduous.
coniferous