Both oak and pine trees can live in a deciduous forest. All oak trees are considered a deciduous plant. Pine trees are conifers and mostly not deciduous however there are a few genera that are (Larix, Pseudolarix, Glyptostrobus, Metasequoia and Taxodium). (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Conifer)
yes because there is enough good temperature for the oak tree to grow there
Coniferous (pine trees).
pine needles,apples and pinnaple
The Lodgepole Pine [Pinus latifolia] is a Conifer. It is also an Evergreen. Some Conifers are deciduous so it is confusing to use deciduous and coniferous as comparisons.
chipmunks DO NOT live in pine trees. They live underground in dens.
Diospyros kaki, the Chinese persimmon is deciduous. Diospyros virgineana the North American persimmon is deciduous. None of the persimmons are conifers.
I presume you mean leaves. All deciduous trees lose their leaves in winter.
they dont live their trees -.-
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!
That would be an evergreen tree. Two others are deciduous and coniferous trees. The deciduous trees are the ones that shed or drop their leaves or needles, and the coniferous trees are the one that produce cone shapes, such as a pine cone from a pine tree.The above answer is correct except for one small detail. All conifers are not evergreen. Larch and Ginko, the Maidenhair tree are conifers and deciduous.
Deciduous tree loose the leaves each fall. They enter a dormant state in the winter months before coming to live with new buds in the spring.
They come from pine trees, so wherever pine trees live. Most likely in colder climates.
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.