No, in fact the opposite, they need their branches to grow leaves which photosynthesis (making their own food.)
Trees that keep their leaves in summer and lose them in autumn are deciduous.
Trees do not have excess leaves in Summer,they have the number required to carry out their function.
trees make food during the summer from the sunlight they trap through the leaves and turn it into food, this is called photosynthesis but due to lack of sunlight during the winter, the trees store just the right amount of food to maintain the branches and the trunk but not the leaves so to save on food supply, the trees loose their leaves
Deciduous trees lose their leaves in autumn, facing winter with bare branches.
If a tree loses all its leaves in the Summer the chances are it is dead. If it loses its leaves in Autumn, and is deciduous, then it will grow new ones in Spring.
Deciduous trees lose all their leaves in the Autumn.
Leaves is the plural of leaf.Two example sentences for "leaves" are:The botanist concluded that the leaves were diseased.Leaves are one of the most important parts of trees and plants.
There is little vegetation because only deciduous trees lose their leaves. Leaves decompose and bring nitrogen compounds into the soil and vegetation appears. Coniferous trees do NOT lose their leaves. Therefore if you were to compare the two, vegetation would happen in the deciduous forest.
Those are called artificial trees. Evergreen trees do not lose all their leaves at the same time, but DO lose leaves (needles).
Deciduous trees, such as oaks or aspens, lose their leaves in the autumn.
Coniferous have cones and are evergreen. Deciduous lose their leaves in the autumn (or 'fall' as Americans call it). But your question asks what is the same about them. There are masses of things that are the same. For example, they both have branches and trunks and bark and sap and leaves
No, money trees do not lose their leaves as they are not real trees but rather a type of plant known for their round, coin-shaped leaves.