Want this question answered?
deciduous trees :)
Deciduous trees often don't shed their leaves in autumn if they are grown in warm or temperate climates. Evergreen trees retain thier leaves throughout the year.
Trees that lose their leaves once a year are called "deciduous." In cooler climates this is usually in Autumn. In some climates plants lose their leaves in the Dry season these are also called deciduous. Losing all the leaves is the important part. Trees that stay green all year round are called "evergreen"
Deciduous trees fall in the Fall. The trees lose their color and lose their leaves. That's why there are many trees that are bare in the Fall.
Autumn which is also called "fall" because the leaves fall from the trees.
Coniferous trees are trees that produce cones to carry seeds. They also have needles. These features protect trees through the cold, dry winters of the subarctic climates. Moist temperature climates support thick forests of deciduous trees, or trees that lose their leaves in the fall. Some temparate forests include a mix of deciduous and evergreen trees.
Well, when they drop they're leaves in the fall, they go dormant, so they don't really do much. (I live in a temperate climate, I should know.) However, during the fall, some species of trees (like the oak or hickory) produce nuts that you can collect and either eat or plant so you can enjoy more beautiful trees.
Fall
Trees may loose their leaves during periods of drought, as a result of herbivorous attacks or, in temperate climates, they may lose them in the autumn season.
Autumn, or Fall. That's pretty much why they call it Fall. the leaves FALL off trees.
deciduous trees.
Evergreen trees do not shed their leaves in the Autumn.