Most conifers are evergreen; however, there are exceptions such as Taxodium distichum, or Baldcypress. Conifers are characterized as trees with either needle or scale like leaves and cone bearing but being evergreen is not a requirement of this classification.
Yes. Fir trees, like Douglas-firs, grand firs, amabilis firs etc. are all conifers, meaning they are generally evergreen and have needle-like leaves.
Most conifers are evergreen but a few such as Larch are deciduous.
A pine tree is an evergreen.
Yes, it is.
Not all evergreen trees are conifers (cone bearing trees). Some trees that are evergreen don't have cones.Not all conifers are pine trees. Fir trees or spruce trees, for example, would not have pinecones on them ... but they would have cones.So, the answer to your question is "No." Not all evergreen trees have cones. Conifer trees, however, do all have cones! To figure out if your tree will have cones, you'll need to figure out if it is a conifer!Megan
Yes, all pine trees (conifer species) are evergreens.
picture of a cedar tree Yes a cedar is an evergreen, it is also a conifer.
this tree is an adult conifer, which branch is from an offspring of this tree
Generally subtropical deciduous trees have wide flat leaves.
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.
Cedar is a conifer. It is indeed an evergreen.
Cedar is a conifer. It is indeed an evergreen.
"conifer" refers to "cones." So pine trees are conifers, but no, mangos are not.
Spruce is an evergreen conifer.
A holly is an evergreen. It is not deciduous and it does not bear cones.
a conifer can have as many as it wants. its a tree, an evergreen. its amazing!