Pine trees are coniferous, that is to say, they reproduce by dropping cones filled with seeds.
Well technically they are called conifers, an example of a conifer is a fir tree.
Conifers.
Evergreens, such a a pine tree.
as matter of fact that question was good .
The Beech tree is the odd one out as the rest are conifers.
Yes, cedars and pines are both gymnosperms. However, both pine and cedar are common names and refer many different types of trees. Some cedars and pine are in the same plant family, others are only more distantly related.
The only relationship between the two is that they are both conifers and both evergreens.
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.
The most common conifers are pine, fir and spruce.
The five types of gymnosperms are conifers (pine trees, spruces, firs), cycads (palm-like plants), ginkgoes (Ginkgo biloba), gnetophytes (Ephedra, Gnetum, Welwitschia), and conifers (cypress, cedar, juniper).
"conifer" refers to "cones." So pine trees are conifers, but no, mangos are not.
Coniferous trees bear cones such as pine trees, fir trees, and spruce trees...Pine trees bear pine cones.Conifers; Coniferous plants