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deciduous sheds and coniferous doesnt Conifers bear cones that carry their seed. Deciduous trees shed their leaves in winter. Not all conifers are evergreen. Some deciduous trees bear cones.
All trees lose their leaves eventually. Deciduous trees drop them all at once once a year.Evergreens carry leaves allt he year round and drop them through-out the year as they age. The Dawn Redwood (Metasequoia glyptostroboides) is a conifer that is deciduous.
In deciduous trees and plants in general it is the leaves falling off in the winter that carry the chloroplasts lost at this change of season.
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.
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Deciduous means the tree loses its leaves completely in either the cold season or the dry season. This is usually winter. In North America 'deciduous tree' commonly is a term used by people and garden centers for any broad-leaf tree (apples, elms, maples etc), because across most of the US and Canada all broad-leaf trees lose their leaves in autumn (fall). Most North Americans call conifers (plants that carry their seeds in cones and typically have needle-like leaves - pines, yews, cedars, etc) 'evergreens' because most of them keep their leaves all year round. However, some conifers also lose their leaves each year, like the larch and the pond cypress. These are 'deciduous conifers'. In places like Australia most of the continent doesn't get very cold, so deciduous trees (trees that drop their leaves) are almost completely absent. Most of the trees in Australia, such as eucalyptus, are broad-leaf trees (so, have flowers not cones) but keep their leaves all year, so are 'evergreen'. A very small number of tropical eucalyptus species, however, are deciduous dropping their leaves for the dry season. So eucalyptus are mostly 'broad-leaf evergreen' trees.
The stem carry's water from the roots to the leaves.
Leaves need to carry photosynthesis in order to make food. The sun's rays give the leaves energy to make chlorophyll, which is the food they eat.
Yes. Cactus do not have leaves.
In the leaves, or more specificly, in the cloroplasts in the cells of the leaves
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Xylem are small tubes in vascular plants that carry water up from the roots to its leaves etc