A Conifer
Spelled coniferous. A tree that bears cones ('con'-if-er-ous from conifer), Pine tree has Pine cones. Most are also evergreen.
You can find red pine cones in the forest, just like normal pine cones. However, red 'cones are much harder to find!
Pine Cones
NO Actually YES, bears eat the pine nuts inside of the cones. Video documentation has shown bears digging up a squirrels stashed cones and eating the cone. A documentary on the Animal Planet showed this action in Yellowstone National Park.
A group of trees that bear cones are called conifers. Conifers are a type of gymnosperm that produce seeds in cones and have needle-like or scale-like leaves. Examples include pine, spruce, fir, and cedar trees.
pine cones
The pine cones that you are familiar with are probably female pine cones. You probably have never noticed male pine cones because they are much smaller and don't look much like the female pine cones. Male pine cones are much smaller and produce pollen grains. Female pine cones contain the egg. The pollen is carried from the male pine cones to the female pine cones by the wind.
Roots, trunk, branches, twigs , needles and cones.
Pine cones are where the seeds for new pine trees develop.
Whenever their hormones start going crazy. Usually when a bear is attracted to another bear, they get a feeling of a sudden need to eat pine cones all the time. If you are missing any pine cones in your centerpiece, check under your couch for some baby bears!
rats do not eat pine cones
The Austrian pine Pinus nigra carries cones that bear the seeds, therefore, no cones, no seed.