While the "conifer" term does not exclusively refer to pine trees, the pine tree is the only member of the conifer family out of the three. The oak (and all of it's subsets) belongs to the "magnoliophyta" phylum, whereas the maple belongs to the "angiosperms" subset.
Correct.
Well only one is a conifer tree. Poplar, Lime, Sycamore and Oak are all deciduous
Pine Teak Oak Maple Mahogany
== According to the JANKA test the hardest Maple is Acer saccharum the Sugar Maple at 1450. Quercus bicolor the Swamp Oak at 1620 Quercus palustrus the Pin Oak at 1510 Quercus phellos the Willow Oak at 1460 Quercus falcata var. pagodifolia the Cherry Bark Oak at 1480 are all rated harder than Sugar Maple. === ===
Maple is the hardest of those woods. Oak is a hardwood also but not a dense as Maple. Pine is a softwood and thusly not near as strong or dense a Maple
The Pin Oak Quercus palustris is deciduous.
The eagle (aquila on the coat of arms)
No. A conifer is a cone bearing tree. A pine tree is a conifer. Maple trees don't have cones. If your question is:Which of these is a coniferous tree: Maple, Palm, Spruce or Mahogany?Horseisle Answer: SpruceBrought to you by LittleCricket [Cremello] & MissEm [Roan]
no. a conifer refers to a plant that produces cones. oaks do not produce cones. An oak is a deciduous tree that looses it's leaves in the fall. Most conifer (coniferous) trees do not loose their leaves (needles or scale like leaves) in the fall and are 'evergreen'. Quercus ilex the Holm oak is evergreen.
needles?
Okay here's some: oak tree, birch tree, maple tree, spruce tree, pine tree. Now here are some wildflowers marigolds, daffodil, forget-me-not...
elm
Gymnosperms - Loblolly pine, longleaf pine, ginko tree, cypress tree, lodgepole pine - Anything that's a cycad, conifer, gnetophyte, or the ginko tree.Angiosperms - oak tree, maple tree, apple tree, grass, rose - Any flowering plant