The Dawn Redwood (Metasequoia glyptostroboides), a relic of prehistory thought to be extinct but discovered in a remote area of China in the 1940s, is a cone-bearing deciduous tree. It has become a popular tree in cultivation for its quick growth, impressive size, often unusual bole shapes, and lacy foliage.
All of them, but some common ones in America are White Pine and Red Pine (long needles) and Eastern Hemlock (Short Needles).
Evergreens or conifers like, pine, cedar, hemlock, spruce and fir trees.
Evergreen trees such as Pine, Spruce and Cedar.
A coniferous tree.
Pines.
Conifer trees grow needles and cones
the thing that is compared to leaves from conifers are needles
Leaves. Conifer trees have needles. nor do they have flowers
The name conifer refers to the seed pod called a cone. Pine trees are conifers. The leaves are called needles (like pine needles from a Christmas tree).
Larch is a conifer that drops its needles in Autumn.
Most conifers have needles that serve the same purpose as leaves.
The "needles" on a pine tree or other conifer are the plant's leaves, where photosynthesis takes place. The needles are long and slender because of the environment of the trees. Needles lose less water and heat than typical leaves.
A conifer has needle shaped leaves. The cones are the seed bearers.
Needles. Both in bundles as in Pines, and also singly on twigs.
Larch is a softwood and a deciduous conifer.
bundles/ bunches
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.