Pine cones are produced by pine trees. These are coniferous trees with needle like leaves that are not totally shed in the winter season. The cone that is common to the tree is part of its reproductive cycle Acorns are found in Oak trees. These are a hard wood deciduous tree with leaves that it generally loses during the winter. Again, the acorn is part of the reproduction of the tree.
pinecones come from a variety of evergreens
Deciduous..... correction, coniferous
Pinecones grow from trees<(^^)>
A pine tree reproduce by sexual reproduction. Pine trees produce cones with seeds by sexual reproduction and these cones must be pollinated.
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.
Pink pine cones are young or immature pine cones that sometimes occur on pine trees. They are not very common. They usually have a light rose to dark magenta hue. As they grow older, they start turning green or brown.
A gymnosperm is a plant that bears its seeds on cones. Examples of gymnosperms are pine, cedar, and redwood trees.
I think pine cones tend to grow every other year on pine trees, and i notice every other year they're will be 3 or 4 on one branch.
Yes. They are found in pine cones which come from pine trees. (see: http://www.answers.com/topic/pine-nut)
Pine cones are where the seeds for new pine trees develop.
no, pine trees are gymnosperms and only produce cones, never flowers
Pine cones.
Pine trees of course!
A pine tree reproduce by sexual reproduction. Pine trees produce cones with seeds by sexual reproduction and these cones must be pollinated.
Yes, they are.
pine
cones
Volcanoes can form cones. Pine trees have their seeds in cones.
The Austrian pine Pinus nigra carries cones that bear the seeds, therefore, no cones, no seed.
All conifers carry cones. that's where they get their name. Only Pine trees carry pine cones.