Conifers produce seed-bearing cones. Typical examples of conifers are cedars, cypresses, firs, junipers, pines, hemlocks, yews, spruces, and redwoods. There are actually 630 living species of conifers.
Seeds that come from cones.
Yes. They are found in pine cones which come from pine trees. (see: http://www.answers.com/topic/pine-nut)
Blue Spruce trees will eventually produce cones but they will be spruce cones.
Volcanoes can form cones. Pine trees have their seeds in cones.
Yes tropical dry forests have trees with cones
They come from pine trees, so wherever pine trees live. Most likely in colder climates.
coniferous trees
Coniferous trees.
Needles (rather than leaves) and cones are characteristic of evergreen trees.
Evergreens have cones that contain seeds.
Pine trees have cones. There are male cones, which are smaller (about 1-5 cm), and female cones, which are larger (3-60 cm). The male cones contain pollen. The female cones have ovules, which become seeds when fertilized by pollen from a male cone.
ALL pine trees are cone-bearing -that's where the pine-nuts come from. AND that is WHY they are classified as coniferous.(Coniferous means cone bearing.)