not sure what i read in my reader was it has no pine trees in decidous forests instead they are found in mountain forests......
Both oak and pine trees can live in a deciduous forest. All oak trees are considered a deciduous plant. Pine trees are conifers and mostly not deciduous however there are a few genera that are (Larix, Pseudolarix, Glyptostrobus, Metasequoia and Taxodium). (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Conifer)
trees in a deciduous forest lose their leaves, coniferous forests have pine trees instead
No, there is only pine trees in pine forests. I think?
A deciduous forest is a forest that usually has 4 seasons. The trees loose their leaves in thefall and grow there leaves in the springA deciduous forest is a forest where the trees lose their leaves. There are many types of animals and plants. Check out the link in the Related Links.When the leaves fall off as opposed to evergreen trees when the leaves don't fall off at all!A deciduous forest if a forest made up of trees that have leaves not cones.
Pine trees grow in coniferous forest, usually in northern regions, where the climate is cold and the soil rich enough to sustain them.
Conifers are evergreens, pine trees. They are found wherever trees grow in general, but further north (or south) than deciduous trees can grow.
Coniferous (pine trees).
The terms Coniferous and Deciduous refer to two different types of trees. Deciduous trees have broad leaves, which they shed every year. For example, Oak, Birch and Maple. Conifers have much smaller, needle or scale like foliage. For example, Pine, Cedar and Spruce. Sometimes forests are classified according to the type of tree they contain the most of. For example if you were to go out into a forest that contained mostly oak trees, with the odd poplar you'd be correct in assuming you were in a deciduous forest.
Coniferous- The trees there have 'needle' leaves that don't fall in the winter. This causes the soil to be very infertile, and hardly any plants grow on the ground. Deciduous- The trees here are 'deciduous' trees, which means that their leaves fall in the winter. This means that the soil (you guessed it) is more richer than the coniferous forest and many plants grow here, like brambles, grass, and other various bushes and flowers.
Tundra, West Coast Forest, Cordilleran Vegetation, Boreal and Taiga Forest, Grassland, Mixed Forest, Deciduous Forest. I'm pretty sure those are the ones.
That would be an evergreen tree. Two others are deciduous and coniferous trees. The deciduous trees are the ones that shed or drop their leaves or needles, and the coniferous trees are the one that produce cone shapes, such as a pine cone from a pine tree.The above answer is correct except for one small detail. All conifers are not evergreen. Larch and Ginko, the Maidenhair tree are conifers and deciduous.
Pine trees grow in coniferous forests