Many do- but some such as the Bald Cypress (Taxodium distichum) lose their needles during Winter. It would be best to look up the species that you have concerns about to see if it loses its needles.
(Technically every tree eventually loses its leaves/needles regardless if they are evergreen or not- new leaves replace old ones as they fall out so it isn't really noticed by a casual observer... But that's just a technicality.)
Larch Ginko biloba Metasequoia glyptostroboides.
no, but there is one type named the tamarack
-kb
The Tamarack (Larch)'s needles fall off in the winter.
yes
deciduous!
Trees that do not lose their leaves in winter are called conifers or evergreens. Some common examples of conifers are as follows:CedarsFirsCypressesJunipersLarchesPinesHemlocksRedwoodsSprucesYews
Coniferous (conifer) trees such as pines, spruces, cedars and fir trees do not loose their leaves (needles or scale like leaves). Think Christmas trees. Some conifers such as the Larch do lose their needles in winter. Trees that do not lose their leaves in winter are called evergreens.
Evergreens do not lose their leaves in the winter. Deciduous trees are the name given to those trees that lose their leaves in the winter. There is also a such thing as evergreen deciduous trees which have characteristics of evergreens besides the fact that they DO lose their leaves in the winter.
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).
the thing that is compared to leaves from conifers are needles
Conifers are commonly classed as "evergreens" as they don't shed their leaves (needles) in winter.
Deciduous trees are trees that lose their leaves. Trees that don't lose their leaves are "Evergreens". Evergreen trees have needles, instead of flat leaves, to survive winter hardship. Needles cut evaporation so trees can save water - dear in the winter. Not all trees that bear needles are evergreen, for example the larch drops it's needles in the Autumn.
Trees that do not lose their leaves in winter are called conifers or evergreens. Some common examples of conifers are as follows:CedarsFirsCypressesJunipersLarchesPinesHemlocksRedwoodsSprucesYews
Coniferous (conifer) trees such as pines, spruces, cedars and fir trees do not loose their leaves (needles or scale like leaves). Think Christmas trees. Some conifers such as the Larch do lose their needles in winter. Trees that do not lose their leaves in winter are called evergreens.
Most conifers have needles instead of leaves. Some conifers have leaves.
The leaves of conifers are called 'needles'
Needles.
Evergreens do not lose their leaves in the winter. Deciduous trees are the name given to those trees that lose their leaves in the winter. There is also a such thing as evergreen deciduous trees which have characteristics of evergreens besides the fact that they DO lose their leaves in the winter.
No they have needles...they are not classified as leaves.
No, they do not. Deciduous trees such as Sugar Maple trees have leaves that fall off in winter. Conifers (evergreens) such as the ponderosa pine have needles and reproduce via cones.
Many hardwoods are evergreen, which means they don't lose all their leaves in winter. Many softwoods, such as pines and conifers, are deciduous, which means they lose all their leaves in winter.
Evergreen conifers hold needles all year round and gradually lose the old ones throughout the year. As the young needles grow constantly this needle drop is not noticible. Larch, Metasequoia and Ginko are deciduous.