To regain their growth thereafter
It is its deciduous :)
Trees that lose their leaves annually are called deciduous trees.
Trees may loose their leaves during periods of drought, as a result of herbivorous attacks or, in temperate climates, they may lose them in the autumn season.
All deciduous trees lose their leaves in winter for various reasons not just frozen winters.
Trees that loose their leaves in the autumn, are called Deciduous trees. (Non-evergreen trees)Some examples of Deciduous trees are..:Tower PoplarGreen AshSugar MapleRed MapleBur OakBlack WalnutEuropean White BirchHope I could help,SSV~
Yes they do because they are very old that's why they are very deciduousso they just leave there leaves.All deciduous trees, no matter what age they are, drop their leaves in the autumn and regrow them in the spring.
Deciduous trees lose their leaves in the autumn. Mostly these are broadleaf trees, but some conifers are also deciduous. In New Zealand, there are only a couple of species that mostly lose their leaves in the winter. The generalization that broadleaf trees lose their leaves in the winter is a northern hemisphere misbelief.
Deciduous tree loose the leaves each fall. They enter a dormant state in the winter months before coming to live with new buds in the spring.
All trees loose their leaves. Some do so a little at a time and are called "evergreen trees." Other trees loose their leaves all at once, usually in the autumn,, so the loss is very noticeable. These are called deciduous trees.
Leaves can not loose leaves. Your question is meaningless. Look in the related question below.
Deciduous trees lose their leaves in the fall season. This process is called leaf abscission, and it occurs when the tree sheds its leaves in response to changing daylight patterns and cooler temperatures.
Deciduous means losing their leaves, not persisting beyond one season.