They lose their leaves and then they grow back in the spring.
Cold-adapted plants are often referred to as "cold-tolerant" or "cold-hardy" plants. These plants have special adaptations that allow them to survive and thrive in cold environments, such as the ability to undergo dormancy or store energy reserves in their roots.
Sleep deprivation can impair the body's ability to regulate temperature and cope with cold environments. Lack of sleep can disrupt the body's internal clock, leading to decreased thermoregulation and reduced ability to generate heat, making it harder to stay warm in cold conditions.
Plants that can withstand cold temperatures include conifers like pine, spruce, and fir trees, as well as deciduous trees like birch and maple. Shrubs like juniper, rhododendron, and heather are also common in cold climates. Additionally, Arctic plants like lichens, mosses, and tundra vegetation are adapted to extreme cold conditions.
Plants have the most difficulty surviving in the polar tundra biome, characterized by extreme cold temperatures, short growing seasons, and frozen soil. The harsh conditions make it challenging for plants to establish roots, grow, and reproduce.
Tender plants such as annual flowers, tropical plants, and vegetables are typically the first to be killed by frost. These plants are sensitive to cold temperatures and cannot survive exposure to freezing conditions. In contrast, hardy plants like evergreen trees, shrubs, and certain perennials have better tolerance to frost and can survive longer.
Most mammals cope with cold weather with a layer of fat or their fur.
Plants cope with seasonal stress by adjusting their growth processes, such as shedding leaves or slowing down growth during cold or dry seasons. Animals cope by adapting their behavior, such as migrating to warmer areas or hibernating during cold seasons, or storing food during plentiful times to survive scarcity. Both plants and animals have evolved various mechanisms to survive and thrive in different seasons.
By thermoregulation.
sap gives it heat
through respiration process, not absorbing too much water, growing in an open space to easily take carbon dioxide
Wet soil and mildly hot tempatures
they are covered I bark and they basically go in to hibernation
Some hibernate. Some have fur and / or blubber as insulation.
plants need cold water to survive
Plants do not get as cold
none the climate is way to cold for plants to survive the cold weather
As sessile organisms, plants are unable to escape from the many abiotic and biotic factors that cause a departure from optimal conditions of growth and development. Low temperature represents one of the most harmful abiotic stresses affecting temperate plants. These species have adapted to seasonal variations in temperature by adjusting their metabolism during autumn, increasing their content of a range of cryo-protective compounds to maximise their cold tolerance. Some of these molecules are synthesised de novo. The down-regulation of some gene products represents an additional important regulatory mechanism. Ways in which plants cope with cold stress are described, and the current state of the art with respect to both the model plant Arabidopsis thaliana and crop plants in the area of gene expression and metabolic pathways during low-temperature stress are discussed.