Evergreen trees keep their leaves in winter.
These are pine trees, fir trees, redwoods, spruces, and the like. Also two kinds of oak trees keep their leaves in winter, live oaks and water oaks.
Some species closely related to the oaks also do, camellias, azaleas, and rhododendron.
These statements describe the characteristic behavior of deciduous trees, which shed their leaves seasonally. If a tree is identified as deciduous, it is expected that it will lose its leaves at a certain time of the year.
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.
yes it is The aspen (Populus tremula )is a deciduous tree of the poplar family and is not a conifer.
Hickory trees are deciduous but they do live in coniferous forests.
the larch is a cone-bearing deciduous tree
Elm trees are deciduous
No, most(?) deciduous trees are hardwoods.
Dormant is the state that the tree is in. The process of losing the leaves is called abscission. Trees that lose leaves are called deciduous.
The types of trees that are deciduous have leaves that shed every fall such as the maple tree.
Rubber trees are not deciduous; they are evergreen trees. They keep their leaves throughout the year and do not shed them in the fall like deciduous trees.
Apple trees are deciduous trees. This means that they loose their leaves in the fall and they reshoot in the spring and grow new leaves.
These statements describe the characteristic behavior of deciduous trees, which shed their leaves seasonally. If a tree is identified as deciduous, it is expected that it will lose its leaves at a certain time of the year.
Yes, Birch trees are deciduous, meaning they shed their leaves annually in the fall. Deciduous trees lose their leaves in response to changes in season and temperature.
Apple trees are deciduous trees. This means that they loose their leaves in the fall and they reshoot in the spring and grow new leaves.
No, the alder is not coniferous. It belong to the birch family Betulaceae.
Trees that shed their leaves in the fall and regrow them in the spring are deciduous trees.
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.