orchard
A group of trees is a stand or a grove. An area that produces fruit trees is an orchard.
A group of fruit trees is an orchard or a grove.
Pollination group 3 refers to a group of fruit tree varieties that bloom at moderate to late times in the growing season. Trees in this group require cross-pollination with other trees from the same or adjacent groups to produce fruit successfully. Examples of fruit trees in pollination group 3 include some apple and pear varieties.
Shorea is not a fruit. It is a genus of tropical trees in the Dipterocarpaceae family, commonly known as "shorea trees." These trees produce timber known as "shorea wood" that is popular in construction and furniture making.
An orchard or a grove, depending on what part of the country it's in.
No, apple trees are angiosperms, which are flowering plants. Gymnosperms are a different group of plants that produce seeds without enclosing them in a fruit. Apple trees produce their seeds within the fruit.
fruit trees grow fruit and forest trees don't grow anything.
Fruit trees bear fruit while forest trees can or cant they just have to be in a forest. So fruit trees is a much narrower thing then forest trees.
The word orchard - is usually used to describe a group of (usually fruit) trees.
Fruit are the swollen ovaries of fruit trees. The ovaries swell so that they can drop to the ground and produce more fruit trees. the trees grow and more fruit grows on the tree
from fruit trees!
Pruning fruit trees helps the trees grow and produce more fruit. All fruit trees would benefit from some pruning with bypass pruners, but especially apple trees.