Apple trees produce fruit once a year. Different varieties mature at different times.
There are numerous varieties of apple trees that produce red fruit.
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.
No-- An apple is the fruit of a plant. The seeds for apple trees are on the inside of the apple fruit in what is commonly known as "the core" no it is not, but apples produce seeds.
Peach trees typically produce fruit once a year, usually in the summer months.
Apples grow on apple trees, which belong to the Rosaceae family. Apple trees require cross-pollination from another variety to produce fruit and typically start bearing fruit 2-5 years after planting.
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.
Yes, peaches are considered angiosperms. They are the products from flowers on trees, which are angiosperms, or flowering plants.
Apple trees produce apple blossoms, which when pollinated, then produce the fruit. Only trees with needles produce cones with seeds, some of which are edible, but not as fruit -- as nuts.
No, flowering plum trees do not produce fruit.
No, apple trees produce seeds, not spores. Apple trees reproduce through pollination and the formation of seeds within the fruit. Spores are typically produced by plants like ferns and fungi for reproduction.
No, olive trees do not need another tree to produce fruit. They are self-pollinating and can produce fruit on their own.
In reality, it is a tree that bares fruit. For example, a cherry tree, apple tree, peach tree, etc. However, it has been used as an analogy within the Bible as well as various religious and philosophical groups.