Year-round plants, often referred to as evergreen plants, retain their foliage throughout all seasons. Common examples include conifers like pine, spruce, and fir, as well as broadleaf evergreens such as holly and certain types of magnolia. Many perennial flowering plants, like some varieties of sedum and heuchera, can also provide year-round interest in gardens. Additionally, certain indoor houseplants, such as pothos and snake plants, thrive year-round with proper care.
some plants do yes..but not all of them
some plants do yes..but not all of them
false?
evergreens
Marigolds do not bloom all year round. They are annual plants that typically bloom in the spring and summer months.
Yes, they grow all year round.
The hibiscus is a flowering plant that can bloom almost all year round in Louisiana. The camellia and knock out rose plants bloom most of the year with a month or two without blooms. Most plants have a dormant period when they do not produce blooms.
Tropical Rain Forests
Tropical Rain Forests
Definitely. In warm-winter climates, plants are growing and blooming year-round and so you can garden every day.
They have a tropical climate so they can grow lots of food all year round they sometomes trick the plants by copying the enviroment that it usally grows in then put it in a green house or something.
"Year 'round" is the correct way to write it as it is a shortened form of "year-round".