All conifers carry cones. that's where they get their name. Only Pine trees carry pine cones.
I think you're a little confused. Pine cones come from pine trees. Evergreens are any plant that doesn't lose its leaves ever year. Not all evergreens are needle leaf trees. Not all needle leaf plants are evergreen. Not all evergreens have cones. And not all plants with cones are pines. But... to answer your question... A cone on a plant (be it a pine, spruce, fir, yew, cedar, redcedar, redwood, larch, or hemlock) is a reproductive organ. Most conifers have separate male and female cones. The male cone has spores that contain sperm. The spores are dispersed by air and land on the female cone (usually of another plant.) After the female cone is fertilized, seeds form.
Cones produced by evergreens or conifers can be either male or female. Male cones release pollen, while female cones contain seeds.
Evergreens have cones that contain seeds.
pine cones
What is the pine tree commonly called "Northern pine?" Is it possibly the Eastern white pine?
Coniferous trees bear cones such as pine trees, fir trees, and spruce trees...Pine trees bear pine cones.Conifers; Coniferous plants
Roots, trunk, branches, twigs , needles and cones.
Yes pine trees are evergreens
Pine cones are where the seeds for new pine trees develop.
Evergreens
The pine cones that you are familiar with are probably female pine cones. You probably have never noticed male pine cones because they are much smaller and don't look much like the female pine cones. Male pine cones are much smaller and produce pollen grains. Female pine cones contain the egg. The pollen is carried from the male pine cones to the female pine cones by the wind.
There are two major types of trees: Deciduous and evergreens. Evergreens are trees, which keep their leaves all year long. Pine, cedar, and other coniferous (producing cones) trees are evergreens with needles instead of leaves. They are the most common evergreens in Maryland. Deciduous trees lose their leaves during the fall and grow them back in the spring.