A pine cone comes from a pine tree which is a conifer. The word conifer means cone bearing. Grapes come from vines.
yes....................................i think!
Well, if there's a small oasis somewhere in a desert that had pine trees, then, yes, there would be pinecones.
Pine cones are produced by pine trees. These are coniferous trees with needle like leaves that are not totally shed in the winter season. The cone that is common to the tree is part of its reproductive cycle Acorns are found in Oak trees. These are a hard wood deciduous tree with leaves that it generally loses during the winter. Again, the acorn is part of the reproduction of the tree.
Yes and no. The big brown pinecones on the ground that most people consider pinecones are actually female pinecones. The male pinecones are the small pollen structures. Each pollen structure has over a hundred sperm cells, and each pinecone has several egg cells inside it. Not all of them will get fertilized, but in a successful instance, wind or gravity will cause a tiny piece of the pollen, one sperm cell, to fall inside of the female pinecone to fertilize it.
They are pine tree seeds. The seeds in the cone will grow into a pine tree.
Only pinecones
Pine trees
No; pinecones are the seepods of coniferous (evergreen) trees.
They come from pine trees, so wherever pine trees live. Most likely in colder climates.
umm... a pine tree?!DUHH!...lolidk
Yes. They are found in pine cones which come from pine trees. (see: http://www.answers.com/topic/pine-nut)
On fir trees !