Red oak leaves actually grow in an alternating pattern.
Oak leaves are alternate. Only maples, ashes, viburnums and a few others have opposite leaves.
They are not opposite they are alternate.
Pin Oak leaves are simple and alternate.
No, a bur oak typically exhibits alternate leaf branching where leaves emerge one at a time along the stem in alternating arrangements. Opposite leaf branching is when leaves emerge in pairs directly across from each other along the stem.
They're alternate.
They're alternate.
Shagbark Hickory has an alternate leaf arrangement.
Examples of plants with alternate leaves include oak trees, maple trees, and sunflowers. These plants have a single leaf attached at each node along the stem, alternating sides as they grow.
No, in fact the opposite, they need their branches to grow leaves which photosynthesis (making their own food.)
technically, oak leaves generate to their own size a soon as a tree produces enough energy for it to grow the leaves grow how big of the energy that's inside them and it stick on too a oak tree and stay the same length. so no an oak tree leaf stays the same.
Poison ivy can be a climbing vine, shrub or bush. It has leaves that are elliptical in shape and grow in groups of three on a stem.
it can grow, sprout leaves, etc.