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.
Blue Spruce trees will eventually produce cones but they will be spruce cones.
Many species of conifers produce cones, including pine, spruce, fir, cedar, hemlock, and cypress trees. Cones are the reproductive structures of conifers, containing seeds that are dispersed for the continuation of the species.
no, pine trees are gymnosperms and only produce cones, never flowers
The most common tree that does not produce fruit or flowers is the pine tree. Pines belong to a group of trees called gymnosperms, which reproduce through cones instead of flowers. These trees are known for their needle-like leaves and produce seeds within their cones rather than flowers.
pine trees
Needles (rather than leaves) and cones are characteristic of evergreen trees.
Cypress trees do not produce pine cones; instead, they produce small, round seed cones. These cones typically contain seeds that are dispersed by wind or water. Cypress trees belong to the family Cupressaceae, which is distinct from pines, and their reproductive structures differ from those of true pine trees.
Conifers don't produce real flowers. However they do produce "flower-like pollen."
No, ginkgoes do not produce cones. They are not coniferous trees like pine or spruce trees, which are known for producing cones. Ginkgoes actually produce seeds that are found within fleshy, foul-smelling fruit.
yes, they are gymnosperms
Pines and fir trees produce cones instead of flowers. These cones contain the reproductive structures necessary for the trees' reproduction, with male cones producing pollen and female cones containing seeds. This reproductive strategy is characteristic of gymnosperms, a group of plants that includes coniferous trees. The cones serve to protect the seeds as they develop and eventually disperse.
gymnosperms