No
While the "conifer" term does not exclusively refer to pine trees, the pine tree is the only member of the conifer family out of the three. The oak (and all of it's subsets) belongs to the "magnoliophyta" phylum, whereas the maple belongs to the "angiosperms" subset.
A spruce tree is a coniferous evergreen (pine needles and cones) and most maple trees are deciduous (leaves fall off).
The many species of maple trees are broadleaf trees, and drop their leaves during the winter. Therefore, they are not a conifer.
A conifer tree is a cone bearing tree. An example sentence would be: The pine tree is a conifer tree.
A cedar tree is a conifer.
A quaking aspen tree is a type of poplar tree, it is not a conifer.
a conifer is a tree that makes seeds inside of cones.
A conifer is a tree which produces seeds in cones.
a conifer is a tree that makes seeds inside of cones.
Maple is a hard wood (from a leafed tree) and pine is a soft wood (from a conifer). In this case both wood also have the described character (hard vs soft) not always the case.
The size of a conifer tree's roots can vary depending on the species and age of the tree. Generally, conifer tree roots can extend as far as the tree's canopy or beyond, forming a network that helps anchor the tree and absorb water and nutrients from the soil.
a conifer can have as many as it wants. its a tree, an evergreen. its amazing!