The 'Emerald Queen' Norway maple (Acer platanoides 'Emerald Queen') features simple leaves. Each leaf has a distinctive shape with three to five lobes and a glossy green appearance. This type of leaf arrangement distinguishes it from compound leaves, which consist of multiple leaflets attached to a single stem.
compound
compound
compound
Compound. It is either C6H1206(simple sugar), or C12H22011(polysaccharide)
Most maples' leaves are simple. However there are at least three that I know, A negundo, aka boxelder, and A nikoense (Maximowiczianum), and A. griseum, or paperbark maple, whose leaves are compound
A silver maple leaf is simple, not compound. This means that each leaf blade is a single, undivided structure rather than being made up of multiple leaflets attached to a central stalk.
well, I am Norwegian, but i have never heard about Norway Maple, sorry.
Yes, a Norway maple (Acer platanoides) has simple leaves. Each leaf is composed of a single blade, which is typically broad and lobed with five to seven pointed lobes. The leaves are arranged oppositely on the stem and have a distinctive dark green color that turns bright yellow in the fall.
The term 'maple tree' is a noun phrase, a group of words based on a noun that functions as a unit in a sentence.The noun phrase 'maple tree' does function as a compound noun, but it's not listed in dictionaries as a word. The nouns 'maple' and 'tree' are listed as individual words.
They are sugar maple, Norway maple, silver maple, sweet maple.
The Norway Maple uses the animals to earn foreign exchange. This helps them in landscaping and conserving the animals in suitable areas.
The average life span of a Norway maple Tree is roughly 100 years.